Erikhagenism

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

The Best Korean Movies of the Decade: The Omissions

I haven't seen every Korean movie made in the last 10 years. I've seen a lot, but great movies have slipped passed. There have been other movies that I've seen that were also good, receiving a lot of attention from critics and audiences around the world, that I simply didn't enjoy. Before I start the top 5, I want to discuss the movies that didn't quite make my list. In no particular order, here are The Omissions:

Monday, November 22, 2010

The Best Korean Films of the Decade: 10 –> 6

Here’s the recap:

25: The Host
24: Searching for the Elephant
23: A Tale of Two Sisters
22: Samaritan Girl
21: Our School
20: 200 Pounds Beauty
19: Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War
18: Forever the Moment
17: Il Mare
16: Sunny
15: Silmido
14: Oldboy
13: My Love
12: Addicted
11: The Chaser

So now we break the Top 10!

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Best Korean Movies of the Decade: 15 –> 11

Another recap to set the stage. Here’s where we’re at now:

25: The Host
24: Searching for the Elephant
23: A Tale of Two Sisters
22: Samaritan Girl
21: Our School
20: 200 Pounds Beauty
19: Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War
18: Forever the Moment
17: Il Mare
16: Sunny

So now we continue on with our list!

Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Best Korean Movies of the Decade: 20 –> 16


The countdown continues!

A quick recap:
25: The Host
24: Searching for the Elephant
23: A Tale of Two Sisters
22: Samaritan Girl
21: Our School

20) 200 Pounds Beauty (2006)
Directed by Yong-hwa Kim
 

The theme is tiresome – an ugly duckling becomes a swan. In 200 Pounds Beauty, the motif is taken a step further by examining how plastic surgery functions in Korea (one of the countries with the highest amounts of plastic surgeries in the world), but the similarities between American and Korean perceptions of female beauty are surprisingly similar.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

The 25 Best Korean Movies of the Decade!

The late 1990's ended by starting a Korean Platinum age for film (the Golden Age was taken by films in the 60's). One reason for the long layover was due to intense political repression that censored and almost destroyed the entire Korean movie industry during the 70's and 80’s. It wasn't until the democratic handover of power in 1988 that films were allowed to explore creatively, without the blacklisting fist of political censors. Setting the stage for what should have been the new infancy of film, Korean cinema exploded in the late 90's to usher in one of the best decades in Korean movie history.

I've made my list The Most Artistic, Most Accessible Korean Movies (let's just call it the Best!) of the Decade for a specific reason. First, consider the reverse example. If someone had never seen an American movie and wanted to find the Best(!) American film, what would you suggest? You could follow many of the critics and say Citizen Kane. While that is arguable, you may hold back and offer something less boring -- Star Wars? Godfather? Avatar? For this reason, I want the list to be an introduction. Some of these choices are very accessible -- fun to watch, but no breakthrough in bold directing, fearless acting or production techniques. Others are fascinatingly unique, philosophically explorative, boldly subversive, culturally revealing and intellectually attractive that they simply must be watched to fully appreciate the cinematic experience.

Some movies are available in the U.S. with English subtitles. Some were watched in Korea and may not be available in the U.S. at all. Although I wanted to include as many movies that were available to U.S. audiences as possible, I couldn’t ignore the amazing films that never quite make it to American shores. If I could find it on Amazon, I provide the link.

The list starts after the jump!

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Essence of Korean Art

Chae Hyang Soon, a dance troupe from South Korea, claims to “present the essence of Korean art.” This essence goes undefined, but it seems that their entire show is devoted to the task, leaving the audience with an understanding of this essence through their recent performance, Dynamic Korea: Dance and Song. Sponsored by the Alabama Asian Cultures Foundation, the program exemplifying Korean art far exceeded expectations with an astounding plethora of cultural insights for the Virginia Samford Theatre audience.

The attempt is Herculean. Utilizing several musical instruments, costumes and songs, Chae Hyang Soon explores a wide spectrum of traditional Korean art and art culture with two hours of dance, music and song. The performers even synthesize traditional dances to popmusic showing the audience a slice of contemporary art splashed against dances hundreds of years old. In their“Taffy Peddler” dance, after giving the audience 17th century Korean candy produced in a 21st century factory, they used children’s scissors as musical instruments. Perhaps they were humble in claiming to present the essence of Korean art - maybe they wanted to show the essence of Korea itself.

monk_dance 
In “The Monk Dance”, the dancer’s ghostly sleeves extend a few feet passed her hands concealing mallets with which to hammer on a giant drum in the background. The performance is hauntingly memorable as she floats across the stage, the sleeves punctuating her movements.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

City Lights – The Movie and Music

Music in film can sometimes feel an afterthought in modern movies. There are exceptions, but most of the time it feels like the music is an afterthought – the movie is made and then the music is written to match whatever occurs on screen. This was the challenge tackled by the Alabama Symphony Orchestra; to make music the main attraction, the reason for attending, a character in and of itself.

