

A Korean classic of the pre K-pop explosion, flip-phone era returns to theaters as subtle, sweet and soulful as ever.
“Take Care of My Cat” is a young women’s coming-of-age tale, set in the 2001 present, a film that, synth-pop score or not — plays like a timeless period piece twenty-five years later.
Five devoted friends finish their vocational school graduation and celebrate on the docks in the port of Incheon. A couple of years later finds them still tight, but straining at the business of growing up and the shrinking dreams and frustrations of the working class young in an economy that doesn’t seem to offer them much.
At 20, Hae-joo (Lee Yo-won) seems to have it figured out and under control. She doesn’t exactly lord it over her mates, what with her office job, nicer clothes and whatnot. But we see her place within that brokerage firm before she does — dress nicely, serve at the boss’s beck and call, fetch a lot of coffee — before she does. Is she a “low wage earner” flunky for life?
Twins Bi-ryru and Ohn jo (Eung-ju Lee, Eung-sil Lee) have family to lean on and street jewelry to hustle on the side.
Ji-young (OK Ji-young) has quit a job and can’t find another, an orphan living with her grandparents in a hovel in abject poverty, something she hides from her former classmates. She stops borrowing money from them as she withdraws from them because she can’t keep up, or so she seems to figure.
And Tae-hee (Bae Doona) is the glue, the one who nags the others to get together, a smart young woman who volunteers as a typist for a disabled poet. Her trap is her family’s “Healing Stones” sauna, run by a boorish father who doesn’t pay her for her labors and who puts all his hope and attention on her student-brother.
Director and co-writer Jae-eun Jeong’s (“Butterly Sleep”) drama follows each 20 year-old through the trials of “just starting out” — the boyfriend who comes whenever you call (for now), the boss who makes you drop whatever you’re doing to run a personal errand, the sense that there’s a better life than handing out fliers for the family sauna, a newspaper-ceilinged dump of a shack to live in, a dead-end job or no job at all.
I love the way the narrative sets up shop in the interior lives of this quintet, the dynamic of clinging to friendships that are starting to bring you down, the battle over “We should get together at least once a month”(in Korean with subtitles) or “The past is the past.”
One character entertains the thought of trying to get in the merchant marine. Another figures working like crazy and meeting her boss’s demands will get her past the new college grads who come in the door, instantly higher status than she will ever be. One we worry about, because she’s given up.
There’s cat in the title and a cat in the movie. A stray that she stumbles over is all poor aspiring fabric designer Ji-young has to offer — in an elaborately hand-decorated box — to Ha- joo on her birthday. The social climber makes it through a day or three before giving it back.
Young-rock Choi’s score charmingly dates this picture the way New Wave/New Romantics pop dated such genre pieces in the ’80s.
The gifted cast lets us into those interior lives — well, most of them, anyway — with just an expression or a gesture capturing all they dream and all they dread about the moment and the future to come.
All involved serve up a sober-minded (not a laugh in it) “growing up/moving away” experience that is both timeless and universal, a classic of a Korean cinema about to emerge and then explode in the years to follow.
Rating: unrated, smoking
Cast:Bae Doona, Lee Yo-Won, Ok Ji-Young, Eung-ju Lee, Eung-sil Lee,
Credits: Directed by Jae-eun Jeong, scripted by Jae-eun Jeong, Kim-hyun Jeong and Lee Eon-hie. A Kani re-release.
Running time: 1:52






































