Secret Sunshine
Secret Sunshine (Korean: 밀양; Hanja: 密陽; RR: Miryang) is a 2007 South Korean drama film written and directed by Lee Chang-dong.[1] The film stars Jeon Do-yeon as Shin-ae, a widowed piano teacher who relocates from Seoul to the rural town of Milyang—her late husband's hometown—with her young son, seeking solace after his death, only to confront further profound loss that challenges her understanding of grief, faith, and forgiveness.[1][2] The narrative follows Shin-ae's emotional journey as she integrates into the tight-knit community, initially finding comfort in a local evangelical church following a tragic event involving her son.[1] Her evolving relationship with religion, marked by fervent belief and eventual disillusionment, is complicated by interactions with Jong-chan (Song Kang-ho), a kind but persistent local man who offers quiet support.[1] Adapted loosely from a short story by South Korean author Yi Chong-jun, the film delves into themes of personal redemption, the limits of communal empathy, and the complexities of Christianity in contemporary Korean society.[1] Lee Chang-dong, a former novelist and South Korean Minister of Culture, directed Secret Sunshine as his fourth feature following acclaimed works like Peppermint Candy (2000) and Oasis (2002).[1] Produced by Hanna Lee, Kim In-soo, and the director himself, the film was shot in the actual town of Miryang, North Gyeongsang Province, with cinematography by Jo Yong-kyu emphasizing the stark, sunlit landscapes that contrast the characters' inner turmoil.[1] It premiered in competition at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, where it competed for the Palme d'Or. Critically lauded for its unflinching exploration of human suffering and subtle performances, Secret Sunshine earned Jeon Do-yeon the Best Actress Award at Cannes, making her the first South Korean performer to receive an acting prize at the festival.[3] The film won Best Feature Film at the inaugural Asia Pacific Screen Awards in 2007 and secured four top honors, including Best Film and Best Actress, at the 6th Korean Film Awards.[4][5] It also claimed Best Film and Best Director at the 2nd Asian Film Awards in 2008.[6] With a 94% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 32 critic reviews, it is praised as a masterful study of faith's power and cruelty.[2]Production
Development
Secret Sunshine originated as an adaptation of Yi Chong-jun's 1985 short story "The Abject," which Lee Chang-dong expanded into a feature-length screenplay.[7] Lee conceived the project in 2002, immediately following the completion of his previous film Oasis, but set it aside upon his appointment as South Korea's Minister of Culture and Tourism in 2003.[8] After resigning from the position in 2004, he resumed development, spending approximately two years refining the script to delve deeper into themes of grief, faith, and human resilience, drawing from personal reflections on loss and spiritual questioning accumulated during his governmental hiatus.[9][10] In pre-production, Lee selected the rural town of Miryang in South Gyeongsang Province as the primary setting, a choice inspired by the story's title—literally translating to "secret sunshine"—to highlight the protagonist's transition from urban isolation in Seoul to the intimate, scrutinizing dynamics of small-town life.[10] This contrast underscored the film's exploration of alienation and community, with Miryang's actual location serving as both narrative anchor and filming site. Lee collaborated closely with producer Lee Han-na of CJ Entertainment and cinematographer Cho Yong-kyu to establish a visual style rooted in natural light and unadorned realism, aiming to capture the unfiltered emotional textures of everyday existence without stylistic embellishment.[11][10] Influenced by directors like John Cassavetes for raw emotional depth and Robert Bresson for introspective spiritual inquiry, Lee stripped the narrative to its essence, prioritizing the protagonist's internal journey over dramatic excess.[10] Key casting decisions included selecting Jeon Do-yeon for the lead role of Shin-ae, a choice made to embody the character's vulnerability and transformative arc.[10]Filming
Principal photography for Secret Sunshine took place primarily in the rural town of Miryang, located in Gyeongsangnam-do Province, South Korea, to authentically depict the everyday life of a provincial community. The production, overseen by Pine House Film in association with CJ Entertainment and Cinema Service, had a budget of approximately 3.5 billion KRW (around $3.5 million USD at the time).[12] Director Lee Chang-dong employed handheld cinematography by Cho Yong-kyu and extended long takes—some exceeding two minutes—to foster a sense of immediacy and documentary-style realism, immersing viewers in the characters' emotional realities without artificial dramatic flourishes.