Korea's Bad Guy Director Gets Philosophical
Published June 20, 2004
While some considered his new movie a change of pace, Kim obliquely commented, "I believe inside of myself I have both a violent and a peaceful side and in my films I sometimes deliver one side more strongly and other times I deliver the other." But accusations that his works are misogynistic or violent don't worry him. "I don't worry about American criticism because for the most part Americans don't buy my other films such as 'Coast Guard,' 'Bad Guy' or 'Address Unknown.' Personally, I would really like to show my 'Address Unknown' to American audiences."
Set in a contemporary Korean town near an American military base, "Address Unknown" follows four lives tainted by the Korean war. Kim explained, "The American soldiers have a very hard time adjusting to the situation because it's hard for them to justify why they are there in terms of patriotism....In this film there are no victims. The American soldier can be understood just as the Korean town people.
"I don't think it's really necessary to divide things into good and bad. It's better to understand every character as a human being rather than define who's the good guy and who's the bad guy. The reason Americans like to have the good side clearly defined is much like their politics. For example, look at the Iraq war. They label Iraq as being bad, then American politicians can easily justify this war....I understand that there are so many people American people against the war that one can't make sweeping generalizations."
On North Korea's weapons of mass destruction Kim said, "I would ask Americans to try and understand a different viewpoint. I would really like to ask, who really has the most weapons? Isn't it the Americans?
"One important thing we need to understand there is no absolute evil. If there even was absolute evil, we should try to change them and not destroy them....to kill a person is not the end. Revenge is part of a never-ending cycle....I believe if we help the North Koreans through their famine, that things will come to a more peaceful ending.
"Of course, there are so many things and circumstances--political and so on--I don't understand, but I would like to say, just as it says in the Bible, we should learn to love each other."
Kim also hopes, "International audiences will watch my films and reflect on their past and plan a better, a more beautiful life in the future."
From the Pasadena Weekly
- Korea's Bad Guy Director Gets Philosophical
- Published: June 20, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Interviews, Video: Foreign Language
- Writer: Purple Tigress
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Comments
very interesting and revealing PT, thanks - this was your interview, right?
I'm not sure, but I don't think this was an actual interview. Did Purple Tigress write this for the Pasadena Weekly?
I believe so - what's the word, PT?
This is the interview style for feature articles. We rarely do Q&A style. Further, Q&A style is harder to do when you're working with an interpreter BTW since the sentences sometimes come out disjointed (Korean and Japanese are subject-object-verb languages while English is subject-verb-object which makes simultaneous translation hard).
Yes, I wrote this for the Pasadena Weekly.
But I always wait until they publish before I post here.
Style is great and very happy to have it - there was some uncertainty as to original authorship, but I assumed it was you.
Thanks again!
Kim has one newer movie out since the one you call his last; it's called "Samaria", which was released this summer in Korea. (It's listed in the IMDB as well: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1104118/) But I suppose that won't be on big screens outside of the country for a while. I've seen it, though. It's disturbing, and most people I know lump it with Bad Guy. It's about a couple of schoolgirls who run a little freelance prostitution service. The girl who sleeps with the men dies (jumping from a window fleeing cops barging into a hotel room during a "servicing", and the other girl, who did booking and accounting and served as lookout for police patrols, decides to sleep with each of the men in the record book and return the money her friend had taken.
Like I said, it's deeply weird and kinda twisted, but sort of interesting too.
It can be a bit confusing when talking about release dates with foreign films. For example, Jet Li's Hero is set for general release this year in the US although it was shown briefly two years ago (mostly for screenings). It was up for last year's foreign film academy awards and it is already out on DVD and has been released in other countries besides the country of origin.
But the date of the interview was March/April of this year. So actually at the time of the interview it was the newest film released in this country and the movie you mention was not released even in his country and has not been released here in theaters.
His "Address Unknown" isn't widely available, so who knows when the movie will be released here (if ever)?
Just saw this post, PT -- very interesting. Here's something from my own blog over the past week:
[Just saw a film titled] Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter ... and Spring, and it is as beautiful as it is classically perfect; an inspired work of visual story-telling where the total dialogue could fill, maybe, ten pages. Written and directed by Ki-duk Kim, this story of a Buddhist monk who raises a young boy is also, as the title suggests, about the cycle of human life: the five chapters are set in different seasons of different years, so that the story goes from the springtime of life to the winter of old age, after which the process begins again. The child at the beginning will become the old man at the end, teaching a new child all that he -- and we, as we've watched him -- has learned.
The old monk and the boy live in a house that floats on a river running through a lush green valley. At the beginning, the boy gets a lesson on the relationship between men and animals. After he ties a rock to the backs of several small animals (a fish, a frog, and a snake -- which Buddhist kids apparently regard with no fear whatsoever) for the cruel fun of seeing them struggle under the weight, the boy is punished by his master in the same way. Carrying a burden becomes the film's standard motif, as the boy falls in love, leaves the pristine sanctuary for the modern world, gets in all kinds of trouble, and ultimately returns.
This is a marvelously meditative work of art. Free-standing doors, the kind you can walk around as easily as you can enter, serve as visual symbols in the film; one seperates the bedroom of the old man and boy from the altar where they pray, and one stands between the river and the outside world.
There's also a magnificent scene, unlike anything I've ever witnessed, where the old monk writes Chinese characters all over the deck of a boat by taking a white cat and using its tail for an inkbrush.
Okay...I can't stand it. You have a type: the word separate.
Otherwise, I'll write later to discuss the Buddhist symbolism, burden and the concept of emptiness.
Ah, yes. A bitter irony: typing a typo when noting a typo.
Shouldn't play when I'm at work...
reductive spiral, the coolest
one of the best movies anyone would ever see simple to the piont natural amazing 6 stars
I enjoyed Spring, summer, fall.... but I really think the scene with cats tail being used as a paint brush is cruel and unnecessary. The cat looked tormented and scared throughout his scenes.





I will have to look for this director's films, they should be thought-provoking.