Tuesday, August 24, 2010

"Welcome to Dongmagol" 2005

Welcome to Dongmakgol is a surrealistic, magical look at a fictional village surrounded by a war raging around them. They are innocents in an Edenic setting. Dongmakgol becomes a microcosm where the outside war is brought in by a crashed American pilot, some South Korena deserters, and some North Korean soldiers who have gotten separated from their troops.


There’s so much going on in this small, charming film that I will break up this discussion over a couple of posts. Today let’s just talk about this movie's cultural impact. Originally, this was a play. Cinematically it has more in common with surreal films lie Amélie and Donnie Darko. Unfortunately, Americans do NOT come across very well represented and rightfully so. The crashed pilot is anything but a goodwill ambassador, shouting profanity to the point that the children around him begin repeating. Fanz Fanon wrote that true colonization begins with language. In a film where America is suppsoed to be fighting the spread of COmmunism...it's obvious the message after 50 years...Americans are still in orea...the Communists are not.

No matter how tense the Korean soldiers get, threatening each other with guns (no bullets though), the villagers continue to try daily life as usual in some very funny stalemates. Unfortunately, the Korean soldiers accidentally blow up the village’s food supply and are circumstantially forced to help them replenish the supplies. While doing so, the soldiers and the American find a common bond…who’d ever think killing a wild boar would focus such emotions?

The film is beautifully shot (lots of CGI) and the acting is impeccable. It’s so easy to play fantasy over the top, but director PARK Kwang-hyun manages to steer his cast clear of clichés. Making a film about the Korean war will always be a touchy subject, but given this idyllic setting and fantastical plot, even up to the ultimate sacrifice the soldiers decide to make in the end, this film is a great one for any American wishing to see from a Korean perspective what the Korean War was about…the disconnection of human emotion in the name of duty and idealism and how it’s possible to regain some dignity in the face of war atrocities.

Easily one of the top ten Korean films ever made.

Monday, August 23, 2010

"Marine Boy" 2009

Today’s film came to me through the generous efforts of a colleague who recently went to Korea and so admirably trekked across Seoul to a specific book store called Seoul Selection (Hank’s Book store from the outside) with a list of films I had E-mailed her. Thanks to her efforts I was able to watch Marine Boy, a guilty pleasure of an action movie.


Suffice it to say this is not one of those films Americans watching will see anything new from. Hollywood is the undisputed king of the action movie. So just know up front there’s no new ground covered here cinematically, lie say in the movie Shiri or even Nowhere to Hide.

There are good guys who we root for (even though the main character isn’t that sympathetic…simply handsome with a swimmer’s build) and bad guys who almost chew the scenery frothing at the mouth.

There are plots and plot twists so convoluted and strained that at one point I couldn’t keep up. A part of me was saying, “This is such crap” while another part was saying, “Man, these are pretty people!” The only twist I didn’t predict was the very end. I mean I knew there’d be a happy ending for the main couple, but director YUN Jogn-seok pulled one over on me.

Without giving too much of the “plot” away…hehehehe…Choen-soo (played by the dashing, sometimes even likeable KIM Kang-woo) is a swimming coach, a job incidental to the plot…not that we ever see him coaching…all we see him do is gamble and get into trouble. He falls into hard times and to pay off a gambling debt (tired plot device #1 of many) he agrees to swim drugs across from Japan to Korea. There’s lots of double crossing (even in the back story) and suffice it to say that by the end it’s a veritable battle royal on a cliff between four people all with an axe to grind. Whatever happened to “Can’t we all just get along?”

The camera work is superb, special effects…check! I would have loved to see more ocean scenes…I mean this is called Marine Boy after all, but alas most of them are at night in what looked to me like Titanic’s CGI leftovers. For me the most enjoyment came from watching JO Jae-hyun as the Head gangster who hires/extorts Choen-soo to swim for him (I loved him in Hanbando) replay when ased, “Do I have a choice?” His character says, “Choice is for the winners. And when a winner gives you a choice…there’s really no choice.” Very Zen.

So not much to hoot about, just a fun, mindless, pretty film with just enough shooting to keep the foreign folk happy. This film is definitely worth seeing for fun, but don’t leave all your willing suspension of disbelief laying around. This movie will soak it all up!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

"The Murmuring" 1995

Today’s film is actually one of the few documentaries that make this list. It’s called The Murmuring (1995). It was directed by BYUN Yonug-joo, and is the first in a three part documentary series on Korea’s Comfort Women (the other two documentaries are Habitual Sadness and My Own Breathing). This documentary is about a support group for Korean Comfort Women who meet once a week to protest against the Japanese government.


During World War II, the Japanese Imperial government conscripted (many say ‘enslaved’) females to sexually service the Japanese soldiers on several fronts. Every week these survivors meet and protest, demanding not only an open apology, but reparations as well. Many of these women would settle for Japan to even acknowledge the heinous act.

