Showing posts with label 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014. Show all posts
Monday, February 9, 2015
Coming Attractions: SOCIALPHOBIA Logs on to Korean Screens This March
By Rex Baylon
I love a good mystery and Hong Seok-jae's feature debut Socialphobia, opening in Korean theaters on March 12, has it in spades. Centering on a couple of police cadets played by Byun Yo-han and Lee Joo-seung sniffing around for clues about an online user with the handle Re-Na who made waves by posting a vicious comment about a dead soldier. These wannabe Hardy Boys eventually track her down, but before they can wring an apology out of her they are shocked to find something else.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Review: FUTURELESS THINGS, A Bright, Gleaming Comedy Well-Stocked With Laughs
By Rex Baylon
Towards the latter half of Kim Kyung-mook's Futureless Things, a niggling question kept popping into my head, "Why a convenience store? What makes a convenience store the perfect spot for this peculiar film?" I racked my brain trying to find an answer, hoping that maybe if I could discover the answer Kim's film might not be so muddled for me. Thinking about all the seemingly random events that transpired during the film's 105 minute runtime I came away with one thought: set anywhere else, this film, a not-so subtle commentary on the modern day South Korean psyche, would have been bogged down by a lot of dramatic cliches if it had been shot in an office, a classroom or even a cafe, in turn diluting a lot of the satire and replacing it with obtuse social commentary.
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
Review: Grand and Mysterious, THE AVIAN KIND Soars
A great many gems have emerged from the Korean independent scene of late, but some worry that the milieu lacks the unique voices that it used to cultivate 10 to 15 years ago. Director Shin Yeon-shick may already be on his fifth film, but with his latest work The Avian Kind, the filmmaker has positioned himself as a fresh and distinct voice, challenging the realist aesthetic that defines the contemporary indie field.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Review: GYEONGJU, Not Just a Place But an Idea
By Rex Baylon
“You can't go back home to your family, back home to your childhood... back home to a young man's dreams of glory and of fame... back home to places in the country, back home to the old forms and systems of things which once seemed everlasting but which are changing all the time – back home to the escapes of Time and Memory.”
- Thomas Wolfe
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Review: Meditative POHANG HARBOR Doesn't Quite Connect
In a country with so many hardships out in the open and an unspoken swell of pain swirling just beneath the surface, there needs to be a release valve for the frustrations of ordinary citizens. In Korea, that role is often taken on by cinema.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: VENUS TALK Drowns Out Despite Strong Female Stars
Part of MKC's coverage of the 19th Busan International Film Festival
By Pierce Conran
As a fan of Moon So-ri and production company Myung Films, I felt that I should be excited about Venus Talk, their first collaboration since Im Sang-soo’s excellent A Good Lawyer’s Wife (2003). But on the other hand, with its middle-aged female cast and heavy Sex and the City parallels, I was never this film’s intended audience. Given the lack of strong female roles in today’s Korean film industry, I’m glad to see a major film like this come along but that still doesn’t mean this particular offering held much appeal for me.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: HAN RIVER Ponders Urban Malaise in Contemporary Korea
By Pierce Conran
With black and white lensing, cheerful yet destitute protagonists and the absence of a clear narrative, the philosophical vagabond film Han River, benefits from a style and focus that sets it apart from the bulk of recent Korean indie fare, yet its offbeat musings and muddled pacing will leave some viewers wanting something a little more concrete.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: WILD FLOWERS Wilts After A Bristling Start
By Pierce Conran
The lives of aimless youths at the bottom of the social ladder are the focus of Wild Flowers, a bleak look into teenage destitution in the streets and back alleys of Seoul. Uncompromising in its focus and brisk in its introduction to the sordid realities of a gaggle of bristly girls, Park Suk-young’s debut is a kinetic but unfocused snapshot of wayward youth.
Busan 2014 Review: DAUGHTER Explores The Ills Of Modern Korean Parenting
By Pierce Conran
Following a pair of indulgent films that awkwardly straddled the balance between fantasy and reality, the multi-hyphenate Ku Hye-sun, a well known actress, singer and artist as well as director, returns with Daughter, her most mature work to date.
Monday, October 6, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: WE WILL BE OK Hits Its Stride Too Late In The Game
By Pierce Conran
Writers are told to write about what they know, so it stands to reason that the same rule should apply to filmmakers. As a result, many films take place within the film world and in the Korean industry this proves no exception. Indie debut We Will Be OK highlights the divide between the amateur and professional worlds in Korean film, placing emphasis on the inner anxieties that plague aspiring filmmakers.
Saturday, October 4, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: Cool KUNDO: AGE OF THE RAMPANT Has Some Swagger In Its Step
Part of MKC's coverage of the 19th Busan International Film Festival
By Pierce Conran
Busan 2014 Review: ENTANGLED Gets Caught Up in Its Own Depressing Narrative
Part of MKC's coverage of the 19th Busan International Film Festival
By Pierce ConranFollowing the blistering debut Fatal, a gritty rape-revenge thriller that bowed at the Busan Film Festival in 2012, Lee Don-ku returns to Busan with the disappointing family drama Entangled. Though it seeks to inspire a similar sense of shock and outrage with its raw family dynamics and desperate plot turns, Lee's matter-of-fact mise-en-scene and his narrative's inherent histrionics combine to form a humdrum and overly familiar Korean indie.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: A HARD DAY Is Easy-to-Love Genre Cinema
Part of MKC's coverage of the 19th Busan International Film Festival
By Pierce Conran
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Review: PLAN MAN Takes A Few Wrong Turns
By Pierce Conran
The 2014 commercial Korean film calendar kicked off with Plan Man, a light and colorful romantic comedy that carries on in a straightforward manner with plenty of humor until a second half that squeezes in some subtle commentary on the regimented lifestyle of working Korean citizens.
