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Reviews
Flandersui gae (2000)
Beautifully executed, unique film-making. Bong Joon-ho's a master.
This film is incredible. Released in 2000 it ran as a pre-cursor to a trend of 'indie' toned films that would be become standard fair over the last ten years and, to an extent, lose their freshness. This film still feels as original and fresh 9 years later. Bong Joon-Ho has created something especially unique and multi-layered with this debut.
The plot is a based around a small group of characters that live within an apartment block complex. Lee Sung-jae plays a wannabe university lecturer who is plagued with the constant yapping of a neighbor's dog. Bae Du-na is great as a bored office clerk who wants to be noticed. Byeon Hie-bong is exceptionally charismatic as the colorful apartment janitor. All characters are played superbly and each have different personal goals, which they struggle with.
Bong lets you know right from the beginning, he is a master of direction. In the opening scenes Yun-ju tries to silence a yapping dog, Bong is almost immediately playing with the audiences' sense of morals and emotions. Either way it grabs the audience and is truly a clever opening.
Bong is not afraid to spend time with each of his characters, so much so that at times the film can seem as if it's a series of short films stitched together. Some might point to this a shortcoming, but I believe since each character scene has been so carefully crafted and written that I would have been disappointed if Bong had taken any other approach. Scenes have been written not only to be entertaining but also to elaborate on themes raised within the film, ie, corruption within democracy, fame, and family values, and by the end of the film plots are tied together enough for me to be satisfied. The final scene is subtly book ended with the first in an interesting, introspective manner.
The cinematography is astoundingly planned and executed. Shots of the bland modernist apartment block are beautifully composed, and serves as much as a location as a representation of the characters lives. Long takes are used on many occasions, not breaking the mood of a scene and developing a more contemplative atmosphere. The visual structuring of a janitors ghost story is accented with sudden swift camera pans and creeping dollys. Simply, the film is beautiful to look at and very comfortable to watch. Bong knows how to use the camera as a powerful storytelling tool.
What Bong has created is not necessary a comedy, but more of a drama the sweeps from comedic moments to emotionally dramatic, as well as surrealist spooky. Bongs abilities are clearly on display as he switches between these genres. The film is multi-layered. It is just as much a 'social commentary' on modern Korean life. I love this film for its execution, its themes, its intelligence, and its uniqueness!
97/100
Harry High Pants.
Johnny Mad Dog (2008)
An incredible achievement in raw film-making.
Johnny Mad Dog hits you like a punch in the jaw straight from the opening shot, and doesn't let up the entire way. The film directed by Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire was for me the stand out film of the Melbourne International Film Festival in 2008. The raw, splendidly gritty film making technique displayed to the full house at the forum has left an image in my head that wont leave me for a long time.
The film depicts a group of soldiers in their early teens and the lives they lead as a gang of freedom fighters in an unnamed African country. Their country has been plagued by war for many years to the point there its all the young boys have ever known. It highlights the loss of innocence amongst the young boys and extreme dramatic realities of the civil situation in the country.
The film for me had some likenesses to Fernando Murielle's and Kátia Lund's 'City of God', as both deal with the corruption of young peoples lives in poverty stricken landscapes. While 'Johnny Mad Dog' doesn't quite hits the incredible heights of 'City of God', its by no means any less of a film. 'Johnny Mad Dog' hits you with more of a documentary feel, lots of hand-held camera, yet shot compositions are still carefully considered and beautifully realized. 'Johnny Mad Dog' does away with a lot of overly stylistic editing, which presents the events of the characters as a very truthful experience.
The performances are incredible. Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire, has shaped some amazing moments from a cast of non-actors. In the Q and A afterwards he explained his pre- production techniques and his unyielding intent on casting boys who had had actually been soldiers in their past. For this, the utmost respect is disserved for him.
Sauvaire's vision of this bleak situation doesn't hold back for a moment. It grabs the audience by the neck, and puts in the middle of the disorderly gang. I'm very glad I had the opportunity to experience it.
85/100
Harry High Pants.