Here's a collection of Korean cinema reviews I wrote at HTF. I've noticed at many sites, people often recommend the high-profile arthouse films and high-concept action movies. Which is cool, but Korean cinema seems to thrive on dramas and comedies more than anything else, so this collection features a healthy infusion of those as well. Be aware that some of these are not good films, in my opinion, and the rating at the end of each review will indicate such. Hopefully this gets you started:
BRIAN'S PARTIAL GUIDE TO KOREAN CINEMA
BARKING DOGS NEVER BITE (AKA: A Higher Animal) (2001) Delightful black comedy with a signature role for Tube’s Bae Doo-na as a plucky girl who witnesses a henpecked student throw a dog that annoyed him off the roof of a neighboring apartment building, and proceeds to hunt him down for the rest of the movie. Things get funkier when the guy realizes he tossed the wrong animal! One memorable scene has crusader Bae, in her ubiquitous yellow windbreaker, chasing the villain across rooftops in slow motion, while in the background, hundreds of imagined onlookers, also in her trademark attire, cheer her on! Many may cringe at the apartment janitor with an affinity for dog meat, but the filmmakers wisely treat this as an everyday occurence - not some shock gross-out thing as most Westerners might be inclined to expect - and acknoledge it as part of the culture. 9
BICHUNMOO (2001) This is a fantastic period swordplay film, based on a Korean comic book, with a nice tragic love story, wicked HK-style choreography, stunning costumes and glossy production values. The soundtrack blends traditional orchestrations with pounding percussive rock beats during the fight scenes and, as such, is surprisingly effective. I'm sure this movie's been written up in these forums before, as it is available in the US (through Tai Seng, I believe), so folks likely found it at their local Best Buy. Leading man Shin Hyun-june has a brooding face that was practically designed for a role like this. The Korean DVD of the film is uncut. 9.
CRAZY FIRST LOVE (2003) Directed by Oh Jong-rok. Typically overblown tragicomedy that signifies much of what westerners find inacessible about Korean cinema and, to some extent, the Korean psyche. Let’s call this lecture Misogyny and the Posessive, Overgrown Man-Child. To protect the virtue of his daughter (Son Ye-jin), an authoritarian high-school teacher (Yoo Dong-geun) sets - and keeps changing - unreasonable standards for the young slacker (MY SASSY GIRL’s Cha Tae-hyn) who has loved her since childhood, then must work with him when she grows tired of their constant meddling and surveillance and becomes involved with another man. Korean men do not come off particularly well in this film (but then,that would depend on who you asked). They’re either shallow gadflies or control freaks with maturity issues. How fitting, then, that the only way the male filmmakers could rationalize their crazed behaviour in the greater social theme of things is to slap the progressive-minded female lead with myelodysplastic syndrome, the same terminal disease - read punishment - that killed her mother at 18. Faced with her own immortality, and in a scene far, far too reminiscent of MY SASSY GIRL, we finally discover why she couldn’t be with the man who has gone to insane lengths to win her affection and why she could be with a lothario who will one day find happiness with yet another woman. While it’s tough to deny the calculation behind emotional scenes like those that end this film - and in Korean cinema scenes like these are legion - one can’t shake the feeling that for Korean comedic cinema - indeed much of Korean cinema in general - to truly move on and perhaps capture a larger international audience, Korean filmmakers may need to dispense with a great deal of the contrived, subtly misogynistic heartstring manipulation that, ultimately, reinforces dated stereotypes about patriarchy, makes childish men look like pariahs and punishes women for thinking outside the box. People crying on mountaintops (and this film is has one!) are starting to wear thin. See also SEX IS ZERO for a similar treatment of these themes. 3