The documentary is very low key and the women are allowed to be completely candid and uninhibited. We are shown their struggle to find normalcy in a world that has abused them and the discarded them without recognition of their plight.

BYUN’s film represents a blatant challenge to the patriarchal view of history and narrative and was a political time bomb for Korean/Japanese relations. BYUN’s work constantly raises challenges to patriarchal society in Korea.

The Murmuring does not shy away from details either. We learn that from 1932 to 1945 over 200,000 females were forced sex slaves of the Japanese Imperial Army. While the majority were Korean, many were from other Asian countries as well. Their whole existence was subjugation to multiple rapes daily. Over 70% died before the end of the war. Due to Confucian codes, many were thought to be unmarriageable. The documentary poignantly depicts the deep sense of shame these women felt as they were abandoned by their own families, at least the ones who were even allowed repatriation.

This documentary makes no use of dramatic reenactments. There is not a recounting of the horrors these women faced. There’s no old footage to add verisimilitude. All the clichés of the genre are wisely avoided. What is then emphasized is the strength of these women allowed to show their bond through activism. And that is pretty powerful stuff. You can find all three of these documentaries in a beautiful box set . Enjoy.

Friday, August 20, 2010

"Sweet Dream" 1936

Yeah, for today's flick we're going old school, and I do mean OLD. This film can be found in a box set called "The Past Unearthed." For all you black & white movie haters, get over yourselves. You’d think that in this complicated world in which we live, you’d be able to appreciate the simplicity of a black and white movie. There, somebody get this soapbox out from under me!


Sweet Dream (with the tag title “Lullaby of Death”…charming, eh? No foreshadowing there!) is one of Korea’s oldest films that still survives. Directed by first-timer TANG Joo-nam, this was the first Korean film to make use of ambient sound recordings (i.e. car horns honking in street scenes, etc.) and was the third talkie in Chosun, a technical marvel at the time.

The reason Americans should watch this is because it shows how a completely diverse culture from our own deals cinematically with the same issues of gender expectations that Western culture also had to deal with. This is a tragic morality tale about what could happen to a female who is seduced by the modern world of materialism.

Ae-soon (played by actress MOON Ye-bong) is a housewife who wants more out of life. From the first two images of the film (a stationary, stable tree panning up to a bird in a cage) the audience is given its too visual metaphors for females in Korean society of the time. The visual landscapes explored in this film would have fascinated movie goers of the day. In an attempt to escape her ‘cage’, Ae-soon is seen going to hotels, cafes, a dance theater, and a beauty shop. Director TANG made use of extensive tracking shots to add to the audience’s sense of movement making this an impressive technological achievement for its time.

So frightening was the advancement of modernization that this film included an extended shot of a driving safety class. This would have been to assuage the fears of viewers also dealing with these modern machines rolling all over the place in big cities. In the end of the film, Ae-soon is hurrying after the dancer she has fallen for in a taxi and she keeps encouraging the taxi driver to speed. He politely refuses reminding her that speeding is illegal. This seems more of a public service announcement than a cinematic achievement;  however, it functions as a narrative device as well.

For me, though, the fascination of this movie lies in the characterization of Ae-soon. Before I saw this film, I would say the best depiction of the modern Korean woman as destructive social force would have to be the character of Sun-young from Madame Freedom (an amazing film achievement we’ll get to some day when I feel like writing a lot!). The difference is that Ae-soon is unsympathetic from the start and remains so until, well, I’m not sure she ever gets our sympathy! She tries in the end, but it’s a bit too little too late.

In the opening, she sits facing a mirror while her husband sits facing another direction reading the newspaper. The scene design is stark vertical lines reinforcing the impression that Ae-soon lives in a cage. They get into an argument because Ae-soon wants to go shopping. This reinforces her vanity for the audience, and when we find out that she’s buying clothes for herself instead of for her daughter Jeong-hee, she has lost our sympathy from the get-go. Before she leaves, there is a discussion about ‘face’ or losing face. Face is an important part of Korean culture and tradition. Ae-soon’s flippant disregard of such a concern would also have shocked viewers. The case against her is mounting. When her husband asks, “How can a housewife not care about housekeeping?” She replies simply that he should divorce her at which point he is then reflected in her mirror, boxed in as if HE were the one living in a cage.

Ae-soon continues to illustrate all the things a Korean woman should NOT be: she treats her daughter rudely, she buys the most expensive dress in the shop, she drinks with a stranger. Back at home, the husband has had enough and tries to remind her that her identity is that of Jeong-hee’s mother. When she curses him, he calls her an “animal bitch.” Things are not going well. He gets violent and the only thing that saves her is the pleading of the daughter. Ae-soon leaves and gets a hotel room with her lover (whom later she finds out is broke, a crook, and she turns him into the police without a single qualm). While she is out, her daughter dreams of her mother. This would lead the audience to believe is the ‘sweet dream’ of the title, but by the end of the film we see that it’s more an ironic nod to a dream of modern life that many subjugated females probably shared.

