Past Lives is a 2023 American romantic drama film written, which was one of my favourite films of 2023. Past Lives is directed by Celine Song in her feature directorial debut, and starts Greta Lee, Teo Yoo, and John Magaro in the lead roles. It follows two childhood friends over the course of 24 years while they contemplate the nature of their relationship as they grow apart, living different lives. The plot is semi-autobiographical and inspired by real events from Song’s life. Past Lives was recognised with a nomination for Best Picture at the Academy Awards, amongst other award nominations.
Past Lives | Official Trailer HD | A24
Past Lives is a beautiful, bittersweet story of unrequited love, full of lovely storytelling, wonderful performances with a quiet intense chemistry between Greta Lee and Ten Yoo, and an incredibly heartfelt ending. Beginning with their childhood friendship and travelling into their early adulthood lives, Na Young (Nora) and Hae Sung lives split apart and follow different paths, and then drift past each other again. Through a series of circumstance, chance encounters, poor timing, and an almost stubborn inability to recognise and follow-through on their feelings, Nora and Hae Sung float through their different lives finding love, disappointments, and life’s bittersweet realities. Eventually they confront each other again, possibly in hopes, expectations, fears to try and understand what their relationship means to each other. I was left wondering whether their young lives were imprinted with an inevitable destiny they had been unable to grasp.
A happiness and a love for each other feels inevitable as the forces that have kept them apart. As the film is semi-autobiographical, we can surmise that the conclusion is set in a sphere of Celine Song’s life reality, excepting that screenplays can take many artistic liberties in their storytelling. Past Lives make me wonder about those moments in our lives where we didn’t take the detour that may have materialised into a different life and what that could have looked like. We look back and wonder if that was the past life I should have taken, but living in the past through the lens of hindsight is a distorted view, because life is wonderfully bittersweet. It makes me think a future life momentarily brushed past, waiting for the opportunity to appear as the next life.
While reflecting on the film, the following line from the 2007 song “Slow Show” from The National floods back to the forefront of my mind. Different lyrics in the song have found different meaning for me today, to when I first listened to it more than 15 years ago. The lines of the song has been following me around for many years. In this case, it creates a connection with the film, in the the destiny of our lives … a destiny that may float aimlessly through our past and future, in and out of our lives like a double helix … presenting another opportunity or forever disappearing. In the short time since watching the film last year, life has changed and finds me on a different path and now represents a beautiful past life … keeps me waiting and hoping for that next life as another life rushes past … wondering if it will fulfil another destiny before the universe envelops us in a deep peace.
I wanna hurry home to you
Put on a slow, dumb show for you and crack you up
So you can put a blue ribbon on my brain
God, I’m very, very frightened, I’ll overdo it…
“Slow Show”, The NationalYou know I dreamed about you
For twenty-nine years before I saw you
You know I dreamed about you
I missed you for, for twenty-nine years
“Slow Show”, The National