South Korean independent film “My Name” tries two different things together. On one hand, it is about an old woman who comes to face the repressed pain and sorrow from her hidden past. On the other hand, it is about her adolescent son who has his own personal issues to handle. While the former often shows considerable emotional power, the latter is quite rote and redundant to say the least, it is a shame that the movie stumbles more than once in its bifurcated narrative setting.
After the prologue part set in Jeju Island at present, the movie goes back to 1998 and focuses on the daily life of Jeong-soon (Yeon Hye-ran) and her high school student son Yeong-ok (Shin Woo-bin). While they have lived happily together in Jeju Island, Yeong-ok hopes to change his name someday just because it feels too girly for him, but his mother does not allow that – even when he prepares a document for officially changing his name.
Meanwhile, it turns out that Jeong-soon has been medicated for years due to some anxiety problem. When her new psychiatrist wants to delve more into the origin of this mental issue of hers, Jeong-soon is understandably reluctant, but then she begins to remember more of her almost forgotten past, and both her mind and body become more unsettled for good reasons. Nevertheless, she is still willing to regain those repressed memories of her past, so she starts to look around here and there around the island for finding any clue for that.
Because I and other South Korean audiences knew well from the beginning that the repressed memories of her past are involved with the Jeju Uprising in 1948, I guess I should tell you a bit about that tragic historical incident in question. In 1948, the South Korean government under the control of the US Army was about to be established via its first national election as opposing to the North Korean government under the Soviet Army, many people in Jeju Island protested against this because they did not want to see their country divided in half, and this eventually led to the brutal clash between them and the local police. Around the point where both US and South Korean Army got involved later, numerous incidents of killings happened on both sides, and this massive tragedy was cruelly suppressed during next several decades before the South Korean government eventually recognized it and then gave a public apology in the early 2000s.
As we wonder more about what exactly happened to Jeong-soon at that time, her mind comes to remember more of her past as it gradually goes back toward what she is still struggling to remember. It turns out that there is also some other painful private memory involved with not only another tragic incident in the South Korean history in the late 20th century but also her son, but she is still not so willing to tell him anything about that.
Nevertheless, Jeong-soon becomes more determined to get to the bottom of her issues, and there eventually comes a point when all the pains and traumas hidden somewhere inside her mind vividly come back upon her. This is quite a harrowing moment, and we are all the more touched as she attempts to sublimate all those painful feelings of her in her own way around the end of the story.
However, this intimate human drama of Jeong-soon is unfortunately interrupted by the other narrative associated with her son, who lets himself associated with some bad classmates who frequently bully the other students in the class including his best friend. Not so surprisingly, there inevitably comes a point when Jeong-ok betrays his best friend, and the following consequence is clumsily intercut with Jeong-soon’s narrative, which could be more effective if it were just presented alone by itself.
At least, Yeom Hye-ran, who recently gave a scene-stealing supporting performance in Park Chan-wook’s “No Other Choice” (2025), gives a strong performance to carry the film to the end. Besides being convincing in her character’s slow but steady personal quest along the story, Yeom ably brings a lot of life and personality to her role, and Jeong-soon eventually comes to us as a dogged survivor has managed to go on despite a lot of pain and sorrow inside her.
The rest of the cast members in the film are unfortunately flat and bland compared to Yeom’s strong lead performance. Shin Woo-bin is merely required to fill his thankless role, and you may also notice that many of the performers playing his classmates in the film look a bit too old to play high school kids. In case of Yoo Jun-sang, who plays older Yeong-ok in the present part, his scenes are mostly perfunctory except the obligatory epilogue which will surely remind you again of why that immense tragedy of the Jeju Uprising should be remembered more.
On the whole, “My Name”, directed by Chung Ji-young, is a well-intentioned but inherently flawed drama film. Although I appreciate its strong elements including Yeom’s admirable acting, it is relatively less successful than O Meul’s “Jiseul” (2012) and Ha Myung-mi’s “Hallan” (2025), and I would rather recommend these two films which did a better job of presenting the same historical subject in my humble opinion.







































