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Hong Sang-Soo Tribute in New York Print E-mail
Featured Events
Written by Samuel Jamier   
Sunday, 25 March 2007
Woman on the Beach
    

Hong Sang-Soo continues to gather distinctions in the international film festival circuit as he has consistently done over the past few years. The author of The Virgin Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors and A Tale of Cinema has won the Best Director award for Woman on the Beach (2006), which stars Ko Hyeon-jeong and Kim Seung-woo and was competing at the 22nd Mar del Plata International Film Festival in Argentina.

Prior to receiving this award on March 17th at the event's closing ceremony, Woman on the Beach had been previously screened at the Berlin International Film Festival in February 2006, as well as the Toronto, Vancouver, Tokyo and New York film festivals. At home, there is certainly no dearth of critical recognition either: Hong Sang-Soo was honored with the Director of 2006 Award by the Korean Film Directors Association at the Director’s CUT Awards ceremony last December.

 

As I write these lines, I am realizing that I completely missed the Virgin Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors blogathon initiated by Brian Darr (Hell On Frisco Bay) on the occasion of  the  Hong Sang-Soo Retrospective at the 25th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (the writing celebration of Hong’s oeuvre was held on March 21st). But I will make a belated contribution as soon as I am done with my piece about Korean-Japanese director Sai Yoichi/Choi Yang-Il (Blood and Bones, Soo).

 

New York will have its own retrospective very soon: Hong’s last three films will be screened on April 16, 20, and 21 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) Cinematek .

 

Here is the official announcement: 

 

Hong Sang-soo and the cast of 'Woman on the Beach'

 

“One of the most exciting and authentically individual filmmakers to emerge on the world stage recently…. Wreathed in a profound melancholy, Hong’s films lyrically explore the limits of subjectivity, both its pathos and its dangers, often through different viewpoints that don’t so much cancel one another out as add another tile to the mosaic of existence.” — Manohla Dargis, The New York Times

The Korea Society co-presents a ‘Hong Sang-Soo tribute' with BAM Cinematek, featuring the celebrated Korean director's three latest films that have won over critics and audiences alike worldwide - Woman is the Future of Man, Tale of Cinema and Woman on the Beach.

 

Location: BAM Cinematek @ 30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, NY (map). Click here to to buy tickets.

 

Monday, April 16 at 4:30, 6:50, 9:15pm

Woman is the Future of Man (Yeojaneun namjani miraeda) (2004), 88min

Directed by Hong Sang-Soo

With Yu Ji-Tae, Kim Tae-Woo, Seong Hyun-Ah

 

poster 1poster 2
 

Two male college friends reunite and spontaneously decide to look up a woman with whom they were both separately involved. “The men’s self–immolating behavior is what’s saddest in the Hong universe, thanks largely to his duplicitous manner with narrative. You can rarely grip the shape of the entire film until past the halfway marker. When you do, the tragedy of soured lives is beyond the point of no return.” —The Village Voice

 

Friday, April 20 at 2, 4:30, 6:50, 9:15pm

Tale of Cinema (Geuk jang jeon) (2005), 89min

Directed by Hong Sang-Soo

With Lee Ki-Woo, Uhm Ji-Won

 

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A young man bumps into a female friend; the ensuing evening involves drinking, sex, and a suicide pact. Turns out it’s only a film (within a film), but life imitates art, which in turn imitates life... “Tale expands on Hong’s preoccupations with a renewed conceptual depth. While it may be a tough film to love, it is also Hong’s finest work to date, marking a bold new direction just when Hong is most in need of a fresh start.”

— Michael Sicinski, Cinema Scope

 

Saturday, April 21 at 3, 6, 9pm

Woman on the Beach (Haebyonui yoin) (2006), 128min

Directed by Hong Sang-Soo

With Go Hyun-Jung, Kim Seung-Woo, Kim Tae-Woo, Song Seon-Mi 

 

poster 5poster 6

 

A filmmaker, writing his latest script at a seaside resort town, becomes involved with two women. As ever, Hong is comically and painfully lucid in outlining the jealousy and self-absorption that fuel his male characters’ drunken acting out. In the scene that is at the heart of this film, he does so literally with the help of a diagram—a fitting gesture for a filmmaker so obsessed with the geometry of human relationships. 

 

 
Shin Sang-Ok: Garden of Evil, Flowers of Hell Print E-mail
Reviews
Written by Samuel Jamier   
Friday, 09 March 2007

As gamblers to the wheel's bright spell,
As drunkards to their raging thirst,
As corpses to their worms — accurst
Be thou! Oh, be thou damned to hell!

Baudelaire, Les Fleurs du Mal, (trans. George Dillon)

Directed by Shin Sang-ok. Screenplay by Lee Jeong-seon. Starring Choi Eun-hee, Kim Hak, Jo Hae-won, Gang Seon-hee. Cinematography by Kang Beom-gu. Produced by Seoul Film Company. 86 min, b&w. Released on April 20, 1958. Winner of a Best Actress award for Choi Eun-hee at the 2nd Buil Film Awards.

Flower in Hell will be playing at The Korea Society on March 15th.

Sueyoung Park-Primiano will give a brief lecture on the film’s history and context and discuss the work with the audience after the screening.

For more information, click here.

 

Flower in Hell

A season in hell

Last week, while the first flowers in bloom were making us hope for the possibility of an early spring  here in New York, winter had a brutal way of coming back to life with insanely low temperatures, snow and a blizzard that seemed like it was not going to run out of breath any time soon (at least upstate). Koreans, who know the phenomenon well, have baptized this late cold wave 꽃샘추위 (you need a Korean font set up on your computer to read this) which can literally be translated as “the cold, envious of flowers, a last poetic whim apparently, as winter seems to have made way for spring in a more definite manner in the past few days. Now, I did not really intend to talk about the weather with this little piece of small talk, but since I am speaking about flowers, this provides me with a (tenuous) link to the Baudelairean-titled film by Shin Sang-Ok, which will be playing at The Korea Society this Thursday.

Shin, who died last year at age 80, occupies a central place in the history of Korean cinema. He directed more than 70 films, 7 of which were made with Kim Jong-Il as the executive producer. The current DPRK leader (he was “only”, if I may say so, his father’s son at the time and the author of On the Art of the Cinema, published in 1973) had conceived the bright idea to have the respected South-Korean auteur work for the greater Communist good, instead of making big bad capitalist goods for the US-supported nation-state on the other side of the 38th parallel.

The story of moral downfall that Flower in Hell tells us has a lot to do with capitalism indeed. The film, which was rediscovered at the 2001 edition of the PIFF (Pusan International Film Festival), was a critical success, if not a commercial one. If Jiokhwa, as it is known in Korean, has aged in many ways, the approach it adopts to deal with prostitution as the human transaction par excellence resonates probably even more strongly now than it did in the late 1950’s. Shortly after completing his military service, a modern-day Candide, Dong-Shik (Jo Hae-won), goes to Seoul to fulfill another type of duty: finding his elder brother who has gone to the ruined capital. His mother has entrusted him with the task of bringing the prodigal son back to the village. But hardly has he set foot in the city that he gets robbed of his meagre possessions while he is trying to help a damsel in distress, the victim of a theft. Another disappointment awaits: he comes across his brother Young-Shik (Kim Hak), who has fallen for a prostitute who calls herself Sonya (played by director Shin’s wife, Choi Eun-Hee), and belongs to a gang that lives an existence of petty crimes near a US base, from which they steal goods that they sell on the black market later.

This stark beginning, shot in a resolutely neo-realist mode, makes good use of actual footage from that era, showing us the aftermath of the Korean War in Seoul, which has become a city of dire destitution and despair. Worse, the presence of American troops has resulted in the development of a specialized underground economy: traffic, hostess bars, diverse outbursts of violence… a world on which Shin Sang-Ok gives a fly-on-the-wall perspective. This documentary-like pessimism initiated a quasi-verist trend in the Korean film industry at the time of its release (1958), and heralded the first days of the 1960's Golden Age.

 

Read more...
 