Jung-seok is a librarian with a case of obsessive compulsive disorder. He gets up at the same time every day and plans the rest of his life down to the minute, to the point where he even catches the same street light just as it turns green on his way to work in the morning. He falls for a convenience store attendant who exhibits similar tendencies but when she professes a desire for someone who can challenge her nervous tendency to keep everything in its place, he decides to shake up the strict order in his life to steal her heart. He does so with the help of So-jung, a singer-songwriter who is his exact opposite. Though it's someone just like him who first caught his eye, perhaps he will discover that opposites do indeed attract.
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Review: Borderline Life - DEAR DICTATOR Re-Frames the Gaze South
By David Bell
Renowned for his unflinching examinations of the socially, economically and culturally marginalised within South Korean society, Lee Sang-woo’s surefooted seventh feature Dear Dictator (2014) presents a wry meditation on the lives of several disadvantaged South Korean youths exposed to the propagandist gaze of a mysterious North Korean onlooker.
Friday, August 1, 2014
Review - Cool KUNDO: AGE OF THE RAMPANT Has Some Swagger In Its Step
By Pierce Conran
Monday, May 19, 2014
Cannes 2014 Review: A HARD DAY Is Easy-to-Love Genre Cinema
By Pierce Conran
Monday, March 10, 2014
News: HAN GONG-JU Picks Up Three Awards At Deauville Asian Film Festival
By Patryk Czekaj
There's no stopping Han Gong-ju, a little South Korean indie that's taking the film festival circuit by storm. Since its world premiere at the Busan International Film Festival last October, Lee Su-jin's debut feature has won many awards at major film festivals around the world, starting with the Citizen Reviewers' and CGV Movie Collage Award on native soil, at the aforementioned BIFF.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
News: Jeon Do-yeon And Kim Yoon-seok In Talks for New Lee Yoon-ki Film
By Rex Baylon
For those Korean film fans that have an affinity for quiet settings and slightly damaged female characters, the films of Lee Yoon-ki have acted as cinematic catnip. Having made a reputation for himself in the film festival circuit for Rohmerian style dramas featuring female protagonists muted by some tragic event in the past the director has been off the radar since 2011 after the release of his fourth feature, Come Rain Come Shine. There have been various rumors about forthcoming projects and though none have added up to much news has surfaced that award-winning actress Jeon Do-yeon (Secret Sunshine, 2007; Happy End, 1999) and superstar Kim Yoon-seok (Thieves, 2012; The Chaser, 2008) are in talks to star in Lee’s fifth feature, titled A Man and a Woman.
Produced by b.o.m Film with an agreement by CJ Entertainment
to distribute the finished picture, the new project would
reunite Lee with Jeon after their 2008 collaboration My Dear Enemy, which played at several festivals around the world and
became a critical darling. The only thing confirmed
about the script is that the film will focus on the passionate relationship of middle-aged lovers. Of course, all this pondering on the plot will be moot if
the two actors can’t reach an agreement with Lee and the producers.
Though Jeon and Kim have shown strong interest in working with Lee on this project both actors already have full schedules this year with Jeon Do-yeon appearing with Lee Byung-heon in the period drama Memories of the Sword and Kim Yoon-seok pulling double duty on Sea Fog and the upcoming Tazza sequel.
Reviews and features on Korean film appear regularly on Modern Korean Cinema. For film news, external reviews, and box office analysis, take a look at the Korean Box Office Update, Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Korean Reviews, which appear weekly on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings (Korean Standard Time).
Friday, February 21, 2014
News: Three Wins for South Korean Cinema at this Year's Berlin Film Festival
By Rex Baylon
As the Berlin International Film Festival closes its doors
for another year Korean cinema was not completely left out of the loop, even if
no films from South Korea made it into the main festival competition. Two
documentaries A Dream of Iron and Non Fiction Diary both took home a
NETPAC Prize for Best Asian Film and Sprout
was awarded the Crystal Bear for Best Short in the Generation Kplus section.
Having both premiered at last year’s Busan International
Film Festival (BIFF) Non Fiction Diary,
a harrowing documentary about South Korea in the early 1990s when true
democracy was still in its infancy, won
the Mecenat award for Best Documentary and Sprout,
a charming tale of a little girl’s quest to get some bean sprouts for her
grandfather’s funerary rites, received
a special mention for the Sonje Award. While A Dream of Iron, a stylishly done picture about the POSCO
steelmaking factory in Pohang, had its world premier at this year’s Berlinale
Forum section.
Last year, other South Korean films like Cheong, Shin Su-won’s Pluto (2012), Hong Sang-soo’s Nobody’s Daughter Haewon have all
received awards and accolades at the Berlin Film Festival and this year
continues the trend, proving that South Korea’s indie film scene is still going
strong.
Source:
Reviews and features on Korean film appear regularly on Modern Korean Cinema. For film news, external reviews, and box office analysis, take a look at the Korean Box Office Update, Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Korean Reviews, which appear weekly on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings (Korean Standard Time).
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)