*Contains spoilers*

20th century girl korean movie review

“In 1999, a teen girl keeps close tabs on a boy in school on behalf of her deeply smitten best friend – then she gets swept up in a love story of her own.”

20th Century Girl Korean Movie Review

Set in 1999, the story centers around Na Bo-ra, a 17-year-old high school student who would do anything for her sick best friend. As the school year starts, her best friend suddenly announces that she doesn’t want to leave for her scheduled heart surgery in the US – because she has fallen in love with a boy from their school. To reassure her friend, Bo-ra promises to find out everything about the boy. Little did she know that following her best friend’s crush around will lead to twists and turns that will make her experience her first love… and heart break.

20th Century Girl is a 90’s inspired Netflix film about first loves and friendships. It has been the talk of the town upon its release and as I kept on seeing it on my Facebook feed, I couldn’t help not to get curious. The trailer looked promising, and I like nostalgic shows, so I got interested.

THE GOOD PARTS:

I’m already in my 30’s so high school romances like this don’t appeal as much to me anymore but I’ll give the movie credit for the lead actors’ visuals and chemistry. I also like the turn-of-the-century setting which takes us back to the era of beepers, movie rentals and payphones.

WHAT DIDN’T WORK FOR ME:

I find some parts too cliche or exaggerated (to the point of being cringey) …

To be honest, as I was writing this review and look back at these scenes, the more cringey they seem.

Bo-ra’s character, the typical “clumsy and funny” with overreacted scenes and expressions just seem overly used to me by now. This is probably one reason why I don’t watch as much romance k-dramas anymore.

Kim You-jung in nostalgic korean film 20th Century Girl
Bo-ra going as far as digging the trash to find out what flavor of drink Hyun-jin likes. With that level stalking, I wouldn’t be surprised if she actually fell in love with her best friend’s crush
Kim You-jung in nostalgic korean film 20th Century Girl
I don’t know if this is supposed to be a funny scene but did she really have to cry like this here?
the awkward double date.
I mean yeah, Bo-ra cares about Yeon-do a lot. But giving a guy that you like (who also likes you) to your friend like he’s some kind of object is really weird. And I’ve seen this plot so many times
That’s why I liked this confrontation scene between Bo-ra and Yeon-do and I’m glad the best friend didn’t turn out to be a b*tch lol.
I like what she said here: “I need a friend, not a nurse.”
Too much plot twists and so many questions.

I feel like there are certain parts in the storyline that doesn’t make sense. I am not a writer, but this is how I felt watching as a viewer. I think they tried so hard to make it “unpredictable” with its many plot twists, however, it only led to plot holes instead.

Like how come, in all those years, nobody in their school knew that Woon-ho died, not even his best friend. I mean I get it it’s pretty common to lose connection with some people, but it was already the era of the internet, not snail mail.

20th century girl korean movie
Some parts just don’t make sense… especially the ending.

To be honest, I would have appreciated this movie if it was given a happy ending instead. And it’s not because I don’t appreciate sad or open endings – some endings actually make the story more impactful. But for this one, I think a happy and simpler ending would have been more fitting. Or even if they don’t give a happy ending, at least give the viewers actual ANSWERS lol. Because the biggest question is, how did Woon-ho die?

I just feel like Woon-ho dying isn’t really needed in the overall story. I actually wished they stuck with the original plot and didn’t add the latter part of the movie with Woon-ho moving away.

20th Century Girl raises questions with its ending
that time when they left us out during the most important part of the conversation lol

CONCLUSION:

This is not the first time that I’ve seen a Korean movie or show that looked promising but ended up underwhelming. I’ve been seeing this become a common scenario in Korean shows. I don’t know if it’s because of high expectations that some writers try too hard to make a story different when they don’t really have to? Like adding plot twists that don’t really add up. Take a look at “Sweet & Sour” for example. I feel like “less is more” would have made this movie better.

I’d say the movie is okay overall. I mean I still finished it given that it’s a 2-hour movie. But it’s not the kind of film that I’d remember years from now as it didn’t make a lasting impact on me.

***

20th century girl korean movie

One more thing, I couldn’t get over Woon-ho’s heartfelt letter that got soaked in the rain. Bo-ra never got to read it. Such a wasted potential.

Han Hyo-joo as adult Bora in 20th Century Girl
My reaction when they didn’t tell us how Woon-ho died lol
Byeon Woo-seok in nostalgic korean film 20th Century Girl
Anyway, here’s a smiling Woon-ho to make us feel better. 😉

RATING: 6/10

What are your thoughts about this movie? Let me know in the comments! 🙂

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