DITTO (2000) If you CAN handle Korean schmaltz and like a good cry, this sorta-sci-fi romance will do the trick. Taking a cue from the Hollywood film FREQUENCY, it deals with a female student who meets a fellow student via her shortwave radio - only he's in 2000 and she's in 1979. This gorgeously filmed story manages to defy expectations twice, first when the guy realizes the girl knows the people who will become his parents and second, at the climax, when the guy decides to see how life turned out for the girl and finds discovers a bittersweet answer. Great date movie, provide your date isn't too cynical. 8
THE HARMONIUM IN MY MEMORY (1999) Sweet, simple tale of a naive country girl who gets a crush on her newly-arrived teacher, an engaged, educated city boy who at first dismisses her silly efforts to impress him as so much childish infatuation, but soon comes to realize, thanks to a convenient development in one of the secondary characters, how much she really cares. 9
IL MARE (2001) Another soapy time-travel romance that, if you watch it in the right frame of mind, could have you in tears. It's about a guy who finds a letter in the mailbox of his new seaside rental house from the previous tenant advising him about little things that haven't happened yet, like the paw prints his dog leaves on the floor days later! In trying to meet the woman who wrote the letter, he come to realize she lives about a year or two ahead of him in the timeline, and lived in the house after he vacated it. He asks her to find him in the future, but she can't... Like DITTO, the film manages to defy conventions on a couple of occasions, and it's internal logic is solid enough that you don't think about it too hard. Another great date film, again provided you're not too cynical about such things. 9
JAKARTA (2000) This one almost never gets mentioned on the Korean film websites, and yet I believe it cracked the top ten that year). It's a twisty comic heist movie about three "teams" of thieves who independently plan to rob the same bank on the same day, which causes no end of pandemonium and confusion, or does it? Clever mid-film twist paints nearly all the characters in a new light and reveals a much more intriguing plot has been afoot all along. Excellent ensemble cast, including SEX IS ZERO leading man Lim Chang-jung. Worth hunting down, and still available at some online retailers. Nice K-pop theme ballad, too. 10
MARRYING THE MAFIA (2002) D: Jung hung-sun is a somewhat-above-avarage romantic mob "Jopok" comedy, made at a time when such films were in vogue (see MY BOSS, MY HERO, MY WIFE IS A GANGSTER, and SAVING MY HUBBY, among others) in which a straight-laced business executive Dae-suh (Jung Jun-ho of MY BOSS, MY HERO) and a somewhat mousy lab tech Jin-kyung (an absolutely charming Kim Jung-eun) wake up in bed together with no recollection of how they got there or what they did. They part company in a rather disgusted huff, but he's soon visited by her three brothers, low class members of a local crime family, who inform him of her family lineage and forcibly encourage him to pursue the relationship with their sister...or else! Meanwhile, the relationship proceed in fits and starts with neither Dae-suh or Jin-kyung aware of the behind-the-scenes machinations that are drawing them ever closer to true love. High-concept, if conventional, story is somewhat undermined by an uninvolving side-story detailing older brother Park Sang-wook's attempts to woo a pretty schoolteacher, as well as the increasingly ubiquitous need in Korean gangster comedies to have a nasty rival gang with which the good guys are forced to wage bloody, baseball-bat-swinging war, this time at a dance club and climactic family event. The situational humour shines through, though, particularly in a scene where Dae-suh's parents meet their soon-to-be in-laws, in another where Jin-kyung confronts Dae-suh's sneaky ex-girlfriend and in various vignettes in which the three brothers go to great lengths to create ideal "romantic situations" to help further the relationship. Overall an enjoyably cute comedy with not-unexpected sidesteps into moderate violence and an overly contrived climax, but also an interesting take on the common Korean filmic theme of "constructed relationships," hardly surpring, once supposes, in a country where arranged marriages were for many years the norm: essentially this film and many like it simply dress up old-school thinking in new clothing, but with a winning wink-wink sensibility. This was the top domestic movie of 2002. 7.