Beautifully accomplished and insightfully executed, the symphony inspires the audience to take a new look at the role music serves in film and see City Lights illuminated by the eyes of Principal Pops Conductor Christopher Confessore.

When Charlie Chaplin started making City Lights, he already possessed complete creative control over every process of the film (producer, director, lead actor and musical composer). The story is fairly straight forward, possessing occasional arbitrary scenes inserted for comedy. Chaplin’s flagship character, the Tramp, falls in love with the blind Flower Girl and then he uses his little amount of money to maintain the perception that he is rich.
City_Lights_100
It’s at this stage that we can see Chaplin’s hand shine. Chaplin decides the Flower Girl’s music needs to be soft and romantic – so we hear the violins beautifully offer their interpretation of the Flower Girl through the Tramp’s eyes. In contemporary cinema, most of the time, a musical composer watches the whole movie without sound and crafts the score to match the situations. This process adds another hand, another artistic insight to the film. While this can be beautiful and essential to the art of the movie (remember Hans Zimmer in Inception), City Lights allows the whole film to be through Chaplin’s eyes. And since he is also the protagonist, the audience experiences the film through the Tramp.

The music, therefore, is an expression of Chaplin’s will, the heartbeat for the Tramp. The audience hears the soul of the character. After he purchases a flower from the blind Flower Girl, she hears a car door shut and tries to give him change. She can’t see that the car door closing was someone else. She also can’t see the Tramp looking reverently at her. Her vulnerability and loneliness don’t affect the music, which continues softly and elegantly. Despite such an expression of powerless kindness, the music tells us that the Tramp doesn’t feel pity, but admiration. The Tramp is touched by her beauty and content to sit in the corner watching her. The complexity of emotions, between the audience’s instinctive compassion and the Tramp’s internal rapture, occurring on the screen is contrasted with such innocent music.

This is why the Alabama Symphony Orchestra playing the music is so artistically powerful. The live symphony amplifies every emotional response originally intended by Chaplin. In one comedic scene, at a party in the house of a millionaire, the Tramp accidently swallows a whistle and can’t stop hiccupping. Each time he hiccups, the whistle blows. A man in a suit stands near the piano and prepares to sing, but can’t get anything out due to the distraction by the Tramp. The symphony is silent except for the whistles. The party guests all stare at the Tramp. The audience keeps waiting for music, or something, to happen to interrupt the awkwardness of silence at a party. We become like the guests - tense, nervously laughing, trying to find a way for it to end. The hiccupping and false starts by the hopeful singer continue for too long – like any joke carried passed the point of humor. Why doesn’t the Tramp go outside sooner? Why does he repetitively look at the woman to his right? And at about the fifteenth whistle, it hits us; each time the symphony sounds the whistle, we see each sharp hiccup as a note on sheet music. The hiccups aren’t arbitrary, but occurring exactly as the music demands.

Then an epiphany hits the audience – the whole movie looks like a symphony; each scene a movement. The comedy scenes that repeat themselves over and over again are Chaplin manifesting repeat signs from sheet music into a physical expression. And everything can be seen musically: the boxing dance, the drunk driving, the yarn pulled from his clothes, him saving the suicidal millionaire. The profound pairing of mediums illuminates how close a relationship film and music can hold, and the Alabama Symphony Orchestra has wonderfully demonstrated this effect. If the film is watched standalone, or without an orchestra, how could anyone see this marriage of art?

Take a look at City Lights and try to understand how the whole film looks like music – listen to the visuals and hear the characters expressing notes in their smiles and steps. And as the awkward and shy Tramp stupidly smiles with the flower near his mouth at the very end, hold in your heart the movie’s crescendo to this exact point. The climax and crescendo are actually the same, fused together by complimentary flutters of artistic inspiration. Hear how relieved and happy he is that the flower girl loves him in his ragged clothes - at her new gaze piercing through the fog of the whole experience. And while the audience may think they’re watching love bloom, they’re actually hearing it.

Originally posted at Arts in Alabama

On Amazon at City Lights: The Chaplin Collection (Two-Disc Special Edition)