[13] This approach was particularly evident in intense sequences, such as the 155-second shot of the protagonist's breakdown and the 121-second discovery of her son's body, where the average shot length progressively lengthened to emphasize psychological depth and social context.[13] Filming emotional scenes presented inherent difficulties due to the material's raw exploration of grief. Lee encouraged a naturalistic flow by allowing some dialogue to evolve organically during rehearsals, enhancing the film's unscripted feel without full improvisation.[14] In post-production, editor Kim Hyun refined the footage to sustain a deliberate pace centered on the central trauma, balancing the long takes' contemplative rhythm with the narrative's emotional arcs.[15] The overall shoot lasted roughly 60 days from late 2006 into early 2007, aligning with the film's Cannes premiere in May 2007.[16]Plot
Shin-ae (Jeon Do-yeon), a widowed piano teacher from Seoul, moves to the rural town of Milyang in North Gyeongsang Province with her young son, Jun, to start anew after her husband's death. Upon arrival, her car breaks down outside the town, and she is assisted by Jong-chan (Song Kang-ho), a local appliance repairman who develops an interest in her and helps her settle in.[1] Shin-ae buys a house and begins giving piano lessons to local children. While driving with Jun one day, she stops to look at a property, leaving Jun in the car with the window slightly open. When she returns, Jun is gone, abducted from the vehicle. A massive search ensues, but Jun's body is later found in a nearby reservoir, having been murdered by the kidnapper after a failed ransom demand.[12] Devastated, Shin-ae attempts suicide but is saved by Jong-chan. She then turns to a local evangelical Christian church for solace, where she experiences a profound religious conversion. Embracing her faith fervently, she is "born again" and begins proselytizing to the community, sharing her testimony of loss and redemption. The church members support her, and she finds temporary peace in her belief that God has a plan.[1] Shin-ae decides to forgive the man responsible for Jun's death and visits him in prison, where he too has found religion and expresses remorse. However, seeing his apparent serenity through faith while she still struggles fills her with rage and doubt, leading to a crisis of belief. She rejects the church and her newfound community, descending into isolation and despair. Jong-chan continues to offer quiet support, helping her navigate her emotional turmoil. The film ends with Shin-ae tentatively reconnecting with life, finding solace not in religion but in human connection.[1][12]Cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Jeon Do-yeon | Lee Shin-ae |
| Song Kang-ho | Kim Jong-chan |
| Jo Young-jin | Park Do-seop |
| Seon Jeong-yeop | Jun |
| Kim Young-jae | Lee Min-ki |
| Park Myung-shin | Female Missionary |
| Cha Mi-kyeong | Boutique Owner |
| Oh Man-seok | Pastor |
| Jang Hye-jin | Park Myung-sook |
Themes and analysis
Religious faith
In Secret Sunshine, the portrayal of evangelical Protestantism in rural South Korea captures the fervent and communal nature of local churches, where loud prayers, revival meetings, and public confessions provide initial emotional support for the grieving protagonist, Lee Shin-ae, but gradually reveal underlying judgment and insensitivity toward individual suffering. Church scenes depict a tight-knit community that embraces newcomers with acts of kindness, such as shared meals and collective worship, yet this solidarity shifts to subtle exclusion when Shin-ae's emotional turmoil disrupts the group's harmonious facade, highlighting the tension between Christian ideals of compassion and the authoritarian tendencies of Korean evangelicalism influenced by collectivist culture. The film's depiction of Christianity sparked debates within South Korean religious communities, with some Christians criticizing it as superficial or anti-faith, while others, including a priest who wrote a book on the film, praised it as a profound exploration of belief.[18][14] Shin-ae's spiritual journey begins with skepticism toward religion, but following the tragic kidnapping and murder of her son, she undergoes a baptism and embraces fervent belief as a coping mechanism, finding temporary solace in the church's promises of redemption and peace. This arc peaks during her visit to the imprisoned kidnapper, where she attempts to forgive him in accordance with Christian teachings on mercy, only to experience a profound crisis of faith upon learning that the perpetrator has already found spiritual comfort through conversion, leading her to question the fairness of divine grace and reject organized religion altogether. Her transformation underscores faith's role as both a balm for grief and a potential source of further alienation when it fails to align with personal justice.[19][10][20] Director Lee Chang-dong draws from the rapid growth of Christianity in South Korea—where nearly one-third of the population identifies as Christian, predominantly evangelical Protestants—to explore philosophical dilemmas of theodicy, contrasting divine justice with inexplicable human suffering and portraying God as distant or even malevolent in the face of innocent loss. Influenced by the emotional intensity of Korean religious practices and broader existential inquiries akin to the Book of Job, Lee critiques how faith can impose simplistic solutions on complex pain without addressing underlying inequities. The film's title, Secret Sunshine—a literal translation of the setting Miryang, evoking hidden warmth—symbolizes the elusive nature of spiritual enlightenment, remaining just out of reach amid earthly struggles and emphasizing tangible resilience over abstract transcendence.[19][10][20][21]Grief and resilience
