For those of you in the New York area, or trav­el­ing there soon, I sug­gest a side trip to the Museum of Modern Art. For many rea­sons, of course. One big rea­son this Spring is the ret­ro­spec­tive for one of Korea’s great­est direc­tors, Kim Ki-​​Duk. It runs from April 23rd thru May 8th. Have watched three of his films and was truly impressed. Samaritan Girl (2004), 3-​​Iron (2004), Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter … and Spring (2003). Especially liked the last men­tioned, with its decep­tive sim­plic­ity of mood, scene and emo­tion, all mask­ing a pro­found analy­sis of the wheel of life and our con­nec­tions to inner and outer worlds. The word vision­ary is often overused. But when applied to Kim Ki-​​Duk, it just fits. He uses the mul­ti­ple sen­sory aspects of cin­ema to their fullest, with word, sound, and land­scape adding up to cre­ate a place apart. One key for me, when it comes to judg­ing a film’s suc­cess and beyond, is whether or not that film is a world unto itself, of a piece, enclosed, as it reaches out beyond its own bor­ders. Kim Ki-Duk’s films are unlike any other space or time.

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An excerpt from MoMa’s article:

Kim Ki-​​Duk was a fac­tory worker, sol­dier, priest-​​in-​​training, and, between 1992 and 1995, a street artist in France, where he dis­cov­ered cin­ema through films like Leos Carax’s Les amants de Pont-​​Neuf and Jonathan Demme’s The Silence of the Lambs (both 1991). After win­ning a screen­writ­ing com­pe­ti­tion in Korea, Kim was able to make, with­out any for­mal train­ing, his first fea­ture, Crocodile (1996). Kim’s debut film, long out of cir­cu­la­tion, her­alded the arrival of a furi­ous young self-​​taught tal­ent with a vision that, bru­tal though it is, is grounded in redemp­tion. Over the next eleven years, thir­teen more films fol­lowed, includ­ing three of his best-​​known films in the United States, the libidi­nous The Isle (2000), the Buddhist-​​inflected Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring (2003), and an ellip­ti­cal trea­tise on invis­i­bil­ity, 3-​​Iron (2004).

 

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