The Private Life of Plants is about the ways in which desire can both
worsen and mitigate our flaws. We meet amputee sons whose mothers cart
them from brothel to brothel; we meet brothers who love their brother's
lovers, and whose lovers in turn are stolen away by the husbands of
their sisters. Sexuality in all its ugliness and wonder is put under the
microscope by Lee Seung-U, who reminds us that love may come in various
forms, but that it is, nonetheless, a force that unifies us all . . .
whether we like it or not.