FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
© 2026 Bennu Inc.TMDB Logo

本サービスはTMDB APIを利用していますが、TMDBによる推奨・認定を受けたものではありません。

パスト ライブス/再会
パスト ライブス/再会

パスト ライブス/再会

20231h 46m★ 7.7ドラマロマンス

あらすじ

ソウルに暮らす12歳の少女ノラと少年ヘソン。ふたりはお互いに恋心を抱いていたが、ノラの海外移住により離れ離れになってしまう。12年後24歳になり、ニューヨークとソウルでそれぞれの人生を歩んでいたふたりは、オンラインで再会を果たし、お互いを想いながらもすれ違ってしまう。そして12年後の36歳、ノラは作家のアーサーと結婚していた。ヘソンはそのことを知りながらも、ノラに会うためにニューヨークを訪れる。24年ぶりにやっとめぐり逢えたふたりの再会の7日間。ふたりが選ぶ、運命とはーー。

作品考察・見どころ

本作は「イニョン(縁)」を軸に、運命と時間の美しさを描きます。単なる再会劇を超え、選ばなかった人生や過去の自分への慈しみを、静謐な映像で映し出します。グレタ・リーとユ・テオが視線で交わす無言の対話は、観る者の「もしも」という感情を優しく呼び覚まします。 ジョン・マガロ演じる夫の誠実さも、物語に圧倒的な深みを与えています。過去に別れを告げ、今の生を肯定する儀式のような本作は、人生のあらゆる巡り合わせを愛おしく変えてくれます。沈黙の中に溢れ出す感情の奔流を、ぜひ心で受け止めてください。

興行成績

製作費: $12,000,000 (18億円)

興行収入: $28,126,646 (42億円)

推定収支: $16,126,646 (24億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

Netflix
Hulu
U-NEXT

予告・トレイラー

配信サービス

サブスクリプション

Netflix
Hulu
U-NEXT
Netflix Standard with Ads

レンタル・購入

Amazon Video
Apple TV Store
Google Play Movies

特集レポート

FindKeyのエディトリアルチームがこの作品の深層や歴史を解説しています。

『ストーリー・オブ・マイライフ/わたしの若草物語』ほか、自分を肯定し愛するための傑作映画5選

FindKey Editorial2026/2/27

是枝裕和のまなざし:『歩いても 歩いても』から始まる創作の地平と物語の向こう側

FindKey Editorial2026/2/18

『哀れなるものたち』から辿る。現代の鬼才が五感を揺さぶる至高の芸術映画5選

FindKey Editorial2026/2/4

キャスト

グレタ・リー
グレタ・リー
Nora
유태오
유태오
Hae Sung
John Magaro
John Magaro
Arthur
문승아
문승아
Young Nora
임승민
임승민
Young Hae Sung
윤지혜
윤지혜
Nora's Mom
チェ・ウォニョン
チェ・ウォニョン
Nora's Dad
안민영
안민영
Hae Sung's Mom
Seo Yeon-woo
Seo Yeon-woo
Young Si Young
장기하
장기하
Hae Sung's Friend 1

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: セリーヌ・ソン

脚本: セリーヌ・ソン

音楽: Daniel Rossen / Christopher Bear

制作: ダビド・イノホサ / パメラ・コフラー / クリスティーン・ヴェイコン

撮影監督: Shabier Kirchner

制作会社: A24 / Killer Films / 2AM / CJ ENM

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 4

As the son of parents who were childhood sweethearts/soul mates, I tend to be a sucker for movie romances that address this subject. In this case, however, the only “sucker” aspect applies to the money I plunked down to watch this two-hour snoozefest. Writer-director Celine Song’s debut feature has been praised as a masterful piece of filmmaking and one of the best pictures of 2023, but I heartily beg to disagree. When a pair of young, tightly knit Korean friends, Nora (Greta Lee) and Hae Sung (Teo Yoo), part ways from their native Seoul and are later reunited in New York after a 24-year separation, the reunion of these childhood pals provides them with an opportunity to reflect on what might have been. However, their time together consists mostly of a series of overly bloated pregnant pauses, inane dialogue and missed chances to discuss much of anything meaningful, the kinds of scenes that make even the most patient viewers want to yell “Get on with it already!” These “conversations” come nowhere close to matching their joy of their spirited youthful interactions or the heartfelt, substantive talks that later take place between Nora and her husband, Arthur (John Magaro). The result is, quite frankly, a big fat bore that’s trying to be more than it is but never achieves that outcome. Perhaps the biggest problem with this is the film’s truly sincere but decidedly paper thin narrative that doesn’t have the writing support to bring it all into beautiful full bloom, despite some fine performances, exquisite cinematography and an emotive background score. From this, the director would appear to have a hefty reserve of potential stashed away, at least based on this offering’s stylistic elements, but the substance could use some definite shoring up. Let’s hope her next effort lives up to that.

