The London Korean Film Festival 2014 – Who’d have thought it! Just nine years ago, the inaugural event showed just 11 films. Fast forward to 2014 and the total is 55. And the variety of genres, directors, stars, budgets and issues has never been stronger. Try to seek out some of these gems. You won’t regret it – and it might make you just as passionate as DVD Fever is about Korean movies.
You could not get a more kick-ass start to the festival than the high-tech epic KUNDO: AGE OF THE RAMPANT, set towards the end of the Joseon Dynasty, where obscene wealth and desperate poverty live cheek by jowl. Directed by Yoon Jong-bin, this stars Gang Dong-won as the villainous Jo Yoon, with Ha Jung-woo as his nemesis, Dolmuchi, an ex-butcher who is rather handy with a pair of cleavers. Starting with a one-sided, almost comic-book fight, we are introduced to a bunch of Robin Hood-type insurrectionists – the Kundo – who steal from the rich to give to the poor, pitted against Yoon, the bastard son of the corrupt, weak governor. In classic style, Yoon aims to wipe out any opposition to his power and wealth, and when he kills Dolmuchi’s family, the butcher feels impelled to join forces with the Kundo.
No-one is beyond corruption, even officials of justice, so the outlaws have their work cut out. Jong-bin blends the Three Musketeers with the Magnificent Seven (Samurai) for their distinctive image, as a highly-motivated gang of men and women with strong personalities. Each highly choreographed fight sequence, with weaponry including spears, swords, bows and arrows, is superb – and although the ambush scenes are outstanding, it’s the breathtaking bamboo forest fight between deadly rivals Yoon and Dolmuchi that lives in the memory – with the cleaver-wielding hero clad in black, and the villain in white. With all due respect to House of Flying Daggers, and to paraphrase Brian Clough, I wouldn’t say this is the best ever Bamboo Forest Fight Sequence, but it is in the top one – as one of the characters is also holding a baby! Oh, and it’s worth noting that this entire movie is accompanied by Jo ‘Oldboy’ Yeong-wook’s fantastically funky soundtrack, reminiscent of Ennio Morricone in full spaghetti-western flow.
Han Dong-wook’s confident debut film MAN IN LOVE is a mix of comedy, love story and poignant drama, with a few brutal action sequences thrown in for good measure. The plot is propelled by the actions and passions of a deeply unpleasant protection/loan racketeer, Tae-il who uses heavy-handed techniques to recover debts. But when he unexpectedly falls for the daughter of one comatose loanee who is in hospital, Tae-il takes on the loan himself, and devotes himself to wooing her. So besotted is he, that he even bathes the ailing father, and in return for helping them out financially, Tae-il insists the daughter’s side of the bargain must be to talk and eat with him on a set number of occasions. Meanwhile he can’t escape from his dysfunctional family and criminal associates who set him up, and just as he’s made the daughter fall in love with him, Tae-il’s destiny seems to be going back into jail… again. Will they still have a future together? And does he have a future at all?
![]() The other explosive festival thriller, Kim Seong-hun’s A HARD DAY, also deals with a corrupt cop trying to wipe out anyone who gets in his way, and similarly contains The Most Massive Twists Imaginable. Conflicted protagonist and accident-prone homicide detective, Gun-su, is expertly portrayed by Lee Sun-Kyun (Nobody’s Daughter Haewon, Our Sunhi), with his nemesis, Park played with huge relish by Cho Jin-woong of Kundo and Nameless Gangster fame. Already a huge hit in Korea, it’s not hard to imagine the likes of Scorsese imminently developing a US remake.
Another domestic issue, child custody, dominates the final part of THE DINNER, from Kim Dong-hyun, a drama that revolves around a series of family meals. We see the everyday mundanity, setbacks and beauty of family life and strife. Ageing grandparents look after their spoiled, hyperactive grandson; their elder son is laid off and his other half is sick from pollution; their younger son is still paying off his student loan, has a pregnant wife, and works as a taxi driver for drunken businessmen; their daughter is a struggling, stressed single mother. They’re all going through the economic downturn – and then an accident and a death happen in quick succession and events threaten to spin out of control. Go to page 2 for more films from The London Korean Film Festival 2014. |
![]() Woo Moon-gi’s sweet sports comedy, KING OF JOKGU (right), is filled with scenes of love and food, but mainly the curious sport of Jokgu, a hybrid of volleyball and football. Our hero, Hong, has done his military service and excelled at his favourite pastime. But on his return to college, he finds that the Jokgu court has been destroyed and his sport is now considered totally uncool. With a well-placed kick or two, he wins a sporting bet and everyone starts taking up his passion again, building up to a big tournament. Expect equal portions of tension, unrequited passion, comic action… and noodles. Directed by screenwriter Shim Sung-bo, produced by Bong Joon-ho (best known for The Host and Mother), and written by the two of them, HAEMOO is based on a true story of everyday fisherfolk. It’s 1998 and they’re having a hard time making an honest living, captain Kang’s boat is in urgent need of repairs – and back home his wife is carrying on behind his back. Extreme circumstances force Kang to accept a job smuggling Chinese-Korean immigrants across the ocean, and he bribes his conflicted crew with extra cash. Everything seems to be going well for the trafficking novices, despite the number of immigrants, until the boat is boarded by inspectors, and the immigrants are forced to hide down below in the unventilated fish hold. The plan falls apart and what happens next is horrific, grisly, bloody, and almost incredible, as Kang loses his mind, turns on the crew and seeks only to save his vessel. Can anyone survive? |
![]() Jang Jin’s MAN ON HIGH HEELS (right) provides a very daring role for Cha Seung-won as hard-as-nails cop Yoon, who secretly wants to be a woman, and is waiting for the operation. Transgender dramas are rare enough, but Jin gives us something even harder to find: a transgender action movie. In his personal life, Yoon may be a woman trapped in a man’s body. But in his work Yoon always comes out on top and nobody messes with him, notably in the opening sequence involving a nightclub dinner party with an expert and bloody cutlery skirmish. And there’s another stunning bit of choreography with an entire, rain-soaked fight, with all the participants’ umbrellas raised. But when two criminal brothers need him to return seized documents, they start to bring down everyone around him. Can Yoon flee to have his op – or will they lure him back? That Jin actually pulls off such a tonally tricky film is in no small measure due to Seung-won’s three-dimensional portrait of a conflicted character. |
![]() If you haven’t already sampled The Korean Film Festival in London, then I encourage you to go next time. And in the meantime demand that your local arthouse cinema show some of the best releases, including KUNDO: AGE OF THE RAMPANT, A HARD DAY, THE TARGET, HAEMOO, REVIVRE and maybe even MAN ON HIGH HEELS. But you can also look out for DVDs, streaming services, and on-demand Korean films. So mark it in your diary: next year’s festival will take place in November 2015 – and you can keep up-to-date with these websites: http://london.korean-culture.org/ and http://koreanfilm.co.uk/ |
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