Incidentally, I can't say exactly what has been cut from MARRYING THE MAFIA’s Hong Kong DVD release as I haven't seen the Korean version, but I do know the HK edition omits what I've read is a scene where the older brothers brassy wife beats up a teacher at the local high school, probably over something to do with the son. A scene with the older of the three brothers talking to his son outside the school is still there, as is the scene of the him joining the anti-school-violence protest, yelling to his minions on a cell-phone to "kill the motherfucker," and scaring a couple of the female teachers. This whole section of the film feels like something's missing.
Same goes for the second-to-third act transition, where there's a very abrupt cut from the scene where Dae-suh chases down Jin-kyung, who's running away from all the craziness (and Dae-suh), to the third-act climax that closes the film (which I won't describe since it would be a major spoiler).
In fact, the cut is so abrupt, I actually thought I was watching some kind of fantasy sequence before getting to the real ending!
It actually seems as though some major kiss-and-make-up dialogue between the two leads was taken out of this part of the movie, but I don't know why, considering all the bat-swinging violence was left intact.
I would only recommend the HK version because it's cheap. The cuts, unfortunately, make the director seem like he has a bad sense of pacing, which I highly doubt based on the majority of the film. I would have to think the Korean edition is a much better experience, plus it's loaded with extras.
MY SASSY GIRL (2001) At the time of its release, this was the number two Korean box-office hit of 2001 (after the much gloomier FRIEND). Clever story of a layabout student who briefly looks after a drunken girl who, at first, seems to represent everything he dislikes in a woman, but who's complicated nature keeps him from simply walking away. Very perceptive study of contemporary relationships, particularly in Korea, and surprisingly balanced in light of the uniquely Korean tendency toward hyper-melodrama. Granted, the first climax will have you bawling, while the second nicely folds the narrative back to the beginning of the film. Long, but extremely rewarding. 10.
NATURAL CITY (2003) Directed by Min Byong-chan. Arresting productions design and state-of-the-art visual effects can’t disguise a dull plot that borrows so liberally from BLADE RUNNER and GHOST IN THE SHELL that the word “tribute” wouldn't stave off legal action. To date, this is probably the most beautiful looking AND most vapid Korean science fiction film to come down the pipeline, and one feels almost guilty in knocking it in spite of the undeniable amount of craftsmanship that went into it. Set in a futuristic megacity in the year 2080, it’s about a sullen policeman (Yu Ji-tae) who wants to extend the life of his beautiful android dancer Ria (Seo Rin) by finding a new host for her brain-chip. As she’s nearing her sell-by date, which requires her complete destruction, this puts him at odds with fellow cop Noma (Yun Chan) and evil android Roy Batty...err...evil uber-android Jeon Doo-hong, who has plans on accessing android headquarters and programming a massive robot uprising. Flying police cars, slow-floating dirigibles with gigantic projection screens, rain drenched outdoor noodle stands, endlessly vertical skyscrapers forming a mountain of technology in a post-war wasteland. We’ve seen all this before. And indeed, it all looks amazing here. But what’s missing is any depth of character to make the story more convincing. The leading man is a complete cipher whose motivations for prolonging the life of his robot are never explained or explored, and while his robot clearly has functional difficulties with her impending doom, Seo underplays these scenes to a fault, generating neither tension nor sympathy, only indifference about her fate. To give credit where it’s due, Korean is one of the few Asian countries - and one of the few countries outside of America and Japan - even attempting such high-minded science-fiction films as this, WONDERFUL DAYS, 2009 LOST MEMORIES, and YESTERDAY. One hopes that one day, the quality of screenwriting will improve to meet the superb level of technical artistry already apparent on screen. The 2-disc Special Edition DVD of this film has tonnes of interesting (unsubtitled) materials for those inspired by its technical merits, including an art gallery, a sketch gallery (tres Syd Mead), a 45 minute TV doc with plenty of behind the scenes and FX footage, a 24 minute DVD doc with more of the same, a 14 minute interview with the lead effects man, an 8.5 minute interview with the animator of the opening credits, 6 minutes of deleted scenes, an English language Cannes trailer that pumps up the action quotient, cast interviews and a 20 minute walking tour of the films locations with the director and lead actor. A cool easter egg can be found on disc 2 by arrowing up on the main menu to highlight “*REC”. This will give you access to what appears to be a 7 minute, effects laden music video about the plight of a country devastated by a nuclear attack, which almost feels like the backstory to the main feature. 5.
