<FESTIVAL AND AWARD>
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL – IN COMPETITION
IN KOREAN WITH ENGLISH & CHINESE SUBTITLES
Genre: Drama
Director: Kim Ki-Duk
Cast: Chang Chen, Zia, Ha Jung-woo
RunTime: 1 hr 24 mins
Released By: Festive Films & Cathay-Keris
Films
Rating: M18 (Sexual Scenes)
Official Website: http://www.festivefilms.com/breath
Opening Day: 27 December 2007
Synopsis:
After her husband’s confession of having an affair,
Yeon finds herself heading towards the prison to meet a condemned
criminal Jin who repeatedly attempted suicide. She doesn’t
know why, but Yeon meets Jin and treats him like an old friend.
Jin doesn’t open up to her that easily at first. While
Yeon brings spring, summer and autumn to Jin in the prison,
they fall for each other. But Jin’s clock is ticking
away, and Yeon doesn’t want to send him away like that.
Movie Review:
Director Kim Ki Duk is back with his latest film. And we are
excited to see what surprises it has in store for us. Known
for his art-house cinematic works which are often abstractly
symbolic, Kim is no stranger to international film festivals
which adore his distinctively personal films. In his 14th
feature, he tackles complex issues of what it constitutes
to feel alive. And like his previous works, he provides no
easy answers.
The
plot is seemingly simple: A convict waiting for execution
meets a woman whose husband is cheating on her. Through a
series of cell visits, the two are strangely drawn towards
each other. Written by the award-winning director himself,
the 84-minute film is another gem that will go down well with
art-house fans while drawing reactions of bewilderment to
the common movie-goer. On paper, there is nothing exciting
about the storyline, and it takes a whiz like Kim to execute
a tale like that.
Which
other director you know can intricately express the relationship
between lonely two human beings through a seemingly ridiculous
series of prison visits marked by colorful song-and-dance
sequences? Which other director you know can include supporting
characters like a touchy homosexual cell mate and a mysteriously
faceless prison officer and have viewers ponder about issues
of companionship and voyeurism? Which other director can boldly
showcase a sensuous lovemaking scene between a death row convict
and a desperate housewife and claim it as an artistic expression
of liberation and freedom?
Kim’s
signature silent protagonist is played by Chang Chen (2046,
Blood Brothers) here captivatingly. Although it is not till
towards the end of the movie that we learn of why he is given
the death sentence, we feel for this man’s lonesomeness.
Playing the female protagonist is Zia, who has had bit roles
in Kim’s Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter… and Spring
(2003) and The Coast Guard (2002). Taking on the lead role
seems effortless for the pleasant-looking actress, as she
expresses her exasperation and vexation being trapped emotionally.
The inclusion of supporting characters of the cheating husband
(Ha Jung-Woo in another convincing role after Kim’s
2006 feature Time), the hilarious cell mate and the odd man
behind the surveillance camera (we suspect it’s the
director who took on the symbolic role of the voyeur here)
will have you thinking about their purposes in the story.
Simple
but effective shots by cinematographer Sung Jong-Moo (Time)
tellingly reveals the story bit by bit. Straightforward cuts
by editor Wang Su-an is an indication that a potent film like
this does not need fancy effects or editing to bring it forward.
Such is the power of visuals in filmmaking – viewers
are left to interpret freely what the storyteller is trying
to say with his pictures. To put it simply, this is the kind
of film you must experience yourself to get a taste of what
it’s like.
This
film may not be as violent as Bad Guy (2001) or The Isle (2000),
not as lyrically gorgeous as The Bow (2005) or 3-Iron (2004),
but it is in no way less zen or thought-provoking as the master
filmmaker’s previous works.
Movie
Rating:
(Visually powerful and symbolic, this is another poetic gem
by one of Asia’s most brilliant filmmakers)
Review by John Li
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