The 14th edition of the London Korean Film Festival (LKFF) has launched its full programme of films and events for the 2019 edition. The festival taking place from 1st-14th November, before embarking on the annual UK tour 18th-24th November.
The Special Focus, and much of this year’s festival programme, will highlight the historic milestone of 100-years of Korean cinema along with an exciting mix of UK and International premieres. There will be the usual guests and events across a diverse set of strands; Cinema Now, Women’s Voices, Documentary, Hidden Figures: Ha Gil-jong, Artist Video, Animation and Mise-en-scène Shorts.
This celebration of Korea’s cinematic history is established with the festival’s Opening Gala on 1st November, The Seashore Village (1965). With the LKFF now in its 14th year, this marks the first time a retrospective title has been selected to open the festival. Newly restored, and presented in the UK for the very first time, the film tells the story of a young woman, Hae-soon, living in a village heavily populated by women who have lost their husbands at sea. A vivid portrait of the hardships faced by the women of the village and their methods of coping through sisterly comradeship and an understanding of the natural world around them, the film features striking monochrome cinematography. Courtesy of veteran director Kim Soo-yong, now in his 90s, who made his film debut in 1958 with A Henpecked Husband and went on to make over 100 films in a long and distinguished career, the revered filmmaker will be present on opening night to discuss The Seashore Village, his life in film and 100 years of Korean cinema. Continuing the festival’s championing of new independent cinema, the LKFF will hold its Closing Gala on 14th November with new directing team Lee Jihyoung and Kim Sol’s Scattered Night (2019, UK Premiere). Told through the eyes of two young children who must wait as their separating parents messily make their way towards a decision on which of them will take which child post-divorce. Minimalist and free of melodrama, the film offers an intimate and heart-breaking child’s eye view of a crumbling family dynamic.
The Special Focus strand, A Century of Korean Cinema, follows on from a landmark collaboration with the British Film Institute and the Korean Film Archive earlier this year, ‘Early Korean Cinema: Lost Films from the Japanese Colonial Period’ which presented the country’s oldest surviving films, produced during the turbulent period of occupation during the Second World War. The LKFF 2019 will continue where that acclaimed season ended, launching into a full programme of cinema spanning the decades and featuring works from Korea’s visionary filmmakers of the past and leading up to the early works of prominent directors spearheading the nation’s cinema today.
The oldest film to feature in the Special Focus programme is Yun Yong-gyu’s touching melodrama A Hometown in Heart (1949) which follows an orphaned young monk as he traverses temple life while longing for the return of his mother. Moving into the 1950s, two titles are presented: one of which shows the harsh reality of the Korean war, while the other shines a light on the society left in its wake. Lee Kang-cheon’s Piagol (1955) finds a group of communist fighters waging war among mountain villages under the harsh leadership of a zealous commander. With its nuanced depiction of communists the controversial film was originally banned for a perceived pro-communist message. From legendary director Shin Sang-ok (who would later be kidnapped and forced to make films for the North Korean leader Kim Jong-il) comes The Flower in Hell (1958), set against the back-drop of occupied post-war Korea. Disaster befalls the lives of prostitute Sonya as she schemes to find a new life for herself by seducing the younger brother of her hustler boyfriend Young-sik who makes money by stealing from the US military.
The 1960s saw a proliferation in the rich number of films from savvy directors who found ways to bypass strict government censorship. These would highlight and comment on pressing societal issues and have become some of the finest examples of classic Korean cinema. This fascinating and turbulent period is well represented in the programme. Aimless Bullet (1961) from Yu Hyun-mok, one of Korea’s most respected filmmakers and a key figure of the period, presents a powerful, downbeat view of postwar struggle as a low-level clerk attempts to earn money for his family, including a war veteran brother, a traumatised mother and a sister who is sliding into prostitution. A Coachman (Kang Dae-jin, 1961) finds a single father similarly struggling to provide for his family, but through hard work, perseverance and a little romance, light is ultimately found amid the darkness. A Woman Judge (1962) is the country’s second-ever film from a woman director, Hong Eun-won. It follows a young woman determined to become a judge and find a meaningful place in society, despite the protestations of various individuals around her, including her own mother and husband. The film is ahead of its time in critiquing a range of conservative and outdated attitudes that traditionally hold back an intelligent, determined woman working hard to find fulfilment outside of the home.