OH! BROTHERS (2003) Directed by Kim Yong-hwa. The number 6 box office charter of 2003, this is an odd, needlessly complicated tale of a debt collector/blackmail photographer/missing person finder Sang Woo (Lee Jung-jae) learning upon his father’s death that he has a half-brother - mentally deficient man-child Bong-ku (Lee Beom-su) - whose mother, if he can find her, will be legally forced to absolve him of his father’s hefty debt. Not surprisingly, Sang-woo discovers Bong-ku’s creepy affectations and appearance (at one point he’s dressed up like the killer doll Chucky in a dream sequence), make him the ideal “muscle” to have on the job, particularly when a sleazy cop forces Sang-woo to get staged adultery photos of the police superintendent in order to expand the jurisdiction of his extortion program. There’s also a subplot that sees the pair trying to unite a deaf woman, at the behest of her estranged sister, with their dying father and which mirrors much of the boys situation and allows for plenty of tears. Lee Beom-su’s performance as Bong-ku, written as the comedic centerpiece of the film, is largely played as a grown man who ACTS like a precocious ass rather than a grown man with a mental age of 12, thus undermining much of the pathos the filmmakers try to wring from his relationship with Sang-woo. Technical production is superb, with warm cinematography and an inviting production design ultimately servicing a thoroughly constructed central relationship that seems designed to feature as many piano-backed scenes of teary catharsis between sensitive new age Korean males. Moderate, but occasionally serious head slapping rates this a 4 on the Korean Cranial Abuse Scale. The overall movie rates a 4 as well.
OH HAPPY DAY! (2003) Directed and written by Yun Hang-ryeol. Wrongheaded, often irritating “comedy” purports to send up the the ubiquitous, vertically oriented Korean class structure, then ultimately plays by the rules as yet another “constructed romance” movie in which the goal for any girl who knows what she wants is to want a rich, educated prettyboy. Except in this case the gal, by all rights and no thanks to smart screenwriting, should be a secondary character who ultimately gets dumped in favour of leading lady Jang Na-ra, who spends nearly the entire movie looking and acting exactly like Rachel Dratch on Saturday Night Live (and I mean that in the meanest possible way) as a voice actress making life miserable for the shallow Club Med executron (Pak Jeong-chol) who denied her homely friend a spot on a singles group holiday. That he actually begins to fall for her, to the point of ultimately dumping his successful girlfriend - who is never once painted as a bad person, just a bit superficial - is either this film’s most clever bit of dark satire or the most egregiously stupid moment in an ill-conceived screenplay. I’m leaning toward the latter. Korean cultural and cinematic traditions are sometimes cleverly held up for ridicule - Jang’s mother takes physical discipline to room-trashing levels of excess, while Jang’s mid-film collapse beside a blood-filled toilet turns out to be a bad case of hemorrhoids - but in the end, the parents know best when it comes to forcing people together based on status, and a staggeringly contrived scheme is hatched to drive home the point, culminating in - of all things - a big musical number featuring the entire cast! The film is ultimately hobbled early on by relentlessly overblown performances that mistake volume and force for wit - Jang’s scrunchy-faced eye popping grows tiresome very very quickly. We do however, get the following standard Korean ingredients: K-pop, tears, snowfall, and head slapping, the latter mild enough to rate this a 2 on the Korean Cranial Abuse Scale. The picture, however, also rates a 2, largely for the usual glossy tech specs. 3.