badelf
badelf
★ 9

Wow. For a director, Celine Song, just coming out of the gate, this is quite an impressive film. The lead actress, Greta Lee, fit the role like a soft leather glove, which speaks volumes, both for her talent, and for Song's casting. Lee's Hollywood Critics Association Best Actress award is well-deserved. Song wrote an excellent screenplay, and her direction turned it into a stunning film. Kudos to A24 for taking a chance on her. I presume they are happy with the outcome. It's rather interestingly paced in a Buddhist or Asian kind of way - slow, meditative, and more is shown than is said. Overall, it's not a perfect film, but it's close. This isn't precisely a coming-of-age movie, but the plot revolves around that (perhaps even more difficult,) developing period between the ages of 20 and mid-30s. I've held a long-standing belief that our life chapters change every seven years. You know: there are seven chakras, seven days in a week, the Seven Sisters (Pleiades), or whichever mystical seven you'd like. Over the course of three of these "theoretical" chapters, this movie focuses on two relationships in the protagonist's life, from roughly twenty-one (7*3) to approximately forty-two (7*6). She was married at about the time of a chapter shift (7*5), as if to validate my weird belief. In my world, it all makes sense. This movie is certainly somewhat autobiographical, even by Song's own admission. It will be added to my Directors About Themselves list. I can't wait to see Celine's next project!

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

"Na Young" (Moon Seung-ah) and her best pal "Hae Sung" (Leem Seung-min) are pretty much joined at the hip at school. They do everything together. That is, until her family decide that they are going to emigrate to Canada. The young lad is a bit bereft, he doesn't really understand and he certainly doesn't approve! Anyway, off they go and after quite an hiatus, she discovers that he had tried to get in touch previously and so she now gets in contact. Now called "Nora" (and played by Greta Lee), she has married "Arthur" (John Magaro) and moved to NYC, but as they continue to chat online they gradually rebuild their friendship so that a visit from Korea to the USA seems the natural next step. What now ensues are a poignantly constructed series of reminiscences that extol the virtues and innocence of their childhoods but also illustrate how different they have become - even while the underlying bedrock of her relationship with him (and, for that matter with her husband) is probably just as solid - though not in quite the same way. There's a bit of pining, a bit of regret - but the film also fairly optimistically looks at where their lives have got to, and also of where their lives have yet to go. The acting isn't really much to write home about, though Magaro delivers well as the gooseberry. He doesn't speak much Korean and so the chats with their visitor frequently leave him in a sort of nervous, but polite, limbo. There are a few films around just now that focus on reconciliation of those separated by migration when South East Asia was still recovering from post war/French colonial rule - and this one is certainly one of the more interesting and honest. It's not without the odd bit of humour either - and is well worth a gander.

BornKnight
BornKnight
★ 10

An american A24 very adult romance and drama movie that gets in you little by little, slow burning with a gentle flame and involves more than just love, but personal choices and fate too. Compared to a lot of romances this one is very real, and tells the story of two korean child, that lives closely together in their 12yo in sort of a "proto-date" till she emigrate to Canada and then US, already searching better changes at what she planned to do as a job (writing). Jump 12 years later accidentally she discovers that he was looking for her, and they start to chat online together, and the old fire starts to ignite again... till the day she says with a broken heart that because neither of them can see each other too soon and because she need to focus on her work they should to stop talking for a while. A while that passes in another 12 years and she gets on her life in America even marrying another writer aspirant while he gets a girlfriend. Then he decides to come visit her in NYC (that's shown in the very start (2min) of the movie, watch closely for the details in expressions that this tells so much) . A great strat for Celine Song at her debut on the big screen (as director and screenplay) and great performance of Greta Lee. An 9.5 out of 10.0 / A+ for me - most real than 80% of the ommances that you see around. Got a nomination for Academy on original screenplay and best Movie but should get more categories imo.

Cinema_Snobb
Cinema_Snobb
★ 10

Celine song directed this wonderful and emotionally complex film about holding on to the past no matter how fleeting it is. Ha Young is a young girl living in Korea. She has a crush on a boy at school named Hae Sung. The time comes when her family is immigrating to Canada. It is devastating to young Hae, who is going to miss his friend. Twelve years go by and Ha is now living in New York City and goes by the name of Nora. One day while browsing the internet she looks up Hae out of curiosity. She contacts him and learns that he has also been looking for her. They talk online for awhile, but Nora worries that the time is being taken away from what she should be doing. They stop communicating. Another twelve years passes and Nora is now married to Arthur, a writer. Hao contracts her out of the blue and says he is coming to New York and wants to see her. The scenes when he arrives are golden. The dialogue and conversation and hidden innuendo are flawlessly displayed. They have so much to say to each other, yet so much is not said. It boils under the uneasy surface. The final moments of the film are devastating, but not in the way you might expect. It leaves a longing and emotional feeling that is hard to pinpoint. "Past Lives" soars as one of the years best films and in my opinion should not be missed.

おすすめの作品