SYNOPSIS
This film, made a year before Berlin Report, exposes the beginning of Park Kwang-su¡¯s primary theme until his film A Single Spark in 1995: the relationship between the intellectuals and the people. Clearly demarcated in the Korean title, ¡®they¡¯ and ¡®we¡¯ designate people and the intelligentsia. During his long career, Park has always searched for reconciliation between the two. Park includes himself as an ¡®auteur¡¯ in his films by presenting an educated male protagonist as his own alter ego, like Seong-min (played by Ahn Sung-ki) in Berlin Report and Ki-young (played by Moon Sung-keun), a fugitive and former-student from political movement in Black Republic. Park¡¯s topic is explored through the journey taken by a male intellectual searching for his subject-identity in his relationship with ¡°regular people.¡± On the other hand, women in Park¡¯s films (mostly played by Shim Hye-jin) are from the working-class like a coffee shop waitress or a blue-collar laborer (Kim Sun-jae¡¯s character in A Single Spark), or mentally retarded (Shim Hye-jin¡¯s character in To the Starry Island), or even physically damaged like Young-hee, an aphasic in Berlin Report.
In Black Republic, like the male characters Ki-young and Seong-chul, the female protagonist Young-sook also lives during the dark ages of 1980s Korea, in a state of psychological panic. However, unlike Ki-young who has a role in representing and explaining the era (clearly heard in his narration at the end of the film), Young-sook does not have any voice of her own. Representing the ¡®people/subaltern¡¯, she is an unknown place that the male intellectual can never reach. (Kim Sun-ah)
PROGRAM NOTE
This film, made a year before Berlin Report, exposes the beginning of Park Kwang-su¡¯s primary theme until his film A Single Spark in 1995: the relationship between the intellectuals and the people. Clearly demarcated in the Korean title, ¡®they¡¯ and ¡®we¡¯ designate people and the intelligentsia. During his long career, Park has always searched for reconciliation between the two. Park includes himself as an ¡®auteur¡¯ in his films by presenting an educated male protagonist as his own alter ego, like Seong-min (played by Ahn Sung-ki) in Berlin Report and Ki-young (played by Moon Sung-keun), a fugitive and former-student from political movement in Black Republic. Park¡¯s topic is explored through the journey taken by a male intellectual searching for his subject-identity in his relationship with ¡°regular people.¡± On the other hand, women in Park¡¯s films (mostly played by Shim Hye-jin) are from the working-class like a coffee shop waitress or a blue-collar laborer (Kim Sun-jae¡¯s character in A Single Spark), or mentally retarded (Shim Hye-jin¡¯s character in To the Starry Island), or even physically damaged like Young-hee, an aphasic in Berlin Report.
In Black Republic, like the male characters Ki-young and Seong-chul, the female protagonist Young-sook also lives during the dark ages of 1980s Korea, in a state of psychological panic. However, unlike Ki-young who has a role in representing and explaining the era (clearly heard in his narration at the end of the film), Young-sook does not have any voice of her own. Representing the ¡®people/subaltern¡¯, she is an unknown place that the male intellectual can never reach. (Kim Sun-ah)