The Japan Times - Blockbuster 'Hope' shows S.Korea's growing movie muscle

EUR -
AED 4.27729
AFN 72.795017
ALL 95.579007
AMD 428.768446
ANG 2.085314
AOA 1069.177113
ARS 1624.723206
AUD 1.625469
AWG 2.097881
AZN 1.979169
BAM 1.958845
BBD 2.345426
BDT 143.121282
BGN 1.944923
BHD 0.439185
BIF 3469.709248
BMD 1.164681
BND 1.490924
BOB 8.075555
BRL 5.86848
BSD 1.1645
BTN 112.139825
BWP 15.835688
BYN 3.212408
BYR 22827.742261
BZD 2.342051
CAD 1.600492
CDF 2617.61484
CHF 0.914392
CLF 0.02682
CLP 1055.561779
CNY 7.931362
CNH 7.920196
COP 4426.695216
CRC 526.82131
CUC 1.164681
CUP 30.864039
CVE 110.436696
CZK 24.320633
DJF 207.37151
DKK 7.473733
DOP 69.468301
DZD 154.710322
EGP 62.082377
ERN 17.470211
ETB 181.828889
FJD 2.563227
FKP 0.873995
GBP 0.870308
GEL 3.121608
GGP 0.873995
GHS 13.321711
GIP 0.873995
GMD 84.437462
GNF 10209.785479
GTQ 8.88385
GYD 243.58766
HKD 9.120143
HNL 30.977293
HRK 7.538279
HTG 152.437649
HUF 361.092923
IDR 20586.896541
ILS 3.385957
IMP 0.873995
INR 112.133539
IQD 1525.478208
IRR 1536213.879145
ISK 143.407625
JEP 0.873995
JMD 184.176339
JOD 0.825738
JPY 184.92916
KES 151.024047
KGS 101.851034
KHR 4684.262507
KMF 493.824298
KPW 1048.212641
KRW 1743.946306
KWD 0.359747
KYD 0.970413
KZT 544.578994
LAK 25513.775765
LBP 104281.926977
LKR 387.924772
LRD 213.102225
LSL 19.44201
LTL 3.438999
LVL 0.704503
LYD 7.408518
MAD 10.724373
MDL 20.157425
MGA 4882.611952
MKD 61.723207
MMK 2445.267938
MNT 4167.266212
MOP 9.393144
MRU 46.47826
MUR 55.092463
MVR 17.947565
MWK 2019.239309
MXN 20.144785
MYR 4.631969
MZN 74.420456
NAD 19.44201
NGN 1598.419148
NIO 42.856813
NOK 10.800315
NPR 179.42372
NZD 1.985961
OMR 0.447811
PAB 1.16451
PEN 3.999135
PGK 5.073888
PHP 71.845643
PKR 324.346654
PLN 4.244563
PYG 7091.964977
QAR 4.256681
RON 5.212531
RSD 117.427627
RUB 84.268317
RWF 1705.458796
SAR 4.370413
SBD 9.336456
SCR 16.97897
SDG 699.390941
SEK 10.947434
SGD 1.4894
SHP 0.869552
SLE 28.653258
SLL 24422.77497
SOS 665.531844
SRD 43.620782
STD 24106.539581
STN 24.537938
SVC 10.189842
SYP 128.726318
SZL 19.437303
THB 37.966843
TJS 10.864845
TMT 4.088029
TND 3.407898
TOP 2.804271
TRY 53.086029
TTD 7.906326
TWD 36.788655
TZS 3028.173402
UAH 51.436468
UGX 4389.787105
USD 1.164681
UYU 46.682577
UZS 13997.762303
VES 594.160493
VND 30697.489938
VUV 137.818772
WST 3.152069
XAF 656.975579
XAG 0.01522
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.147607
XCG 2.098772
XDR 0.817784
XOF 656.978403
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.858543
ZAR 19.368716
ZMK 10483.509193
ZMW 21.922082
ZWL 375.026719
  • CMSC

