The film plays with temporal shifts that are subtle and often disorienting. A character might be healthy on one floor and ailing on the next, leaving the audience to wonder if these are sequential events or parallel "what-ifs."
Each floor introduces different residents and relationships , often accompanied by the consumption of copious amounts of white wine.
In the prolific career of South Korean auteur Hong Sang-soo, few films capture the delicate intersection of architectural space and existential drift quite like Walk Up (2022). Filmed in his signature minimalist style—crisp black-and-white photography and long, talkative takes—the film offers a languid, rhythmic exploration of a man's life as he physically and metaphorically moves through the floors of a single building. A Structural Narrative Walk Up (2022)
The film’s spaces act as a frame for the smallest nuances—a hesitation or an awkward smile —that speak volumes in "super-sotto mode." Critical Reception
Byung-soo is depicted as weak in presence despite his professional accolades, grappling with a deep unhappiness or a sense of simply "wading through life." The film plays with temporal shifts that are
Walk Up eschews traditional narrative thrust for "delicious complexities" found in everyday negotiations.
The introduction of familial tension and professional weariness. Critics have praised the film for being "relaxing"
Critics have praised the film for being "relaxing" yet intellectually stimulating. While it delivers what Hong Sang-soo fans expect—revealing conversations over drinks and emotionally unguarded performances—it stands out for its meticulous photography and the way it transforms a static location into a site of artistic and domestic possibility.