Chapter 727
Life, Once Again!
âSora, letâs go to the noraebang together after school.â
âCanât. I have an interview after school today.â
âAn interview?â
Sora waved at her clueless friends before leaving the classroom. Two days ago, she received a call. A movie magazine named âMovie Soundâ wanted to do an interview. She was drowsy when she got the call, so she was in a daze for a while. When she got herself together, she thought that it was a prank call. If the journalist did not explain clearly, she would have pressed the end call button and gone to the land of dreams.
âMaru-seonbae.â
She opened the door to 3rd-year electrical engineering class 2. The seniors sitting at their desks all turned their heads around and looked at her. Sora smiled awkwardly at the teacher who was standing at the front before closing the door. They hadnât finished their homeroom yet. She was waiting outside while looking at the time when the front door opened along with the last greeting. The teacher in charge of the acting club told her to be careful. Sora apologized.
âWhy were you in such a hurry?â
âBecause thereâs an interview!â
âThere are 20 minutes left.â
âWe should go there early.â
âYouâre way too excited.â
âI canât help it. Itâs an interview, you know? An interview with a famous magazine too. When else would I get a chance like this in my life? Well, you might not feel much because you show up on TV every weekend, but thatâs not the same for me.â
âYes, yes.â
Sora dragged the grumbling Maru by the arm. âMovie Soundâ was a long-time movie magazine that filled up one wall of the film production club. She couldnât help but be excited since she got an interview from such a major magazine.
âQuickly.â
She urged Maru, who was changing his shoes leisurely, and then left the school gates and crossed the road. They crossed the city park and a pedestrian overpass, before reaching a commercial district. After seeing the coffee shop, the place they were appointed to meet, Sora told Maru to come quickly before opening the door.
âThere are 10 minutes left.â
âYou shouldnât have too high hopes, you know?â
âWhy?â
âItâs just a student interview, thereâs nothing amazing about it.â
âI heard itâll fill up 3 whole pages.â
â3 pages?â
Maru made a confused expression. Sora also maintained her calm before she heard the length, but when the journalist told her that sheâd take up 3 whole pages including a photo, she couldnât stay still due to excitement. She had seen the magazines in the clubroom, so she knew how much 3 pages were worth.
âShould we order something?â
âDo it when the journalist comes.â
âSeonbae, what time is it now?â
âCheck over there,â Maru replied back before taking out his notepad from his pocket.
Sora was curious about what was in it but did not ask. His eyes were really scary when he looked at that notepad. She felt like she would get cut if she touched him.
Sora grew up hearing that she was quick-witted. Just like what others said about her, she was talented at reading other peopleâs moods. She was complimented a lot by adults for knowing when to approach and when to leave them alone. Her intuition told her that this was the time to leave him alone.
Maru kept flipping over the pages before returning to the first page. He wrote something with a pen before flipping again. He kept going through that process. Although she was sitting at the same table as him, she felt like he was really distant.
His notepad returned to his pocket when the journalist came. The female journalist, who had on a pair of catchy white glasses, asked them what they wanted to drink before she sat down.
âKiwi juice for me.â
âCappuccino.â
The woman ordered the drinks before returning. She smiled and said that she enjoyed the film.
âYou watched our film?â
âYes. It was really well-made.â
The female journalist took out a notepad and a device that looked like a voice recorder.
âCan I have a look at this?â
âThe voice recorder? Sure.â
Sora turned on the voice recorder and tried recording. When she played it back, she heard a clear voice from the device. It finally felt real to her that she was doing an interview. While the woman got ready to do the interview, Maru brought over the drinks.
âShall we have some drinks for now?â
âYes.â
She drank a sip of the juice as she observed the woman. She was a fashionable person with catchy accessories. She was wearing a white bracelet to match her white glasses and was wearing a trench coat for the autumn season.
âShall we have a light talk first? Donât be too conscious of the fact that youâre doing an interview and just think of it as chatting with a girl older than you. It tends to make things a lot easier.â
âYes.â
âFirst up, are you two a couple?â the woman asked while locking her hands.
Sora smiled as soon as she heard that question.
âDo we look like one?â
âYou two do suit each other.â
âNo, heâs just a seonbae.â
âHow unfortunate. If you two were dating, there would be a lot more to write for the interview. When did you start taking interest in film?â
âIf itâs watching, I liked it since I was young, but I only thought about creating one for the first time when I was in my 3rd year of middle school.â
âWas there a trigger of some sorts?ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âI watched a movie on TV and it was terribly boring. Thatâs when I thought that I could make something better than that. Now, Iâve come to understand how hard it was to create even that. Shooting is a really hard process, huh.â
âYou realized a lot in just one year. Oh, you are in your first year, right?â
âYes.â
âWhat kind of genre interested you the most? Documentary-style that touches on controversial topics like âClassroomâ which you did?â
âNo, I originally liked action movies. I mean, hot action has that taste.â
âReally? Then I guess you must have been rather disappointed when you were creating your piece this time. There was a genre you wanted to do after all.â
âNot necessarily. When I made synopses, I did make some of them with action in mind, but when I actually thought about enacting them in reality, I hit a limit pretty fast. Action movies arenât something you can shoot in a day or two either. It was then that I came across a piece of news.â
âSo you got your motif from there huh? A bullying accident?â
âYes. I thought about doing a refreshing revenge story, but that usually doesnât happen in real life. Thatâs when I thought about showing bullying for what it is.â
The journalist nodded. She was drinking coffee with one hand when she suddenly made an expression that looked like she had remembered something she had forgotten.
