翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Tell Me I'm Dreaming
・ Tell Me I'm Not Dreamin' (Too Good to Be True)
・ Tell Me I'm Not Dreaming
・ Tell Me I'm Pretty
・ Tell Me If You Still Care
・ Tell Me It's Not Over
・ Tell Me It's Over
・ Tell Me It's Real
・ Tell Me Lies
・ Tell Me More
・ Tell Me My Lying Eyes Are Wrong
・ Tell Me O Kkhuda
・ Tell Me on a Sunday
・ Tell Me on a Sunday (album)
・ Tell Me So
Tell Me Something
・ Tell Me Something Bad About Tulsa
・ Tell Me Something Good
・ Tell Me Something I Don't Know
・ Tell Me Something I Don't Know (Charlie Major song)
・ Tell Me Something I Don't Know (Selena Gomez song)
・ Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon
・ Tell me the old, old story
・ Tell Me This Is a Dream
・ Tell Me Tomorrow
・ Tell Me Tomorrow (album)
・ Tell Me True
・ Tell Me What It's Like
・ Tell Me What It's Worth
・ Tell Me What Rockers to Swallow


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Tell Me Something : ウィキペディア英語版
Tell Me Something

| director = Chang Yoon-hyun
| producer = Koo Bon-han
Chang Yoon-hyun
| writer = Kong Su-chang
In Eun-ah
Shim Hye-won
Kim Eun-jeong
Chang Yoon-hyun
| starring = Han Suk-kyu
Shim Eun-ha
| music = Jo Yeong-wook
| editing = Kim Sang-bum
| cinematography = Kim Sung-bok
| distributor =
| released =
| runtime = 116 minutes
| country = South Korea
| language = Korean
| budget =
}}
''Tell Me Something'' () is a 1999 South Korean mystery crime thriller film directed by Chang Yoon-hyun. It was an early South Korean film to find success abroad as part of the Korean Wave, and was selected to appear in the 2001 New York Korean Film Festival.
==Synopsis==

''Tell Me Something'' is a blood soaked film, although much of the violence occurs off screen. The story begins with a detective Jo returning to work after the death of his mother. He is accused of accepting money from a dubious source to pay for his mother’s medical treatment. He denies the accusation but his career is under a cloud and the film never definitely clears up whether he is innocent of this charge. (Although Jo does seem to allude to this to his friend, Detective Oh, which suggests he is willing to compromise legality in order to follow the higher morality of caring for a loved one.)
Detective Jo is soon put on the case of a serial killer who amputates the limbs and heads of his victims and seems to enjoy mixing up the body parts – swapping a new part into the body of each new victim. The trail of victims leads to beautiful young woman, Chae Soo-yeon, daughter of a famous painter. She was named as the next of kin of one of the victims, but it quickly becomes apparent that she knew each of the victims and had dated them in the past. Soo-yeon is an enigmatic character whose past is gradually revealed over the film as she becomes close to Detective Jo. Her only close friend, Seung-min a doctor whom she has known since high school, reveals that in the past Soo-yeon had tried to kill herself several times. This apparent fragility and victim status is subtly picked up by a painting in her country retreat which depicts her as Ophelia drowning (a recreation of the Pre-Raphaelite painting of the same name by Millais, seen earlier in the film). The body count mounts and Soo-yeon moves into Detective Jo’s apartment for safety signalling a growing trust between them. The relationship remains chaste if not quite professional with Jo acting as a protective knight. His complete trust is shown by him giving his gun to Soo-yeon and showing her how to use it.
In keeping with the tradition of serial killer films as the body count mounts the finger of suspicion moves from boyfriends and would-be boyfriends to Soo-yeon's absent father. It emerges that her father had abused her over a long period of time. It is also suggested that Detective Jo will be the next victim due to his growing closeness to Soo-yeon. Meantime, Detective Oh has found the apartment where the amputations / killings have taken place and naturally he is killed – although handily he manages to procure a photograph which provides a crucial clue for Detective Jo to reach the final denouement. A show down in Tower Records in which both Soo-yeon and Jo survive seems to indicate a happy ending. Soo-yeon bids a warm farewell to Jo, thanking him for surviving and sets off for Paris. Jo later realizes that Soo-yeon is in fact the killer, and has sewn together limbs from each body into one which Jo finds suspended in an tall aquarium in her living room. He breaks the class, causing the water to knock him down. He is shown on his back, wet and with palms outstretched in a recreation of the Ophelia pose. Soo-yeon's plane takes off to Paris, and she tells the man sitting next to her that it is her first time to Paris despite having stated earlier in the film that she had studied art there.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tell Me Something」の詳細全文を読む



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