In Kim Soo-yong’s Bloodline (1963) the societal conflict is generational, as three sets of parents attempt to force their children to forego personal ambitions in order to make money to support their families. Set in the immediate post-war period, the younger generation demand freedom to choose their own path as they look ahead to a brighter future. Goryeojang (1963) is the first of two films from the idiosyncratic Kim Ki-young, director of the classic The Housemaid (1960). The title refers to the practice of families abandoning relatives in the mountains once they reach old age (as seen in Imamura Shohei’s 1983 classic, The Ballad of Narayama), a custom practiced in a small village where the film is set, as society begins to buckle under the strain of famine and starvation. Ieoh Island (1977) incorporates the director’s highly stylised filmmaking into a psychosexual mystery thriller in which a man investigates a murder on an isolated island inhabited only by women. Next comes three titles from prolific auteur Lee Man-hee whose influence has extended well beyond his tragically short life, with 51 films produced before his death at the age of 43 in 1975. The Devil’s Stairway (1964) is a dark mystery thriller in which a chief surgeon murders the woman with which he is having an affair, only to become tormented by her spirit. Homebound (1967) follows the wife of a bedridden writer as she stumbles upon a chance at true happiness beyond the confines of her tragic circumstances, while Lee’s masterpiece A Day Off (1968), presents an agonisingly bleak but beautiful look at a young couple’s life in 1960s Seoul, and was originally banned by the authorities for its bold but sombre depiction of Korean society.
Heading into the 1980s, and the nation’s struggles are reflected by filmmakers in works commenting on wealth disparity, corruption and materialism among other critical social issues. Im Kwon-taek put Korean film on the map in this decade as he moved away from a more commercial filmmaking style, announcing himself as a true auteur who would be celebrated at Cannes, Venice and Berlin where he earned an honorary Golden Bear in 2005. Here the legendary director is represented with the exemplary Ticket (1986), which looks at the lives of three newlyhired sex workers in a small seaside town. Lee Jang-ho, celebrated with a retrospective at the 2016 LKFF, was another filmmaker combining a commercial sensibility with a keen artistic eye to great effect throughout the 1980s. The Man with Three Coffins (1987) finds Lee in experimental mode as he tells a non-linear, dream-like story that addresses issues of displacement after the Korean War, as a man wanders the countryside looking for a location to scatter his dead wife’s ashes. From Park Chul-soo, who would become a leading voice in Korea’s burgeoning second New Wave, a A Pillar of Mist (1986) follows the plight of a married couple and was the winner of the Grand Bell Award (Korea’s Academy Award equivalent). Jang Sun-woo, a filmmaker who would achieve acclaim whilst also troubling censors with his bold tackling of controversial subjects, is here represented by The Age of Success (1988) which mixes anarchic comedy with a sharp skewering of rampant 1980s capitalism. Screened in the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes, Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East? (1989) is a meditative reflection on the lives of three Buddhist monks that director Bae Yong-kyoon shot with a single camera over the course of seven years.
Slowly emerging from the political turmoil of the 1980s, Korean cinema would continue to grow in reputation in the 1990s as filmmakers gained increasing international recognition with their work and new artists appeared, many of whom are still finding commercial and critical favour around the world to this day. Based on the accounts of a real-life war correspondent, Chung Ji-young’s epic drama North Korean Partisan in South Korea (Nambugun) (1990) humanises characters on both sides of the divide. In A Single Spark (1995), Park Kwang-su shines a light on the country’s strong protest practices as he follows a young law school student inspired by the life of a manual worker who burnt himself to death in a demonstration over unfair labour practices. Hong Sangsoo has earned a status as one of Korea’s leading auteurs. This reputation was cemented with his first film The Day a Pig Fell into a Well (1996), which follows four intertwined lives in a fragmented, self-reflexive chronology and bares many of the great director’s established trademarks. Lim Soon-rye has found success as a woman director telling powerful stories often concerning women and marginalised lives with hits including Forever the Moment (2008) and last year’s Little Forest (2018). Presented here, her debut Three Friends (1996) is a biting satire that finds three young men, each one considered something of a social misfit, whose lives are disrupted when they must report for military service. The romance film continues to hold a place in the heart of Korean cinema goers and Chang Yoon-hyun’s The Contact (1997) is an excellent example as love blossoms over the airwaves when a radio DJ plays a Velvet Underground track. Already widely acclaimed, Lee Chang-dong has recently earned new accolades following a return to filmmaking with Burning (2018) which saw him win the Fipresci International Critics’ Prize at Cannes. Peppermint Candy (1999), Lee’s second work, looks at different episodes of a man’s life to portray a tragic personal story which, in true Lee style, further comments on Korean society as a whole.
