Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter...and Spring: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Bowdlerize]]: The international release is shortened due to the depiction of animal cruelty. Though [[It Makes Sense in Context]], it's quite sad to watch if you love animals.
* [[Bowdlerize]]: The international release is shortened due to the depiction of animal cruelty. Though [[It Makes Sense in Context]], it's quite sad to watch if you love animals.
* [[Useful Notes/Buddhism|Buddhism]]
* [[Useful Notes/Buddhism|Buddhism]]
* [[Freak Out]]: Young Monk has one after The Girl is sent away.
* [[Freak-Out]]: Young Monk has one after The Girl is sent away.
* [[Going Native]]: The Young Monk runs off to find The Girl after she returns to civilization.
* [[Going Native]]: The Young Monk runs off to find The Girl after she returns to civilization.
* [[He's Back]]: Happens in Fall and Winter.
* [[He's Back]]: Happens in Fall and Winter.
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[[Category:Roger Ebert Great Movies List]]
[[Category:Roger Ebert Great Movies List]]
[[Category:Spring Summer Fall Winter And Spring]]
[[Category:Spring Summer Fall Winter And Spring]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Revision as of 16:59, 26 January 2014

Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter...and Spring is about an old buddhist monk who lives in a small floating temple on an isolated lake in Korea. He lives simply, maintaining the modest, yet ornate temple, keeping a few pets, and raising a small boy to be a monk like him.

The movie cycles through the seasons in the same order as the title. The seasons cover not one year, but several, each devoted to a different time in the boy's life: boyhood, teenage years, young adulthood, adulthood, and old age. With each division, the younger monk learns new life lessons, often the hard way, until he eventually finds peace in the simple life his master originally laid out for him.

Incredibly beautiful and simple, it is the type of movie that can't be well described without giving it away. Dialogue plays such a small role in the film that you would swear no one said a word through the whole thing. It is a movie that is as much about Buddhism as it is about life, faith, growth, love, jealousy, hate, cruelty, mystery, and redemption. Definitely a must see.

If you're not convinced, it's on Roger Ebert's List of Great Movies.

As the plot is rather spoiler sensitive, it is recommended you watch the film before reading the examples.


This film provides examples of: