Korean Cinema 2011: The View from Here
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US-based author and curator of film at the Smithsonian's Freer and Sackler Galleries in Washington, DC, Tom VICK shares his views on recent trends he has noticed programming their Korean film festival.
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How do you introduce new Korean films to an American audience? Since 2004, when I began programming the Korean Film Festival DC, the answer to this question has become more difficult to answer. This is not to say that it's harder to find good films. Quite the opposite. The problem (if it can be called a problem) is that there are so many films to choose from.The explosion of digital production and distribution in the last decade or so has made it easier than ever to make a film, but harder than ever find an audience for it.
Addressing the Issues
Last year I was on the jury of an international film festival. One of the films up for consideration was Ryoo Seung-wan's "The Unjust". The non-Korean members of the jury were impressed with the film as a well-made thriller, but our decision to give it an award was swayed by a Korean jury member who admired Ryoo's courage in confronting the apparently very real issue of police and government corruption.
Kim Joong-hyeon's "Choked" and Shin A-ga and Lee Sang-cheol's "Jesus Hospital" powerfully convey the perilous lives of people strangled by debt and poverty, while Yang Jung-ho's "Mirage" and Yeon Sang-ho's "King of Pigs" address the pressures and traumas of growing up in Korea's strict educational system.
Love, Sex and Everything in Between
Considering that Korean films have never been shy about depicting sex and nudity, I was surprised to learn that Lee Hae-yeong's charming sex comedy "Foxy Festival" caused something of a sensation when it was released in Korea. Not because of anything visually explicit, but because the film dared to bring to light everyday sexual peccadillos that are apparently just not talked about in public like bondage, fetishes and sex toys.
But if these films seem tame, others give darker, more jaded impressions of sexual relationships. Jeon Kyu-hwan's "From Seoul to Varanasi" and Noh Kyeong-tae's "Black Dove" are raw, sexually explicit dramas in which the characters have extramarital affairs not, it seems, out of passion or desire, but as a way of alleviating boredom, pain or emotional emptiness. The more naked the characters get, the less they seem to feel.
Jeon and Noh are both young directors, and their films may accurately depict the attitudes of a generation that came of age in a time when dating and online shopping have come to resemble one another more and more. Which is why Kim Tae-sik and Park Chul-soo's odd little experiment "Red Vacance Black Wedding" stands out in comparison.
Narrative Invention on a Budget
I'm always amused when some film critic accuses Hong Sang-soo of repeating himself. That's just what Hong Sang-soo does. Like him or not, he has injected into Korean cinema a sense of narrative experimentation that has flourished in the last few years.
That this narrative inventiveness seems to occur mostly in the indie arena is perhaps a case of necessity being the mother of invention, but whatever the reason, last year brought a host of creative films that expand the possibilities of low-budget filmmaking.
It has been said that all films are documentaries in that they reveal truths about the times and places where they were made, either intentionally or inadvertently. I hope that in the last eight years audiences at our festival have gotten a fair introduction to Korea's film industry and can now appreciate the ways that Korea's many talented filmmakers address issues and subjects familiar to all of us from their own unique perspectives, so that we can understand them from ours.
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