The Cinema Now strand once again showcases the best of contemporary Korean cinema with a diverse and exciting line-up including some of Korea’s finest recent titles, including festival sensations and domestic box office hits from the past year. In Hong Sangsoo’s latest feature Grass (2017, UK Premiere), a writer (Kim Minhee, The Handmaiden) eavesdrops on conversations in a cafe as their stories begin to intertwine. Carefully-crafted and deceptively-simple, Grass bears all the hallmarks of the Korean auteur and premiered to acclaim at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2018. The first of two titles on real-life incidents is the critically-acclaimed Birthday (2018, UK Premiere) which comments on the emotional toll of the Sewol Ferry tragedy of 2014 in which 299 people lost their lives when a passenger ferry sank en route from Incheon to Jeju. Director Lee Jong-un’s moving film focuses on one grieving family as it sensitvely tackles the aftermath of an event sadly burnt into the contemporary Korean consciousness. Travelling back to the early twentieth-century Joe Min-ho’s period drama A Resistance (2019, European Premiere) is based on the true story of Yu Gwan Sun, a political activist who became a symbol for the struggle for Korean independence against Imperial Japanese rule. For those who like their cinema full of thrills, Idol (2018, UK Premiere) is an action-packed and blood-soaked neo-noir from director Lee Su-jin, while Lee Byeong-heon’s Extreme Job (2018, UK Premiere) is a hilarious action-comedy that follows an inept police squad on a narcotics bust as they work undercover at a fried chicken joint, and has become one of Korea’s most successful films of all time at the domestic box office. Lee Min-jae’s The Odd Family: Zombie On Sale (2018, UK Premiere) is an undead horror-comedy with a lot of heart that proves there’s still life in the age old zombie formula. A captivating meditation on human nature, Height of the Wave (2019, UK Premiere), follows a police officer, Yeon-soo, who is transferred to an isolated island with her daughter when the actions of the locals start to cause alarm. Winner of the Special Jury Prize at this year’s Locarno Film Festival, the film is the latest from LKFF favourite Park Jung-bum (Alive, The Journals of Musan).
Presented by the LKFF in conjunction with the Barbican’s Hidden Figures film programme, this celebration of renowned director Ha Gil-jong shines a light on the work of one of Korean cinema’s most iconoclastic auteurs. Rising to prominence in the 1970s, a dark period for Korean filmmaking as the Park Chung-hee led government exerted its control through strict censorship, Ha Gil-jong stood out with a radical, politically-charged voice, challenging contemporary society through the language of film. The Pollen of Flowers (1972), is a provocative first-feature in which a relationship between a businessman and his protégé (with forbidden sexual undertones) goes awry with the introduction of the younger man into the home of the boss’s mistress. The March of Fools (1975), a perennial favourite and Ha’s best known film, is a college comedy that offers a snapshot into 1970s student life, with dark undertones that reflect on the prevailing dictatorship of the time, and The Ascension of Han-ne (1975) mixes elements from traditional ghost stories and shamanic practices to tell the story of a woman who is saved from suicide only to later fall prey to the gross antagonism of the village shaman.
The LKFF continues its work highlighting Women’s Voices in cinema, with this now-regular strand that has reinforced and expanded upon issues raised in its films with roundtable discussions and panel events featuring directors, actors and leading voices in contemporary feminist film criticism. This year celebrates the work of first-time women directors with four films: Cha Sung-duk’s Youngju (2018, UK Premiere) finds a young woman forced into the role of parent to her wayward younger brother as she forms an unlikely relationship with the man who accidently killed her parents, Ahn Ju-young’s A Boy and Sungreen (2018, International Premiere) finds an awkward schoolboy attempt to track down his father with the help of his more forthright female best friend, Shim Hyejung’s A Bedsore (2019, International Premiere) tackles issues of treatment and care for the elderly as family wounds fester when a stubborn bedsore develops on a bed-ridden grandmother, and intimate documentary Yukiko (2018, UK Premiere) finds director Young Sun Noh trace a family history scarred by war.
The Artist Video strand, focuses on two distinctive voices in experimental film work. Director and cinematographer Yoo Soon-mi presents a visually dazzling portrait of North Korea in her documentary Songs from the North (2014, UK Premiere), which interrogates the shared memory and collective history of the North and South Korean people and in Dangerous Supplement (2005) we gain an insight into the artists’ early work, particularly the theme of memory that informs her later pieces. Three works are presented from visual artist Park Chan Kyong, with Sets (2000) examining the North’s perception of South Korea by looking at the constructed sets of South Korean streets and buildings housed at the National Film Studio of North Korea, Flying (2005) examines the North-South divide via footage of flights in and out of Pyongyang and from the streets of the northern capital and Believe It or Not (2018) (produced by Park’s brother, acclaimed director Park Chan-wook) is a short narrative piece inspired by the many people who have made the dangerous journey across the border.
For full information on the lineup head over to the London Korean Film Festival Website.
London venues include: Regent Street Cinema, Picturehouse Central, Close-up Film Centre, Phoenix Cinema, Rio Cinema, ICA, Barbican, British Museum, LUX, Birkbeck’s Institute of Moving Image, and KCCUK.
The festival tours to: Edinburgh Film House, Watershed Cinema Bristol, Belfast Queen’s Film Theatre, Glasgow Film Theatre, Manchester HOME, Nottingham Broadway Cinema, until 24th November 2019.
2019 London Korean Film Festival will run between 1st until 14th November.
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