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IMDbPro

Seom - Die Insel

Originaltitel: Seom
  • 2000
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
15.391
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Seom - Die Insel (2000)
Working at a fishing resort in an idyllic location, but surrounded by various facets of human unpleasantness, a young mute woman falls in love with a man on the run from the law for committing murder.
trailer wiedergeben1:59
1 Video
57 Fotos
DramaThriller

Eine Betreuerin wird zur Mutter einer abgelegenen Insel.Eine Betreuerin wird zur Mutter einer abgelegenen Insel.Eine Betreuerin wird zur Mutter einer abgelegenen Insel.

  • Regie
    • Kim Ki-duk
  • Drehbuch
    • Kim Ki-duk
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jung Suh
    • Kim Yu-seok
    • Cho Jae-hyun
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    15.391
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Drehbuch
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jung Suh
      • Kim Yu-seok
      • Cho Jae-hyun
    • 72Benutzerrezensionen
    • 84Kritische Rezensionen
    • 61Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 6 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    Trailer

    Fotos57

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    Topbesetzung12

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    Jung Suh
    Jung Suh
    • Hee-Jin
    Kim Yu-seok
    Kim Yu-seok
    • Hyeon-sik
    Cho Jae-hyun
    Cho Jae-hyun
    • Mang-chee
    Jang Hang-seon
    • Middle-aged man
    • (as Hang-Seon Jang)
    Son Min-seok
    • Dal-Soo
    Ji-Seon Han
    • Jeong-Ah
    Jeong-sik Kang
    • 40-Year-Old Fisherman
    Hye-kyeong Choi
    • Young lady 1
    Seon-hwa Jeon
    • Young lady 2
    Won Seo
    Song Seung-heon
    Song Seung-heon
      Kim Yeo-jin
      Kim Yeo-jin
      • Regie
        • Kim Ki-duk
      • Drehbuch
        • Kim Ki-duk
      • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
      • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

      Benutzerrezensionen72

      6,915.3K
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      Empfohlene Bewertungen

      9simon_booth

      Challenges the audience to work for their reward, but pays off if you make it

      Another movie that has attained a little notoriety from the number of walk-outs at festival screenings, and even a couple of audience members passing out. Whilst it is not hard to see why, it is a shame that is what the film is known for, as there is much more to it than *those* scenes. A mute girl makes a living running a kind of retreat, where men can rent a floating cabin on a lake in the mountains and spend their days fishing, and their nights sleeping with prostitutes. The mute girl makes ends meet by taking on this role as well. A young man arrives and rents a cabin, clearly not their for the fish. We see that he is tortured and suicidal - you wouldn't guess why from the 5 second flashback that is meant to explain it, but the 'filmography' section of the DVD explains it in more detail. The mute girl is drawn to the man's desperation, perhaps feeling sympathy/protectiveness, or perhaps simply relating to another deeply unhappy soul.

      The relationship between these two characters, and several other characters that come to the lake for one reason or another, is the main focus of the film. The difficulty some people have with relationships is the topic being studied, particularly when they are not happy in their relationship with themselves. The inner feelings of the characters receive expression in scenes whose 'shock factor' has drawn inevitable comparisons with Takashi Miike, especially AUDITION. Director Kim Ki Duk doesn't seem to mind these comparisons:

      "KK: I saw Audition at Toronto and that movie made me realize that there is someone else out there like me. We are two of a kind"

      If you couldn't sit through the last half hour of AUDITION, you'll probably want to give THE ISLE a miss too. It's also definitely not a film for animal lovers... there is absolutely zero chance of the film being released intact in the UK or the US, as the treatment of the animals in the film (mainly fish) is far outside what is permissible in either country's regulations.

      But there is much more to THE ISLE than the scenes that make keeping your eyes on screen a challenge. In between, the film is absolutely ravishing, and will keep your eyes glued there. The setting of the lake, mostly bathed in deep fog, and the fantastic wordless performance from actress Jung Suh (and the rest of the cast) are beautiful and powerful. The loneliness and sadness of the characters is reflected brilliantly in the total isolation of the floating cabins. There is a deep message in the film, and it is presented to us beautifully.

