Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Ha In-young has suffered for years under her husband, Kang Suk-wu. He's kept her captive with his loss of humanity and sexual depravation. In-young yearns for an unknown world. One day, In-young meets Min Byung-gu but Byung-gu leaves her. In-young leaves her husband and even her young daughter Ha-mi. Ha-mi searches madly for her mother. Chairman Kang, Suk-wu's father, understands why his daughter-in-law has run away. Suk-wu anguishes over the actions of his father and daughter. Suk-wu regains his sexual masculinity which he had lost for years. He forgives In-young and receives her again.
Ha In-young has suffered for years under her husband, Kang Suk-wu. He's kept her captive with his loss of humanity and sexual depravation. In-young yearns for an unknown world. One day, In-young meets Min Byung-gu but Byung-gu leaves her. In-young leaves her husband and even her young daughter Ha-mi. Ha-mi searches madly for her mother. Chairman Kang, Suk-wu's father, understands why his daughter-in-law has run away. Suk-wu anguishes over the actions of his father and daughter. Suk-wu regains his sexual masculinity which he had lost for years. He forgives In-young and receives her again.
The film explores the profound trauma of sexual assault and the perceived failure of the formal justice system, leading a victim to seek individual retribution. While critiquing institutional inadequacy, the narrative focuses on a primal, individualistic response to injustice rather than promoting a specific political ideology or systemic solution.
The film features traditional casting consistent with its cultural context, without explicit DEI-driven character recasting. The narrative does not appear to critically portray traditional identities or center strong DEI themes.
The evaluation of 'Red Cherry' indicates no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes based on the information provided. Consequently, the film's portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements is rated as N/A, signifying an absence rather than a specific positive, negative, or neutral depiction.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Red Cherry" (1982) is an original South Korean drama. It is not an adaptation of existing source material with pre-established characters, nor does it feature historical figures or legacy characters from a prior franchise. Therefore, no gender swaps occur.
Red Cherry (1982) is an original South Korean film. Its characters were created for this production and do not have pre-existing canonical or historical racial identities from prior source material or real-world history. Therefore, no race swaps occurred.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources