By Pierce Conran
Thanks to Lee Chang-dong and a few late year surprises, 2018 saw the Korean film industry churn out enough quality product to merit a strong Top 15 once again, but the truth is that, for the commercial industry at least, the past 12 months have raised a lot of questions regarding the sustainability of the current marketplace.
This year welcomed a record number of big-budget (over 10 billion won, roughly $9 million) projects (without exact figures I would guess just over a dozen), but most of these struggled badly on the charts and studios will have to be more cautious about greenlighting pricey tentpoles in future. Though to be fair, recent legal changes relating to staff wages have caused an overall surge in budgets.
The good news is that a larger than usual amount of mid- or low-budget projects turned into sleeper hits. Big films splashed on stars and effects and gambled with high-concept stories, but it was the smaller works with tighter scripts that really caught the imagination of the public. After years of being largely maligned in the local film scene, horror (Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum), romance (On Your Wedding Day) and family drama (Be With You) proved to be alive and well in 2018. Adding to the mid-level hits were several well calibrated remakes such as Intimate Strangers and Door Lock.
Yet perhaps the most exciting thing about this year's list is that three newcomers made the cut and they were all women. In fact four women directors made the list this year overall, which doubles our previous record. Of course these debuts were all indie films but it goes to show that when you start giving everyone a voice, you end up with more original films. I look forward to the year (hopefully very soon) when half or more of our annual roundup comes from women directors.
Meanwhile, Lee Chang-dong made history with his Cannes competition entry Burning, which became the first ever Korean film to land on the shortlist for the Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award (we'll know on January 22 if it makes the final five contenders).
As in previous years, feature-length films made in Korea and screened for the first time in 2018 (whether for a theatrical release or at a film festival) were considered. The following list was whittled down from about 90 films seen throughout the year, which was a little less than usual, but I'm confident I managed to see most of the important films.
Thanks to Lee Chang-dong and a few late year surprises, 2018 saw the Korean film industry churn out enough quality product to merit a strong Top 15 once again, but the truth is that, for the commercial industry at least, the past 12 months have raised a lot of questions regarding the sustainability of the current marketplace.
This year welcomed a record number of big-budget (over 10 billion won, roughly $9 million) projects (without exact figures I would guess just over a dozen), but most of these struggled badly on the charts and studios will have to be more cautious about greenlighting pricey tentpoles in future. Though to be fair, recent legal changes relating to staff wages have caused an overall surge in budgets.
The good news is that a larger than usual amount of mid- or low-budget projects turned into sleeper hits. Big films splashed on stars and effects and gambled with high-concept stories, but it was the smaller works with tighter scripts that really caught the imagination of the public. After years of being largely maligned in the local film scene, horror (Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum), romance (On Your Wedding Day) and family drama (Be With You) proved to be alive and well in 2018. Adding to the mid-level hits were several well calibrated remakes such as Intimate Strangers and Door Lock.
Yet perhaps the most exciting thing about this year's list is that three newcomers made the cut and they were all women. In fact four women directors made the list this year overall, which doubles our previous record. Of course these debuts were all indie films but it goes to show that when you start giving everyone a voice, you end up with more original films. I look forward to the year (hopefully very soon) when half or more of our annual roundup comes from women directors.
Meanwhile, Lee Chang-dong made history with his Cannes competition entry Burning, which became the first ever Korean film to land on the shortlist for the Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award (we'll know on January 22 if it makes the final five contenders).
Agree? Disagree? Let us know below.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from MKC!
1. Burning
(버닝)
(버닝)
It took eight years for Lee Chang-dong to return but boy was it worth the wait. Taking Haruki Murakami’s short story ‘Barn Burning’ and exploding it into a two and a half hour slowburn fever dream of simmering paranoia, dark desire and wicked secrets, Lee has returned with the masterful Burning. Yoo Ah-in and Steven Yeun do career-best work in a film that almost demands repeat viewings to tread deeper into its unfathomable secrets, while newcomer Jun Jong-seo is sensational in an indescribable debut performance.
MKC Review
2. House of Hummingbird
(벌새)
(벌새)
3. Swing Kids
(스윙키즈)
(스윙키즈)
4. Hotel by the River
(강변 호텔)
(강변 호텔)
The extraordinarily prolific Hong Sangsoo continued his assault on the international festival circuit with two films this year. Both were shot in black and white and feature Kim Min-hee in a lead role but the most impressive of the pair was the elegiac Hotel by the River, for which Ki Joo-bong deservedly picked up the Best Actor prize at the Locarno International Film Festival for his vivid and achingly yearning performance as an aging poet trying to reconnect with his sons, his life and his past.
5. Door Lock
(도어락)
(도어락)
6. Our Body
(아워바디)
(아워바디)
Another very impressive debut this year was Han Ga-ram’s Korean Academy of Film Arts (KAFA) graduation project Our Body. We’ve seen many low-budget tales of youth suffocated by Korean society but Han’s work gives its protagonist purpose through the simple but effective motif of a hobby, in this case running. Moon Choi (aka Choi Hee-seo) is remarkable as the reticent lead who crafts a sense of self through her growing interest in exercise and her friendship with a fellow runner.
7. Believer
(독전)
(독전)
Johnnie To’s Drug War gets a stylish Korean revamp in Lee Hae-young’s lean action-thriller Believer. Bursting at the seems with glorious scenery chewing turns by the likes of Kim Joo-hyuk (in his final role prior to his untimely passing last year), Jin Seo-yeon, Park Hae-joon and Cha Seung-won, Believer is a slick actors’ showcase that embraces eccentricity.
MKC Review
8. The Spy Gone North
(공작)
(공작)
9. Herstory
(허스토리)
(허스토리)
The harrowing plight of Korean comfort woman, who were subjected to sexual slavery at the hands of the Japanese Empire’s military during and prior to World War II, has been captured several times on screen in a parade of mawkish and manipulative works such as I Can Speak and Spirits' Homecoming. Veteran director Min Kyu-dong reversed that trend this year with the (relatively) restrained and powerful Herstory. Kim Hee-ae and Kim Hae-sook lead a phenomenal cast in this story of strength in the face of adversity.
10. Little Forest
(리틀 포레스트)
(리틀 포레스트)
Yim Soon-rye returned with her eighth film this year, an adaption of the Japanese comic (already produced as a two-part Japanese film) Little Forest. Kim Tae-ri leads this youth drama that speaks to a generation of people suffocated by society and in need of a break. Beautifully filmed throughout, this delectable tale is the perfect antidote to urban fatigue.
11. Grass
(풀잎들)
(풀잎들)
12. A Good Business
(굿비스니스)
(굿비스니스)
The surprise of this year’s Jeonju International Film Festival was Lee Hark-joon’s unusual Jeonju Cinema Project, the North Korean defector documentary A Good Business. Focusing on a minister who runs a business getting defectors out of North Korea, the film presents a very frank view of its central character, who is presented as doing charitable work for potentially for very selfish reasons.
13. Ode to the Goose
(군산: 거위를 노래하다)
(군산: 거위를 노래하다)
Zhang Lu’s most playful and accessible film to date, Ode to the Goose is a witty tale consumed by questions of national identity. Intriguing tidbits of history loom around every corner, while a terrific cast (including a brilliant turn by Moon So-ri) keep the story rooted in the present.
14. The Great Battle
(안시성)
(안시성)
It could easily have been a big-budget dud, but period siege action-drama The Great Battle proved to be one of the year’s greatest surprises. Energetic and epic, Kim Kwang-sik’s film for the most part sidesteps nationalist fervor and the dour political wrangling that mars most of Korea’s period films. Think Korean The Two Towers without orcs or elves.
15. The Return
(회귀)
(회귀)
Providing an intimate look at the journey that Korean adoptees go through when they return to their motherland to find their parents, Malene Choi’s work provides rare insight into a difficult and complex set of themes centered around identity and belonging. As the film echoes the director's own experiences, The Return feels both raw and innocent during a search that is at turns frustrating, uplifting and sometimes rather strange.
Honorable Mentions
Adulthood (어른도감)
Army (군대)
Army (군대)
Be With You (지금 만나러 갑니다)
Clean Up (호흡)
Clean Up (호흡)
Dark Figure of Crime (암수살인)
Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (곤지암)
Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (곤지암)
Graduation (졸업)
Intimate Strangers (완벽한 타인)
On Your Wedding Day (너의 결혼식)
Winter's Night (겨울밤에)
Do kyung soo 축하해 :) *.*
ReplyDeletenice thanks for this
ReplyDeleteIn my country(Hungary) we had a chance to see Burning only .I can't compare it to the other movies on this list, but I think it really deserves an Oscar.
ReplyDeleteYes to BURNING. It's the best movie of this year!
ReplyDeleteWhat’s the nane of the pic with the girls at the top?
ReplyDeleteIt's from SWING KIDS
DeleteWhere can I watch House of Hummingbird
ReplyDeleteIt will have its first international screening at the Berlin International Film Festival next month. Hopefully it will make the rounds after that, but as an indie film it is unlikely to become available everywhere.
DeleteThanks for the "to watch list"
ReplyDeleteJust like last year and the years before, I gotta wait until they become available in dvd/br format or streaming.
As for the Oscars... well, who cares :)
I'd love to watch all of these, but it's not like they're going to be aired on cinemas abroad (barely in Korea, as I understand it ...). The "illegal" options aren't too many either. I wouldn't mind paying for quality Korean movies, but is there anywhere I can do that? When I've tried Netflix and other services like it, there's basically nothing (which I don't really understand, I can't imagine Korean low-budget movies being very expensive to acquire). I'd be very happy for your suggestions!
ReplyDeleteA number of these are recent release are still early on their festival runs, but it's true that the indie particularly may hard to track down. Although with streaming options beginning to cast a wider (beyond Netflix) I hope some of these smaller titles may find a home in the near future.
DeleteThis works with a VPN - https://www.ondemandkorea.com/
DeleteThis is a topic that's close to my heart...
ReplyDeleteTake care! Where are your contact details though?
Do not forget to ask your kids about what's on TV or in cable schedule for the day. You would be updated with the latest shows that they may or may not watch while you are away.free movies online stream on watch4hd.com
ReplyDeleteFinally been able to watch Burning.
ReplyDeleteAs you have mentioned in your review; it's an absolutely wonderful film. A thought-provoking film as all this directors films are. Could he have made the end as non violent and mysterious as the rest of film... Maybe
The scenes are beautiful and here you'll see the true talent of these actors without the usual Korean stereotypes
It's a piece of art
Nice post, thanks for suggestion.
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ReplyDeleteKorean cinema is flourishing across all genres. Whether you want to feel romantic, giggly, frightened or otherwise, these movies have all you need. The cinema of South Korea refers to the film industry of South Korea from 1945 to present.
ReplyDeleteWhere can I possibly rewatch these movies? Looks good!
ReplyDeleteHow about top Korean movies in 2022?
ReplyDelete