      Like Miike, Kim Ki-Duk makes us work for our reward when we watch THE ISLE... if you want to take away the beauty of his film, you have to be willing to pay the price of the horror. Thoroughly recommended!

      One note: the film is another one of those great films that just doesn't know how to end itself. Actually, we get the perfect ending... a nice long shot and a fade to white and it should have been over, but

      apparently Kim Ki Duk wasn't quite satisfied to leave it at that and tacks on two extra scenes, about a minute of footage, that are simply inexplicable and serve only to confuse and spoil the mood. My recommendation... when it fades to white, simply stop the DVD
      9HumanoidOfFlesh

      Deeply moving and emotional film.

      Ki-duk Kim's "Seom"/"The Isle" has to be one of the most beautiful movies I have ever seen.The cinematography,the silence and the themes under the surface are incredible.The film explores human relationships and the pain of being in love,and being loved.Both characters(Hyun-shik and Hin-jin)are lost human beings searching for love.They crave love,yet shun it when it comes to them,as they are deeply aware of the destructive qualities it brings out in them.Suh-Shik Hwang's cinematography is absolutely beautiful and captures many impressive visuals.Still there are some horrific images that will shock casual viewer,so the viewer should be prepared.9 out of 10.
      7Smallclone100

      Beautiful but gruesome

      Wow, where to start with this. Ki Duk Kim has always been a divisive director, with his films showing slow burning, very natural, almost spiritual human traits. This though is like a magnified version of a Ki Duk Kim film. It's low budget, set in a single location, stunningly beautiful, very gruesome in parts, explicit and controversial. It centres around a lonely woman (Hee Jin) who delivers bait to tourist fisherman. What we see unfold is a symbolism heavy ride into a twisted / tumultuous relationship between Hee Jin and a visitor. It's full of breathtaking cinematography, sparse dialogue and one of the most stomach churning suicide attempts I've ever seen on screen. As usual with Ki Duk Kim, water as a symbol is featured heavily, and so are animals and nature. Quite why certain little creatures are sacrificed on screen I'm not sure though. A warning to anyone who is easily offended by animal cruelty - don't watch this movie.

      What does it all mean in the end? I'm torn between it being an entire metaphor for how difficult relationships can be / an exploration into gender roles or a simple descent into madness tale. Maybe all 3. It is a heck of an experience though. Think of a Pedro Almodóvar movie mixed with a bit of Takashi Miike, maybe with a bit of Haneke in there too, and you may get the picture.

      It's beautiful yet gruesome. I have to take a mark off for the animal cruelty, as it is bordering on unacceptable levels at times, but it still gets a 7.5/10
      7rosscinema

      Very painful view of relationships

      This is definitely not a film for all tastes. "The Isle" not only shows some of the most disturbing images on film but it also makes the viewer work hard to try and figure out what it all means. Especially the very last scene which I think was put there for each viewer to make they're own interpretation, as Kubrick did for the end of "2001, A Space Odyssey". Suh Jung plays Hee-Jin who rents out floating fish cabins and supplies bait, food and prostitutes. She also is a prostitute and she never utters a single word in the film. Some have called her character a mute but towards the end of the film she screams so I am thinking her silence might be of her own doing! She is attracted to one of the renters who is suicidal and is hiding out. Suh Jungs performance is very strong and its difficult to carry a film without speaking a word and the actor has to rely to a great length on how well and interesting the story is. Her performance reminds me of Isabelle Huppert in "The Piano Teacher". The amount of pain between the two characters is what they have in common. This is a film about relationships in a very strange setting with two strange people. Each character has a scene involving fish hooks and when they take place its up to the other character to try and ease the pain. Good cinematography with shots of the lake at dawn or sunset with mist and fog on the water. Very tough film to view with all the self mutilation and animal cruelty. For those of you who have viewed Asian films before then you should check out this very well made film.
      Ali_John_Catterall

      Float Your Boat?

      There are two immutable truths in matters of the heart. None more desirable than those who do not want you; none less desirable than those you could possess with ease. Somewhere between these two axioms fall the doomed lovers of this spellbinding offering. Beautiful Hee-Jin (Jung) is the grounds keeper for a dingy Korean fishing resort, selling snacks, bait, her tits 'n' ass, to the tourists she ferries between flotillas of fishing huts.

