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Sympathy for Lady Vengeance
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Character

Jenny is Geum-ja's daughter, forcibly separated from her mother when she was adopted to Australia by Baek Han-sang. Her existence is the purest thread of connection that cracks through all the trauma and thirst for vengeance Geum-ja has endured. Her return to Korea 13 years later and her participation in the revenge alongside her mother symbolize the 'life as a mother' and 'normal relationships' Geum-ja had lost, anchoring the film's emotional center of gravity.

Lost Time, and Reunion

Jenny symbolizes the greatest void in Lee Geum-ja's life. Her existence marks both the starting point of all the tragedy Geum-ja has endured, and the only 'normalcy' she seeks to reclaim. In the film's narrative structure, Jenny — through the temporal gap of 13 years — simultaneously reminds Geum-ja of two vantage points: 'the past' and 'the future.'

1. Forced Separation by Baek Han-sang

Jenny's life is distorted from the very start by the violent figure of Baek Han-sang. The setup that she was born to Geum-ja in the course of Geum-ja's dependence on Baek Han-sang means that even the most private realm of Geum-ja's life — her own childbirth — was subordinated to him. By sending Geum-ja's daughter to be adopted in Australia, Baek Han-sang inflicts on Geum-ja the most fatal 'deficiency.' This becomes the foundation of Geum-ja's guilt that all the 'kindness' and 'planning' she accumulated in prison were ultimately unable to protect what was most precious to her.

2. The Return to Korea and the Formation of a Bond

Jenny's journey back from Australia to Korea holds a meaning beyond simple physical relocation. Initially she cannot speak Korean and struggles to accept Geum-ja as her mother. This reflects the traumatized and severed mode of life Geum-ja has experienced. Through Jenny, Geum-ja had to relearn the role of 'mother,' and in this process cracks began to appear in Geum-ja's cold, calculating image as an avenger.

Jenny is the medium that reminds Geum-ja of 'the everyday' and 'purity.' All the 'kindness' Geum-ja performed for the sake of revenge is projected with an unconscious longing to be received by Jenny as the performance of genuine maternal love.

3. Jenny Within the Revenge Plan

In the film's latter half, Jenny actively participates in the process of Geum-ja's revenge against Baek Han-sang. She acts alongside Geum-ja, serving as the emotional driving force needed to execute the revenge plan. Her existence proves that Geum-ja is not simply consumed by the desire for vengeance, but carries a 'human desire' to protect someone and live a normal life.

Jenny's gaze poses a question to the audience: after this revenge is over, what kind of life will Geum-ja live? She is less the revenge itself than the being who gives Geum-ja a reason to go on living.

Why It Matters

Jenny is the central device that introduces the theme of 'salvation' into Lee Geum-ja's revenge narrative. Geum-ja's revenge is fundamentally a tug-of-war between the extreme emotions of 'retribution' and 'atonement.' Jenny symbolizes the possibility of that atonement. The setup in which she was separated through the physical distance of Australia and then returned demonstrates that all the pain and guilt Geum-ja endured can only be resolved when it returns to the most fundamental unit of 'family.' Jenny's purity is the most powerful motive guiding Geum-ja away from confining herself in the roles of 'witch' or 'avenger' and back toward being a human being who is a 'mother' — the most hopeful light the film ultimately holds out.

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Sympathy for Lady Vengeance

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