    -0.1150

    22.98

    -0.5%

  • RBGPF

    0.8900

    61.68

    +1.44%

  • NGG

    -6.7900

    80.64

    -8.42%

  • RIO

    -5.9000

    103.69

    -5.69%

  • AZN

    -3.3800

    181.58

    -1.86%

  • CMSD

    -0.4500

    23.05

    -1.95%

  • GSK

    -0.8289

    49.67

    -1.67%

  • BTI

    -1.6100

    65.09

    -2.47%

  • RELX

    0.9400

    32.4

    +2.9%

  • BCE

    -0.4000

    23.79

    -1.68%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8300

    15.1

    -5.5%

  • BCC

    -3.4100

    65.99

    -5.17%

  • JRI

    -0.5565

    12.45

    -4.47%

  • BP

    0.7292

    44.35

    +1.64%

  • VOD

    -0.8000

    14.68

    -5.45%

Blockbuster 'Hope' shows S.Korea's growing movie muscle
Blockbuster 'Hope' shows S.Korea's growing movie muscle / Photo: Thibaud MORITZ - AFP

Blockbuster 'Hope' shows S.Korea's growing movie muscle

Acclaimed director Na Hong-jin has unveiled South Korea's biggest budget film ever: a blood-splattered sci-fi thriller featuring killer extraterrestrials played by real-life couple Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander.

Text size:

"Hope" by Na, whose low-budget horror movie "The Wailing" became a huge hit in his home country, was able to give free rein to his dark imagination in this gory tale of alien invasion.

"It's the most expensive film in the history of Korean cinema," Na told AFP in an interview at the Cannes Film Festival where the film premiered on Sunday night.

"It's a film that really required a very, very large budget because of the special effects, the design, the actors."

Despite having a genre-defying concept that was hard to sell initially -- it skips between thriller, sci-fi, horror and comedy -- he received backing from Korea's Plus M Entertainment and a budget of around 30 million euros ($35 million).

The cost of "Hope" underlines the increasing resources available to South Korean directors whose hit films such as the quadruple Oscar-winning "Parasite", as well as TV series like "Squid Game" have turned the home of KPop music into a global entertainment centre.

Reviews for "Hope" were broadly positive, with Screen magazine calling it "a thunderously entertaining genre mash-up" while The Hollywood Reporter said it had "instant cult classic written all over it".

But others such as IndieWire slammed the quality of the special effects -- suggesting the budget was "not enough" for Na's grand ambitions -- while its run-time of 160 minutes was described as "over long" by Variety.

Although married acting couple Fassbender and Vikander, stars of films from "12 Years a Slave" to "Ex Machina", are listed on the film's cast, many fans might struggle to recognise them.

Their acting has been transformed by special effects, with all the recognisable lead roles performed by bankable Korean stars including Hwang Jung-min, as well as Hoyeon from "Squid Game".

- Korean wave -

The all-action film, full of bodily fluids and gunfire, revolves around a clash between the residents of a remote town close to the frontier between South and North Korea and terrifying visitors from another planet.

With its themes of conflict and the incompetence of local officials, Na said he had "the wars that we know at the moment and the political situation that we had" at the time in his mind as he was writing the screenplay.

"Hope", intended as the first film in a series, is one of 22 films competing for the prestigious Palme d'Or prize for best film in Cannes.

It is the first by Na in 10 years since "The Wailing", which also focused on a remote location struggling with a mystery arrival.

The Cannes jury this year is headed by a South Korean director for the first time, Park Chan-wook, the maker of arthouse classics such as "Oldboy" and "The Handmaiden".

"Korea is playing a role as one of the central hubs of the film world, and I believe this is a movement befitting the time," he told AFP last week.

 

Park insisted that he would not favour his compatriot, Na.

"Some even joked that I might go out of my way to be harsher on a Korean film, because it wouldn't look good if I appeared to be favouring it," he told AFP. "I intend to judge everything as fairly and objectively as possible."

T.Maeda--JT