PARADISE VILLA (2001) Directed by Park Chong-won. An online gamer geek pops a headvalve when a hacker steals all his character’s weapons, then pops over to the perp’s apartment during a big Korea-Japan Soccer match for some real-time revenge, seemingly unfazed that the place is a bigger moral cesspool than he could ever have hoped for. Obvious social commentary enlivens the otherwise standard B-slasher plot machinations employed here; the whole thing just misses being wicked black comedy, although many of the supporting players give it punch: the illicit lovers who scramble to dispose of the adulterous landlord’s body after a scuffle leaves him dead; the water purifier saleslady who’s secretly polluting the rooftop water tanks to increase sales; the landlord’s son and his pal (the psycho’s intended target), who plot to make hidden-camera sex videos of the porn starlet who lives downstairs. Basically, it all boils down to a fast-paced exercise in contrasting psychoses: while the killer cuts an impartial, linear swath through virtually everyone who gets in his way, the tenants prove far more calculated and oblivious in their own selfish pursuits. Director Park shows some flare for the genre, although his tendency to rely on cliches (like the flickering power supply) is slightly distracting. Lack of anyone to root for may put off some viewers, though it’s quite appropriate for the material. 7.
RESURRECTION OF THE LITTLE MATCHGIRL (2002) An ambitious cyber-punk actioner from the director of 2000's LIES and 1996's A PETAL. It's one of the few Korean films I've seen that has polarized audiences as much as it has. An expensive failure upon its first release, the film has, with a couple of repeat viewings on DVD, started to grow on me, not that I didn't like it in the first place. The narrative has a socially disaffected gamer attempting to make the title game character fall in love with him before she dies while fending off an array of well-armed oddballs. Eventually though, she rebels against the system with a Great Big Gun. There's a tricky blur between real world and game world in this often maddeningly vague film, and I'm still not sure I've read all the director's messages correctly, or if he even makes them at all, but the visuals are so enticing, the action so deliberately overblown, and the philosophy so seemingly just out of reach, it's tough to stop watching (and watching again). I suspect that this film will develop a strong cult following in the years to come, with even many of those who absolutely hated it reapproaching it from different angles and perhaps finding new meaning in it. Despite it's Korean setting and cast, it's probably the least Korean-feeling Korean film I've yet seen, generally eschewing themes of identity and patriotism as well as the maudlin melodramatics so often found in Korean cinema. Somehow, I suspect that was all intentional. Unfortunately, the Korean DVD of this title had no English subs, so most people who've seen it subbed have had to spring for the bootleg. 8
THE ROMANTIC PRESIDENT (2003) Written and Directed by Jeon Man-bae. You know those moments in American movies about fictional presidents where the heroine (it’s almost always a heroine) realizes just what a normal, decent, lovelorn man-of-the-people the president really is, a moment that usually solidifies her love for him? Well, leave it to the Koreans to construct a movie almost entirely out of scenes like those. In fact, this film’s President Han (Ahn Sung-ki) is such a man of the people, hehangs out in subways with bums and drives the occasional cab to find out what his citizens really think. His approach to policy amounts to centrist vagueries like “Our policy shouldn’t be superficial or formal, but full of hope for the future is most important.” Yes, Ahn Sung-ki makes a very cuddly president, which is probably why a no-nonsense high school teacher named Choi Eun-soo (Cha Ji-woo), who takes no s**t from his bratty daughter, eventually falls for him, after a series of romantic moments - on a city bus, at a jazz festival, in a tavern closet, on a rainy Seoul sidewalk (the most popular kind!) and via a piano serenade of “Love Is A Many Splendored Thing,” (the president is known as “The Piano President” for his skill with the ivories) - that in any other cinema besides Korea’s would be loosley termed as stalking. If one had to pick a Korean actor to play the Korean president, it would be Ahn Sung-ki, and I’m absolutely certain the dignified, popular actor would top many filmmakers’ lists as well. Now if only one of them had thought of the idea before writer/driector Jeon, who wallows in candyfloss sentimentality that doesn’t require much conflict and has little payoff, Ahn could have had the role of a lifetime. Of interest in this film is the fact that the characters discuss (and constantly hear the theme song from) the hollywood soaper LOVE IS A MANY SPLENDORED THING, which featured Korean-American Phillip Ahn in a sizable role. 3.
