Review | Berlin 2024: A Traveler’s Needs movie review – Isabelle Huppert is a mystery woman in Korea in a typically opaque drama from Hong Sang-soo
- Despite the presence of French screen veteran Isabelle Huppert, A Traveler’s Needs remains as frustrating a watch as can be expected from Hong Sang-soo
- Huppert plays a mystery woman teaching French in Korea and who seems to have a relationship with a Korean man – but what else is going on? We do not know
2/5 stars
Korean filmmaker Hong Sang-soo returns to the Berlin International Film Festival with his latest film A Traveler’s Needs, another modestly scaled piece – albeit this time featuring that icon of world cinema, Isabelle Huppert.
Despite Huppert’s presence, there is no discernible change in style from a director who might be dubbed a master of inaction.
Huppert plays Iris, a mystery woman in Korea. When we first meet her, she is teaching a young woman French, which seems to be her way of supporting herself in the country.
Dressed in a distinct green cardigan, straw hat and summer dress, she uses a cassette recorder to aid her work and has a habit of inquiring about the woman’s innermost feelings. Soon, formalities give way and she is drinking the Korean alcoholic drink makgeolli with her client and the woman’s husband.
At the film’s halfway point, she returns to a flat where she meets a young Korean man, Inguk (Ha Seong-guk), with whom she seems to be in some kind of relationship. Are they friends or is it something more?