In Secret Sunshine, the protagonist Lee Shin-ae's journey through grief is depicted with psychological realism, tracing the classic stages of mourning as she copes with her young son's abduction and murder. Initially, denial manifests in her determined relocation to the rural town of Miryang, where she seeks normalcy by resuming piano teaching and forming tentative social bonds, suppressing the trauma through routine. This evolves into anger, evident in her volatile outbursts and internal conflicts as loss disrupts her sense of control. Depression dominates later, portrayed through catatonic withdrawal and raw, physical expressions of despair, such as uncontrollable sobbing that exposes her vulnerability.[19] These emotional phases are contrasted with the quiet resilience of everyday life in Miryang, where Shin-ae and the townsfolk persist amid personal hardships, engaging in unremarkable activities like farming or casual conversations that underscore human endurance without dramatic resolution. The film's neorealist approach tempers potential melodrama by emphasizing long silences, extended takes of mundane tasks—such as walking along dusty roads or preparing simple meals—and the subtle rhythms of provincial existence, which highlight grief's unresolvable persistence rather than its cathartic release. This stylistic restraint grounds the narrative in authentic emotional texture, avoiding sensationalism to reveal loss as an enduring undercurrent in ordinary moments.[22][23] Director Lee Chang-dong, drawing from his background as a novelist, crafted resilience as a form of subdued tenacity rather than heroic triumph, portraying characters who navigate profound suffering through incremental, unglamorous survival influenced by literary traditions of introspective human struggle. In interviews, Lee has described his creative process for the film as one of "utter despair," aiming to capture the invisible weight of endurance without imposing false consolations. This intent manifests in Shin-ae's gradual return to tangible daily persistence, reflecting a broader exploration of innate coping mechanisms.[24][23] The film's treatment of trauma echoes universal narratives of bereavement, such as those in global cinema where protagonists confront irremediable loss through personal fortitude, emphasizing psychological realism over external aids for endurance.[19]Release
Premiere and distribution
Secret Sunshine had its world premiere at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival on May 24, where it competed in the main competition section for the Palme d'Or.[25][26] The film received significant attention at the festival, particularly for Jeon Do-yeon's lead performance, which earned her the Best Actress award.[3] In South Korea, the film was released theatrically on May 24, 2007, distributed by CJ Entertainment in association with Cinema Service.[16][27] Internationally, CJ Entertainment handled sales and distribution to various territories, while the U.S. theatrical release occurred on December 22, 2010, through IFC Films, marking the film's American debut in New York.[28][29][22] Marketing efforts centered on Jeon Do-yeon's acclaimed performance and the Cannes buzz, positioning the film as a profound exploration of grief and faith to attract arthouse audiences.[30] Due to its introspective and challenging themes, the rollout featured limited theatrical engagements rather than wide distribution.[22] The film's depiction of evangelical Christianity in a small Korean town sparked debates in South Korea, with some churches criticizing its portrayal of overzealous believers and institutional religion as uncomfortably realistic, though others viewed it as a thoughtful examination rather than an attack.[14]Box office performance
Secret Sunshine achieved solid box office results in its home market of South Korea, drawing 1,605,543 admissions and grossing approximately 6.5 billion KRW (about $7 million USD) during its 2007 release.[31][32] Internationally, the film earned modestly, including in the United States upon its 2010 release, contributing to a worldwide total of approximately $11.6 million.[32] As an independent drama, it performed respectably relative to similar Korean arthouse productions but fell short of mainstream commercial hits, largely due to its exploration of intense themes like grief and faith that may have limited broader appeal.[33] Its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival helped sustain long-term visibility, fostering ongoing interest through festival circuits and subsequent international distributions.[28]Reception
Critical response
Secret Sunshine garnered widespread critical acclaim, particularly for its unflinching portrayal of grief and Jeon Do-yeon's transformative performance, which earned her the Best Actress award at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 94% approval rating based on 32 reviews; the consensus describes it as "Plumbing the depths of tragedy without succumbing to melodrama, Chang-dong Lee's Secret Sunshine is a grueling, albeit moving, piece of beautifully acted cinema."[2] Critics frequently highlighted director Lee Chang-dong's masterful restraint and emotional precision, with The New York Times praising the film's "raw, excruciating depiction of grief" and its lyrical exploration of resilience amid despair.[22] Jeon's raw vulnerability was a recurring point of acclaim, often cited as the film's emotional anchor, while Song Kang-ho's understated supporting role provided subtle balance.[19] The film's subtle critique of religious faith drew both admiration and contention. Internationally, reviewers appreciated its nuanced examination of piety's limits in the face of personal trauma, with Senses of Cinema noting its "subtle rhythms and almost novelistic attention to experiential detail" in dissecting belief's comforts and cruelties.[10] In South Korea, however, the depiction of evangelical Christianity provoked debates, with some accusing it of anti-Christian bias for portraying church communities as shallow and opportunistic. A few critics pointed to the film's deliberate pacing as a minor flaw, describing certain sequences as plodding or overly drawn-out, though many viewed this as integral to its immersive realism.[34] Retrospective assessments since 2010 have solidified Secret Sunshine's reputation as an enduring work on faith and loss, with recent reviews emphasizing its prescient relevance to ongoing conversations about trauma recovery. For instance, a 2021 analysis lauded its "ominously slow momentum" for allowing space to confront the inadequacies of simplistic solace, while a 2024 reevaluation described it as a "bona fide masterpiece."[35][36]Home media
The film received its initial home media release in South Korea on DVD in a limited edition on September 21, 2007, distributed by CJ Entertainment, featuring a crisp anamorphic widescreen transfer in the original 2.35:1 aspect ratio.[37][38] In the United States, Secret Sunshine was released on DVD and Blu-ray by The Criterion Collection on August 23, 2011, marking the first Korean film to receive such treatment from the label.[39][40] This director-approved special edition included a new high-definition digital transfer supervised by director Lee Chang-dong and cinematographer Jo Yong-kyu, along with a lossless Korean DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack and improved English subtitles.[1] Special features comprised a 2011 video interview with Lee (22 minutes), 2007 Cannes Film Festival interviews with Lee and actress Jeon Do-yeon, a 27-minute making-of documentary, a video introduction by critic Tony Rayns, and a booklet with an essay by critic Howard Hampton plus excerpts from Lee's writings on the film.[1][41][42] As of 2025, the film is available for streaming on platforms including Netflix and Kanopy, with rotating availability on the former.[43][44][45] A 4K restoration, supervised by Lee, was announced in late 2023 and screened in select markets, including theatrical retrospectives in New York and Asia, with a Japanese Blu-ray edition following in 2024.[46][47][48] The Criterion edition significantly enhanced the film's accessibility to international audiences, helping to cultivate its enduring cult following among cinephiles drawn to its emotional depth and thematic complexity.[49][40]Accolades
Secret Sunshine received numerous awards and nominations following its release. Below is a selection of major accolades:| Year | Ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Cannes Film Festival | Best Actress | Jeon Do-yeon | Won | [3] |
| 2007 | Cannes Film Festival | Palme d'Or | Lee Chang-dong | Nominated | [3] |
| 2007 | Asia Pacific Screen Awards | Best Feature Film | — | Won | [4] |
| 2007 | Asia Pacific Screen Awards | Best Performance by an Actress | Jeon Do-yeon | Won | [50] |
| 2007 | Asia Pacific Screen Awards | Best Screenplay | Lee Chang-dong | Nominated | [51] |
| 2007 | 6th Korean Film Awards | Best Film | — | Won | [5] |
| 2007 | 6th Korean Film Awards | Best Director | Lee Chang-dong | Won | [5] |
| 2007 | 6th Korean Film Awards | Best Actress | Jeon Do-yeon | Won | [5] |
| 2007 | 28th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Actress | Jeon Do-yeon | Won | [52] |
| 2008 | 2nd Asian Film Awards | Best Film | — | Won | [6] |
| 2008 | 2nd Asian Film Awards | Best Director | Lee Chang-dong | Won | [6] |