SAVING MY HUBBY(2002) D: Hyun Nab-seob In Korea, a not-uncommon cash-grab scheme for unscruplous bar owners is to drug already-tipsy patrons, then bill them when they wake up for ridiclous amounts of booze they never drank. On a night out with his new employers, business man Jun-tae (Kim Tae-woo of JOINT SECURITY AREA) is the victim of just such a con, and the only way out is for his wife Geum-soon (Bae Doo-na) - a former volleyball champ sidelined into a domesticity she wasn’t prepared for after a shoulder injury - to stalk through a seedy, after-hours entertainment district, evade the minions of a gang boss she inadvertently pelted with a tomato, find the elusive bar, pay the debt with her fists and drag her childish husband back home before his parents arrive for dinner - all with her chubby little year-old baby daughter (who everyone assumes is a boy, much to her dismay) bouncing on her back in a baby-strap! Winning, high-concept race-the-clock action comedy allows for the heroine to cross paths with many of society’s less fortunate souls and repeatedly outrun a handful of relentlessly altruistic henchmen, and one tellingly wordless encounter with a humiliated PR girl that speaks volumes about the treatment of immigrant bar hostesses in the country. Mild social commentary aside though, there’s much to enjoy here, and though many of the supporting characters represent the broadest mob comedy stereotypes, the entire secondary cast is memorable, right down to the cute old couple that runs the tent bar where Geum-soon spikes one of her husband’s sexist co-workers clear across the room. Bae once again nails another quirky, tough-but-vulnerable role as a woman who battles through hell, often using cinematically enhanced techniques, for the sake of an existence she never truly expected, while Kim Tae-woo essays pitch-perfect man-child naivete as here weak-willed but loyal hubby. Only the ending seems somewhat fantastical. 8.
SEOUL (2002) D: Masahiko Nagasawa. Japanese cop Tomoyo Nagase, on vacation in Seoul is held over for questioning after he foils an armoured car robbery. Meanwhile, Dawn of Nation, a terrorist orgnaization, plots to disrupt the upcoming Asian summit, kidnapping Japan’s Foreign Minister to back up their demands. Tomoyo inserts himself into the investigation of hard-nosed Korean cop Choi Min-soo, an unwavering protocol follower who teaches him the finer points of Korean etiquette along the way, most often at the receiving end of a punch in the face. Choi himself is saddled with obstructve KCIA guys who regularly overrrule his authority. Meanwhile, Tomoyo, against the wishes of his handlers, begins to suspect a link between the terrorists, the robbers and the monolithic Korea Japan Union Bank that could spell a deadly threat to Pan-Asian relationships. Slick, solid actioner with crackling action sequences, a worthy cousin to the seminal 1999 actioner SHIRI, though one rooted less in Tom Clancy-ish techno-fantasy than that film. Writer Yasuo Hasegawa lightly acknowledges Japan’s shameful presence in Korea’s history, largely through the character of a wizened Korean noodle-stand proprietor whose Japanese fluency surprises Tomoyo, but then in the films climactic turning point, in which Tomoyo rescues hostages on a city bus in defiance of Choi’s orders (and is ultimately joined by Choi in his efforts), this act of Japanese redemption on behalf of Korean innocents seems tantamount to the Japanese (historical revisionists with the best of them) telling the stuffy, face-saving South Koreans to remove the stick from up their collective ass and get over themselves. A minor quibble, considering the film’s general intelligence and quality in the face of so many cop thriller genre cliches. Trimming a few of the film’s multiple denouements might have helped, though. 8.
