SYNOPSIS
One of the most successful Korean horror films, A Public Cemetary under the Moon attracted more than 50,000 viewers in Seoul when it was released, and became the touchstone for Korean horror films¡¯ popularity.
Set in the 1930s when Korea was under the Japanese occupation, the film centers around two women. One of the women, Myung-soon, has held various social positions, such as a student and hostess, whose husband, Han-su is from the upper class. She seeks revenge against a wicked and cruel housemaid, who has plotted to kill and take her position as the wife of the family and finally faces her own death. Behind the women¡¯s strife is the theme of nationalism represented through the characters of Myung-soon and Han-su: Myung-soon becomes a hostess so she can support her brother and Han-su who ended up in jail for their involvement in the independence movement. Han-su turns his back on the independence movement and attains wealth through his involvement in the Japanese colonizers. Meanwhile, the film also depicts the gloomy fate of a colonized bourgeois family that has to suffer the nightmarish catastrophe in the tradition of ¡®Shinpa¡¯ that often portrays the tragic courses of life of a hostess.
The film sees Do Kum-bong rendering the role of a charismatic and energetic femme fatale more powerful and threatening than the role of the lead woman character(played by Kang Mi-ae), the center of the tragedy and the horrifying other. (Joo You-shin)
PROGRAM NOTE
One of the most successful Korean horror films, A Public Cemetary under the Moon attracted more than 50,000 viewers in Seoul when it was released, and became the touchstone for Korean horror films¡¯ popularity.
Set in the 1930s when Korea was under the Japanese occupation, the film centers around two women. One of the women, Myung-soon, has held various social positions, such as a student and hostess, whose husband, Han-su is from the upper class. She seeks revenge against a wicked and cruel housemaid, who has plotted to kill and take her position as the wife of the family and finally faces her own death. Behind the women¡¯s strife is the theme of nationalism represented through the characters of Myung-soon and Han-su: Myung-soon becomes a hostess so she can support her brother and Han-su who ended up in jail for their involvement in the independence movement. Han-su turns his back on the independence movement and attains wealth through his involvement in the Japanese colonizers. Meanwhile, the film also depicts the gloomy fate of a colonized bourgeois family that has to suffer the nightmarish catastrophe in the tradition of ¡®Shinpa¡¯ that often portrays the tragic courses of life of a hostess.
The film sees Do Kum-bong rendering the role of a charismatic and energetic femme fatale more powerful and threatening than the role of the lead woman character(played by Kang Mi-ae), the center of the tragedy and the horrifying other. (Joo You-shin)