Ae-soon attends a dance show and falls for one of the lead dancers. Ironically, he is shown sitting in front of a mirror putting on make up much the same way as Ae-soon was shown in the beginning. This alignment may be hopeful, but this is a tragic melodrama after all. The ultimate irony though is that Ae-soon is in a taxi chasing after the dancer, encouraging the driver to go faster and faster, the driver refusing saying, “I might have an accident,” when boom! You guessed it. The taxi hits her daughter crossing the street. This has to be one of the most ludicrously contrived plot devices in cinema history (well except maybe every time James Bond is given the exact kind of gadgets he needs to help him escape in EVERY Bond film).

So here we are at the end of the film and our naughty girl has to face punishment for her desires of a modern, care-free, FUN life. Not to disappoint, director TANG shows us Ae-soon is redeemable buy making her so over the top dramatic at her daughter’s hospital bedside. Ultimately, she kills herself by drinking poison (which she just so happened to have in her purse) and her husband runs in with a gun to shoot her only to see her flop onto the floor…dead as a doornail. Jeong-hee still calls out for her mother and hubby looks off distantly to the heavens for support. Cut. Wrap. Print. Oscar! Not hardly, but all of this in 48 minutes. I think modern daytime dramas could learn a bit from this flick.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

"The Classic" 2003

Okay, one thing to keep in mind is that this blog is not about the best movies ever made. Beginning with The Classic is an exception though. This is not the best movie ever made, but it is definitely one of the best examples of melodrama. It is also a fine example of how a director can take cliché and reshape it for the viewer into something... well classic.


My goal here is not to recap the plots of every movie discussed; however, it is to let Americans know exactly why they need to watch Korean movies. The long and short of why Americans NEED to see this film can be summed up easily: CHO Seung-woo. He is one of South Korea's most popular actors and rightly so. He may not be a national treasure like AHN Sung-ki (yet!), but he is well on his way, racking up an impressive list of film credits and stage performances, a few of which will definitely make this blog list!

That having been said, let's look at the film.

It's hard to know where to start. First, there's little original about this film. It is literally laden with every romantic cliché imaginable (there are even fireflies...HA!). There are enough tear-jerking moments to keep Kleenex in business in perpetuity. By setting the film in part in flashback, film director KWAK Jae-yong manages to imbue a nostalgic tone without sanctimony. By using found letters as the vehicle into the past, we are spared too many cinematic tricks to force us there.

The overall tone is definitely melancholy, yet hopeful. We like the leads (Joo-Hee played by actress SON Ye-jin and Joon-ha played by my man CHO Seung-woo) we are watching, and we root for them because they are innocents whose attraction is out of step with their circumstances. We also root for them because no matter what they feel, they follow the rules of Korean society. They put family and friendship ahead of their own selfish (or not so selfish) desires.

Friendship is definitely a part of life examined in this film. Sacrifice in the name of friendship begins when the two main characters face their first melodramatic complication. Joo-hee is betrothed to Joon-ha’s best friend Tae-su. I know, right?! But Tae-su understands and allows his buddy to use his names in the letters written to Joo-hee. When Tae-su’s father finds out, he beats him and this inspires an unsuccessful suicide attempt. Guilt-driven, this causes Joon-ha to flee to the military and a tour in Vietnam. I know, I know...stick with me; it gets much worse.

The two protagonists timing is always off, much like in Same Time next Year by Neal Simon; however, THAT was a comedy. Here' we've got blindness and death to deal with. I won't go on because I'm not interested in spoiling anything...right? Suffice it to say it reads on the blog much more heavy handed than it reads on celluloid.

Why should Americans see this film? 1) Because there's not a real sinister moment in the film and 2) because it really is a guilty pleasure to witness such pure emotion denied until the end and even after death we see that devotion to the concept of true love can withstand the realities of life...even in spite of the fireflies. There's an ironic twist at the end that really pushes the boundaries of reality, but by this time if you've jumped into the cliché vs. classic pool...you're hooked and weeping tears of joy.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Here's how I hope this is going to work!

Wow,
Thanks for your interest in Korean Movies. I have taught twice in South Korea and the second time there I fell madly in love with the Korean film industry. I am creating this blog in an attempt to help guide others to these amazing films. Of course they all won't be amazing in an art-house-award-winning kind of way, but let's hope I'll be able to intrigue you enough to go rent them somewhere. I will try to include as many film details as I can, but I'll have to do it in Enlgish since my computer doesn't type Hangul. So if I misspell any actors' names...my appologies. Any comments or questions you'd like to leave...feel free. I'd really like to know if anybody is reading this.

Now here's the hard part...I am a teacher at a boarding school and finding the time to watch a movie every day will be tough, but I am determined to do it. So, tomorrow I will begin with a Korean classic called appropirately enough...The Classic.

My rating system for movies will be a scale of 0-5 Bricks. Cute, right?!

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