Take Care of My Cat

A joyful group of five girls posing in the school uniforms, which are charcoal gray with a white blouse and marron ties.

Take Care of My Cat (2001, Korean title: Go-yang-i-leul boo-tak-hae) is a debut feature from director Jae-eun Jeong and perhaps the best coming-of-age film Korea has ever produced. (Please don't miss the opening scene — its music and imagery are simply fantastic!)

Set in the port city of Incheon, the film follows five female friends struggling to keep their friendship after graduating from a vocational high school — an institution that already marks them as having been sorted to the margins of South Korea's relentlessly upward-aspiring society. As their lives move in different directions, the film becomes a critical portrait of class, gender, and the uneven costs of globalization in post-IMF financial crisis Korea.

Director Jae-eun Jeong renders the girls' desires, frustrations, and tenderness with warmth and precision. Take Care of My Cat also has an extraordinary sense of place: Incheon's marginality in its relation to Seoul. Its portrayal of Incheon's urban landscape shows the social and economic disparities and the long history of global encounters felt from the ground.

Released in 2001, Take Care of My Cat feels entirely vital in 2026 and continues to resonate with Korea's socioeconomic pressures and the lives of young women. Cornell Cinema is pleased to present a newly remastered version released by Kani Releasing in celebration of its 25th anniversary. 

The screening will be introduced by Jeongsu Shin, LB Korean Studies Postdoctoral Associate in the East Asia Program.

Free admission! Sponsored by the East Asia Program in the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies.

The screening is part of "How to Live in Disturbed Worlds," a spring series featuring two Korean films about girls navigating their own desires, tastes, and sense of self in a precarious and uncertain world.

In Korean with English subtitles. Courtesy of Kani Releasing.

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