      Fugitive Hyun-Shik (Yoo-Suk) shows up one day, shivering, suicidal, utterly alone. Another lost soul, Hee-Jin's smitten because, unlike her sleazy clientèle, Hyun-Shik's different. He doesn't abuse her or make fun of her muteness. And he fashions exquisite little wire sculptures for her, as they study one another across the rain-spattered lake. He in his unreachable desolation, she in her shore-side cabin, cat-like and inscrutable. The first time he tries to kill himself, by swallowing fishing hooks, she brings him back to life – to love – the only way she knows. From suicide to sex in three minutes. And nobody is going to get in her way. Director Kim Ki-duk, responsible for surprise Art-house hit Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter…and Spring, has crafted another beautiful-horrible movie; gorgeous to look at, and often between splayed fingers. It's as minimal and soulful as a haiku. And as painful as falling in love

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      Handlung

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      • Wissenswertes
        This fell foul of the British Board of Film Classification who demanded cuts, not because of the scene where a metal object is inserted into a vagina but of cruelty to fish, which director Kim Ki-duk admitted was genuine.
      • Alternative Versionen
        The cut UK print was submitted to the Irish censor who cited the violence as causing concern - he gave the distributor (Tartan Films) two options:
        • Resubmit the same version (presumably for an appeal/reconsideration)
        • Submit an altered version to secure a certificate
        They went with the latter, despite the changes not being required under law - this censored version was certified 18 on September 29, 2004. The cuts totaled 3m 15s on top of the UK's 1m 50s to animal cruelty - the running time of the Irish print is 84m 53s compared to the UK's 88m 8s. No details for the cuts or justification for the decision were made available. An article in the Irish Times issue dated October 1, 2004 explains it in further detail: "The Isle was due to open at UGC Cinemas in Dublin on September 10th as part of the touring Asia Extreme season organised by the London-based distributors, Tartan Films. On that date, showings of the South Korean film were listed in all the daily UGC advertisements, and a display ad for the film was run in The Ticket, as was Donald Clarke's review. But the film never opened and has yet to receive a public screening in Ireland. The Isle was submitted to the censor's office on September 8th, just two days before it was due to be released - very late notice at an exceptionally busy period for new releases. John Kelleher, the film censor, made time to view it the next day, but found that some elements of the film required serious consideration. "We contacted Tartan and drew attention to scenes of sexual violence and explicit self-mutilation that were causing us concern," he says. "It was entirely up to Tartan Films if they wanted to resubmit the same version of the film, or a different version." Tartan subsequently submitted an altered version of the film, which was viewed by Kelleher on Wednesday morning and passed with an 18 certificate. The film had already been cut by 110 seconds by the British Board of Film Classification because of a scene of animal cruelty. In his three-star review, Donald Clarke noted "the notorious scene in which the female lead, part avenging angel, part lady of the lake, inserts fishhooks into her vagina and then, as if that were not uncomfortable enough, hauls them out again". He also noted that in the film's "envelope-pushing shock therapy, the hero does something similar to his esophagus." The Isle will probably open at the end of the Asia Extreme season, on November 5th."
      • Verbindungen
        Referenced in Frühling, Sommer, Herbst, Winter... und Frühling (2003)

      Top-Auswahl

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      FAQ19

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      Details

      Ändern
      • Erscheinungsdatum
        • 17. Januar 2002 (Deutschland)
      • Herkunftsland
        • Südkorea
      • Sprache
        • Koreanisch
      • Auch bekannt als
        • The Isle
      • Drehorte
        • Südkorea
      • Produktionsfirmen
        • Myung Films
        • Nova Media
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      Box Office

      Ändern
      • Budget
        • 1.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
      • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
        • 20.666 $
      • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
        • 4.546 $
        • 25. Aug. 2002
      • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
        • 24.963 $
      Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

      Technische Daten

      Ändern
      • Laufzeit
        • 1 Std. 30 Min.(90 min)
      • Farbe
        • Color
      • Sound-Mix
        • Dolby Digital
      • Seitenverhältnis
        • 1.85 : 1

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