Right Now, Wrong Then

[2] It won the Golden Leopard, the top prize at the 68th Locarno International Film Festival, as well as Best Actor for Jung Jae-young.

There she talks about how she used to work as a model but found it empty and uninteresting despite making good money.

As he has arrived a day early and has nothing else to do, Cheon-soo goes with Yoon Heejung to her studio and watches her paint.

He drunkenly digs through his pockets searching for a ring he can give her but Heejung becomes morose telling him that she doesn't have any friends.

At the screening the following day Cheon-soo is hung over and acts angry and erratic during the post-film discussion.

Encouraged to drink by Heejung's friends he briefly passes out and plays it off as a bit of play-acting.

Walking home she receives a call from her mother who asks her where she is and tells her that Cheon-soo stripped in front of her friends which she finds hilarious.

Heejung comes out to speak with him and the two wish each other well before she heads back inside to see the rest of the film festival.

The website's critics consensus reads, "Right Now, Wrong Then offers diverging perspectives on a chance meeting – and thought-provoking observations on human interactions in general.

"[9] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 81 out of 100, based on 16 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".

[10] In 2020, The Guardian ranked it number six among the classics of modern South Korean Cinema.