âOh right, I havenât told you my name yet, have I?â
She took out a business card from her wallet and pushed it forward. Sora accepted the business card. âMovie Sound, Koo Yuraâ was written on it.
âA movie critic, who was one of the judges for the festival, praised it for the structure of the plot. A drama writer did the same.â
âReally?â
âApparently, they liked how it showed everything for what it is so indifferently. They said that youâre bound to use different techniques if you were greedy to show off, but you focused on the story instead.â
âActually, the scenario I first came up with is really different from the one we used for the movie.â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
Sora looked at Maru, who was just quietly drinking coffee next to her, before speaking,
âI think I need to clear this up first. Maru-seonbae originally didnât have any intentions of shooting with us. Meanwhile, I was of the opinion that nobody else would do except him.â
âWas there a problem?â
âHe was of the opinion that the scenario is too incomplete and thus will not participate. Honestly speaking, I was a little angry back then. He just disrespected my scenario after all.â
Journalist Koo Yura looked at Maru. Maru just shrugged.
âBut that turned out to be a good thing. If he didnât point out the problems back then, the final product would look a lot different from how it is now. I thought about it again after getting an earful from him. What am I trying to show through this film; where am I going to put my focus? Thatâs how the edited version of âClassroomâ came to be.â
âSounds like there were a lot of ups and downs.â
âYes.â
âI donât think thereâs a film in this world that goes smoothly from beginning to end. There are many big titles that start crashing midway. The crux of the issue is how to get up from that crash and how to clean it up.â
âI think so too.â
Sora spoke with excitement. The journalist induced her to say everything she wanted. She kept asking questions so that she didnât stop talking, and Sora was impressed by how she induced her to keep speaking. She felt that not just anyone could become a journalist for a major magazine.
âOur boy here is a little quiet,â journalist Koo Yura talked to Maru this time.
âI donât think itâs my turn yet. Also, I believe that itâs only proper for the director to do the talking.â
âFrom what Sora said, it sounds like you participated in the production instead of just the acting. Am I wrong?â
âI just said what anyone else could say from the side. There will always be busybodies in whatever you do. There are things that you can see from the sidelines that you canât see it while doing it yourself.â
âHow humble of you.â
Journalist Koo fiddled with the pen between her fingers.
âSince weâre at it, I do want to hear something from you too, Maru.â
âYes, go ahead.â
âMaru, you are an actor who has shown your face on public TV programs, right?â
âWell, Iâd be rather embarrassed to call myself an actor with the things I have done.â
âIf youâre earning money at your age, you can be considered an actor. There arenât many people who can win a fixed role in a series while theyâre still in high school. Moreover, I heard that you were starting another mini-series soon, right? No wait, have you begun shooting already?â
So she dug into him already. Sora thought that they came across a good journalist. She was worried that they might end up talking about just trivial stuff without getting into the important details but seeing that journalist Koo had done her research put her at ease.
âThe shoot began, yes.â
âHowâs the atmosphere there?â
âThere are times when itâs good, and there are times when itâs bad.â
âHow about the people that shoot with you? Do they treat you well?â
âThere are times when they treat me well, and there are times when they donât.â
Sora looked at Maru. All he gave were vague answers. Even journalist Koo tilted her head since he looked like he was dodging the questions. He looked like he was in a bad mood before, so was this related to that?
âIn your shoot for âNew Semesterâ....â
âMiss.â
Before journalist Koo could finish her words, Maru interrupted. Sora felt nervous. The smile on Maru-seonbaeâs face looked frosty.
âAs far as I know, this interview is supposed to be about the youth film festival. Am I wrong?â
âThatâs right.â
âThen I see no relation to my dramas.â
âBut the people who read the magazine want to know more about the interviewees, so itâs fine to say what youâre up to right now.â
âIf itâs like that, then just go with âIâm shooting a drama and preparing for one as wellâ. This girl is supposed to be the main character, so I donât think thereâs a need to talk about me in so much detail. Donât you think so too?â
âThatâs true, but I still think this much is fine.â
âYes, this much is fine. If itâs just this much.â
Sora looked at Maru and journalist Koo alternately. There seemed to be a mental war between the two. But why?
âFine. Shall we go back to talking about the film then? Based on what Sora said, it sounds like you didnât have any intentions of proactively participating in the film.â
âI did try to proactively participate in the film.â
âThatâs not what I heard from her.â
âIâm not sure from what perspective youâre asking, but from mine, âproactivelyâ doing something is doing something properly. The scenario that Sora showed me back then was unpolished. Thatâs why I said I will participate if the scenario becomes better.â
âReally? Then can I ask you one more thing? Leaving aside Sora, why did you participate in the film festival?â
âSomeone I know told me that there was something called the youth film festival that began this year, and they told me that some people at my school are preparing for it. Thatâs how I met her.â
âSo you didnât participate in it on your own accord, but because of someone elseâs advice? So another personâs advice played a bigger role in making you participate?â
Sora felt like journalist Kooâs question was loaded. Just then, Maru audibly laughed before replying,
âOf course not. Are you going to quit your company if I âadvisedâ you to quit? Advice is just advice. Itâs me who makes the decision. I did it because I wanted to. Iâm rather confused because youâre being roundabout for such an obvious thing.â
Maru had spoken as he wiped the lip of his cup with a finger.