SEX IS ZERO (2002) Raunchy comedy/drama starring pop idol Lim Chang-jung (see JAKARTA) as a hapless college schlub who falls for Miss Popularity, who conveniently happens to be dating the biggest prick on campus and is therefore blind to Lim’s hopeless overtures until she gets knocked up and beaten silly by her embarrassed mother. Often feels like an idealized male-centric filmization of the director’s unrequited college romance, except that here the dream girl is made to suffer unspeakable anguish before she wises up to the man who really cares about her (a made-for-the-movies conceit if ever there was one). The dramatic scenes are uncommonly powerful, but they seem almost too heavy in places for a comedy that tries so hard to be base. You may never look at bread or frying pans the same way, though. UNBELIEVABLE FACT: if you watch the making of doc on the Korean DVD, you’ll learn that the scene where a secondary female character throws up on her date WAS NOT FAKED. Man, talk about suffering for your craft: the girl downs two full 1.5 Litre bottles of water, mixed with one cup instant noodle soup and voila! Real barf! Which the actor then has to enjoy while he kisser her in the same take. Probably the most f’d-up thing I’ve ever seen in all my years of movie watching. 8
SHIRI (1999) The one that started it all, reviving a generally moribund Korean cinema into it's high-concept renaissance, turning a sensitive topic political issue into a fantastic action movie as cops Han Suk-kyu and Song Kang-ho race to unmask a band of deadly North Korean terrorists bent on wiping out North and South Korean leaders at a peace-making soccer match, unaware that one "bad guy" is operating right under their noses. Nice to see an action movie where the villains aren't one-dimensional cartoons, which could have been so easy when dealing with North Koreans in the contemporary climate. 10
SILVER KNIFE (2003) Directed by Kim Sung-deok.Written by Kim Hyun-hee and Joo Jung-geun. Smalltown uber-virgin Min Seo (Shin Ae) takes her ferociously traditional family’s long history of virtuous women - each protected by a small ceremonial dagger known as a changdo - to Seoul University, where horny roommates, a horny boyfriend (Ok Gi-ho), and his horny pals lead her into all sorts of temptation, forcing her to face up to modern, liberated sexual attitudes while keeping her prized little blade ever ready to fend of attack. Female writers Kim Hyun-hee and Joo Jung-geun preface the film with a spoken declaration that this is their true story, but it fast becomes clear their rose-colored glasses are darkly tinted for the sake of low-brow comedy. Still, the message is clear, and it’s pounded home in scenes featuring Seo-min’s maniacally authoritarian dad (the same actor who plays fathers in TOO BEAUTIFUL TO LIE and SINGLES), who eats only the yolks of eggs and gives the whites to either his wife or the dog, depending on the mood he’s in. In the end, Min-seo’s ill-preparedness for the real world forces her to return to what she always thought was the comfy confines of home, but her friends soon follow and her mom, fearing history will repeat itself, leads them in literally rescuing her from the clutches of repressive chastity. Character development is minimal (and rather unrealistic) as the filmmakersdrive home their simple message about women breaking with tradition. A choppy narrative structure is heightened by sets that seem designed (and shot) for television sitcoms. 3.
For an interesting history of the changdo ornamental knife, with which women of old were often expected to kill themselves if their virginity was threatened, look here:
http://www.women.or.kr/ehtml/cultur...gdo/chang1.html
SORUM (2001) Written and Directed by Yoon Jong-chan. A young taxi driver (Kim Myung-min) moves into a decrepit tenement building and soon discovers his fifth floor neighbours have a whole bunch of skeletons in their closets, but none, ironically, that can compare to his own! Shades of William Peter Blatty’s NINTH CONFIGURATION, minus all the supernatural religious hooey, permeate this very unconventional horror yarn: measured, contemplative, sometimes pretentious, but always creepy without once copping to the existence of literal ghosts - the spectres here haunt the damaged minds of society’s bottom feeders, who frequently turn on each other as a result. 7.