Updated On: 07 July, 2023 02:59 PM IST | Mumbai | Johnson Thomas
The film’s score adds touching notes to the experience with its evocative soundtrack that makes poignancy and reflection a theme that haunts throughout

Past Lives Poster
Celine Song’s poignant directorial debut follows Nora (Greta Lee) and Hae Sung (Teo Yoo), two childhood friends who are reunited 20 years after they were separated by Nora`s emigration from South Korea. The two old friends reconnect and begin reminiscing about their past bonding as children, and subsequent social media connect as teens, and this brings forth a churning of longing and yearning that only good sense and acceptance of fate can simplify. What might have been? haunts them…as Hae Sung piquantly asks, “If you had never left Seoul, would I have still looked for you? Would we have dated? Broken up? Gotten married? Would we have had kids together?” This retrospective preponderance gains stranglehold of the narrative as Song develops and fine-tunes the understated nuances in the evocation.
Words matter and the choice of dialogue is the key here. The dialogues acknowledge the random little things in their lives that add up in a certain way to solidify the idea of fate, the Buddhist “in-yun” concept of meeting someone again and again in reincarnation cycles. Complex emotions, choices made and retrospective yearning come into play as the two struggle with staying in the present.