Tale of the unusual gets unusual prize Print E-mail
News
Written by Samuel Jamier   
Monday, 05 March 2007
 
Park Chan-Wook in Berlin, 2007

Even though a lot of people had left the theater during the press screening of I'm a Cyborg But That's OK, obviously unmoved or repelled by the extreme visual and narrative quirks that seem to be Park Chan-Wook's signature, the jury presided by Paul Schrader was seduced by the unique directing style of the author of Old Boy (which earned the Grand Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004) and its Vengeance-sympathetic brother and sister. Director Park received the Alfred Bauer Prize on Sunday, February 17th, while I was utterly absorbed by the preparation of the Bong Joon-Ho mini film festival. The award (one of the event's main eight distinctions), named after the renowned German photography director who was also the first director of the Berlinale”, honors a particularly innovating work that opens new perspectives in the art of filmmaking. Director Jang Sun-Woo's film Hwaeomkyung also received this award in 1994.

Director Park Chan-Wook in front of the Berlinale "Palast" last year (Feb. 2006):
a lone protest against the reduced screen quota in South Korea
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Hosting 'The Host' Print E-mail
Featured Events
Written by Samuel Jamier   
Thursday, 01 March 2007
Mina Park, Director Bong Joon-Ho and S. Jamier
Director/translator Mina Park, director Bong Joon-Ho... and me.


rss-audiomp3 To listen to the post-screening Q&A interview click here.
* for more audio recordings of our programs click the iTunes or RSS logo on the right menu

Tuesday night (Feb. 27th, 2007) saw a tremendously successful packed screening of The Host at The IFC Center, in the Village that they used to call “Greenwich” (some guide books still do, most likely), in presence of the director himself, who introduced his “creature” to a downtown-meets-uptown looking crowd. Arranged in association with The Korea Society and the Korean Film Council, the film was shown to a full house of New Yorkers from all walks of life (and a long line around the block) – a remarkable mix of Koreans (American or not), students (Korean or not), and various sorts of moviegoers from obviously heterogeneous (i.e. unidentified) backgrounds. An interesting audience for a film signed by a sociology major.

 

 

Full House 

 

This high profile event concluded a retrospective of the spectular career of  Bong Joon-Ho (Barking Dogs Never Bite, Memories of Murder, which were screened the day before) and had the ancillary goal of  serving as a platform to raise more awareness of Korean cinema.

My 9, SBS, MTV Korea, ImaginAsian TV covered the event. Not to mention a number of bloggers, and even the Japanese media (Kodansha).

Practically everyone who attended the screening remained in their seats as the film concluded, visibly keen to listen to what the director had to say about his “thinking person’s giant mutant tadpole pic” (dixit Trevor Johnston, Time Out UK) in the pursuing Q&A session.

 

The Host, coming out
The disenfranchised underclass and the creature. Coming out on March 9th
    
Read more...
 
Jung Da-Bin 1980-2007 Print E-mail
News
Written by Samuel Jamier   
Sunday, 11 February 2007
Jung Da-Bin R.I.P

 

 

South Korean actress Jung Da-bin, 27 years old, was found dead at her boyfriend’s house at 7:50 AM on Saturday, February 10th. 

 

The exact circumstances of her death are still unknown and many rumors have been circulating among the internet communities. According to investigators, the actress hung herself around 3:30~50 AM. In the absence of evidence and based on the testimony of Jung’s boyfriend and various acquaintances who spoke about the actress’s clinical depression, the police first ruled out the possibility of a murder. However, due to inconsistencies in the report, they are now examining the case in further detail.

 The family refuses to believe the official hypothesis and sees no personal or professional reason that could explain her suicide.

Sedona Media, her management company, also expressed their disbelief  and requested an autopsy, which was approved by the family.

Jung was a very popular actress who had built a large fanbase thanks to her interpretation of petulant but cheerful characters in television dramas like New Non Stop (2002), Attic Cat/Rooftop Cat (2003) or My 19 Year-Old Sister in Law (2004), a couple of which I used to follow regularly.

 

She had a brief career in movies with He Was Cool (2004)  a comedy based on a popular Internet-based novel, This Good Fellow (2003) and The Legend of Gingko.

 

 

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