Showing posts with label Collective Invention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collective Invention. Show all posts

Monday, September 14, 2015

COLLECTIVE INVENTION: The Weirder Side of Korean Cinema

Looking toward the future of Korean Film

South Korean cinema has gotten a lot of international attention in the last fifteen years, but it's mostly for the tough, realistically grounded, often brutal and harrowing films like Park Chan-wook's Vengeance Trilogy (Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (2002); Oldboy (2003); Sympathy for Lady Vengeance (2005)), Kim Jee-woon's I Saw The Devil (2010), Bong Joon-ho's Mother (2009) and Na Hong-jin's The Chaser (2008).

But there's a whole other side to Korean film. A silly, weird and often satirical side. You might've got a glimpse of it with Bong Joon-ho's The Host, which played TIFF's Midnight Madness program in 2006. In The Host, a slippery river monster terrorizes Seoul and a family unites to rescue a girl carried off by the very disgusting critter. The Host is both affecting and hilarious. And the action's pretty sweet, too.



In Jang Joon-hwan's Save The Green Planet (2003), Byeong-gu (Shin Ha-kyun) attempts to save the world from an invasion from Andromeda before an eclipse renders the invasion inevitable. With the assistance of his girlfriend, Su-ni (Hwang Jeong-min), he kidnaps a business executive (Kang man-shik) and tortures the man--in a very cartoonish fashion. Still very violent, but cartoon violence. Is the executive an alien from Andromeda able to contact his people by means of his hair? Or is Byeong-gu torturing the man for revenge after a pharmaceutical trial went bad? (Hmm... you know, Collective Inventions involves a clinical trial...)



It's billed now as a sci-fi horror comedy, but I remember at the TIFF Midnight Madness premiere Jang told the crowd that it hadn't done well in Korea because it had been billed as a "romance." The weird thing, is I can kinda see it. 



Speaking of eccentric romance, Park Chan-wook moves away from vengeance and towards, weird but sweet love in, I'm A Cyborg, But That's Okay (2006). Young-goon (Im Soo-jung) who works in an electronics factory and believes she is a cyborg tries to fix herself by slitting her wrists and inserting the proper wiring. She wakes up in a hospital. And there she finds love when a soul-stealing man in a rabbit mask steals her heart. That man is also Korean superstar, Rain. But... it goes kinda dark for other people.

Did you know that there is a whole Google search category, "Rain Abs." There is.


He's not allowed to have shoelaces in the hospital, but his abs are the real danger.
Kim Jee-woon has made a lot of neat, eccentric films. His The Good The Bad The Weird (2008) is much lighter than, say, I Saw The Devil. It also premiered at TIFF, but it played the Elgin Theater as a Gala. It's a post-modern Western set in 1930s Manchuria as three gunfighters try to find the map to buried treasure. It also has an amazing chase scene. So good. You should watch it. Jung Woo-sung can really ride and Song Kang-ho in a motorcyle with a sidecar. And the action was explicitly inspired by Sam Raimi's Spider-Man films.


And one of Kim's earlier films, The Foul King (2000) is very fun. Plus, it's another film that played Midnight Madness. Dae-ho (Song Kang-ho) takes up professional wrestling in part to get his boss to stop harassing him. Fight, Ultra Tiger Mask!



Kim's first film, The Quiet Family (1998), inspired Takashi Miike's The Happiness of the Katakuris. In Kim's film a family running a small hiking lodge tries to deal with a series of more or less accidental deaths.





In Kim Tae-gyn's Volcano High (2001) the favorite, and possibly only subject, is asskicking. When teachers crack down, students rebel and every punch is explosive. Everyone is a master of martial arts. And everyone is a master of amazing hair. (And, yep, another Midnight Madness entrant. I saw it at 9am and it kept me awake).



But we know what you're wondering. You're wondering about Vampire Prosecutor. Will it ever be a feature film? I don't know. But I have heard there is a follow-up series in development, Vampire Private Investigator. Who knows?

Vampire Prosecutor ponders the future of Korean cinema.

Collective Invention premieres tonight!


COLLECTIVE INVENTION Screening Times:
Mon. Sept. 14, 6:00 PM SCOTIABANK 1
Tue. Sept. 15, 11:45 AM BLOOR HOT DOCS
Sat. Sept. 19, 9:30 AM SCOTIABANK 3

COLLECTIVE INVENTION Premieres Tonight!


Hurry up, guys, Collective Invention plays tonight!

 Kwon Oh-Kwang's Collective Invention premieres tonight!

Is it mere coincidence that Evolution, a film about a mysterious island where young boys who swim a lot are subjected to experiments, premieres the very same evening that Collective Invention, a film about a young fish man who became a fish man after he participated in a series of clinical trials? We're not saying it isn't coincidence. We are just strongly implying something. We at Vanguard are trying to warn you without giving away our hand.

The truth is out there, Ju-jin.

We'll just note that Evolution was influenced by Chirico. And Collective Invention happens to be a reference to a work by Magritte.  And how does The Devil's Candy, a Midnight Madness film seemingly about an evil painting, fit in to all this? (And don't say, "It doesn't!")

Filled with secrets she can never share. Because, The Man.

We know you are curious about the life of a fish-person. We all are. Learn a little more about the life of a fish-person (and the terrible effects of our voracious curiosity in this digital) with Collective Invention tonight!

COLLECTIVE INVENTION Screening Times:
Mon. Sept. 14, 6:00 PM SCOTIABANK 1
Tue. Sept. 15, 11:45 AM BLOOR HOT DOCS
Sat. Sept. 19, 9:30 AM SCOTIABANK 3

EVOLUTION Screening Times:
Mon., Sept. 14, 9:30pm at RYERSON
Wed., Sept. 16, 4:30pm at BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA
Sun., Sept. 20,  8:30pm at TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX

And, at Midnight Madness, THE DEVIL'S CANDY Screening Times:
Sun, Sept 13, 11:59 PM RYERSON
Tue, Sept 15, 6:45 PM SCOTIABANK 9
Sat, Sept 19, 1:15 PM SCOTIABANK 14

Saturday, September 5, 2015

COLLECTIVE INVENTION First Look: Stills and Trailer

"Honey, I have something to tell you."

In director Kwon Oh-kwang's Collective Invention journalist Sang-won (Lee Chun-hee) accepts an assignment to investigate an urban legend, the story of a man participated in a pharmaceutical company's clinical trial to earn cash--and transformed into a fish. Sang-won discovers the story is true and tracks down Gu (Lee Kwang-soo), the legendary fish-man, setting off a media frenzy and some fine social satire. Plus, there is a man with a fish head. I don't know about you, but that's all I need.

If you're not such an easy sell, we do have some intriguing stills and the trailer for your pondering pleasure...

Waiting for the bus

Waiting for his brine shrimp. A Fish-Man's life involves a lot of waiting.

We also have Magritte's  "Collective Invention"  (1934).



And here's the trailer!



COLLECTIVE INVENTION screening times:
Sep. 14, Monday, 6:00 pm, SCOTIABANK 1
Sep. 15, Tuesday, 11:45 am, BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA
Sep. 19, Saturday, 9:30, SCOTIABANK 3