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Suchwiin bulmyeong

  • 2001
  • R
  • 1 Std. 57 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
4028
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Suchwiin bulmyeong (2001)
DramaWar

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuRomances end in blood and the frail hopes of individuals are torn apart in a vile karmic continuity of colonialism, civil war and occupation. After surviving Japanese colonization, Korea bec... Alles lesenRomances end in blood and the frail hopes of individuals are torn apart in a vile karmic continuity of colonialism, civil war and occupation. After surviving Japanese colonization, Korea became the first war zone of the Cold War. The legacy of war remains today in this divided co... Alles lesenRomances end in blood and the frail hopes of individuals are torn apart in a vile karmic continuity of colonialism, civil war and occupation. After surviving Japanese colonization, Korea became the first war zone of the Cold War. The legacy of war remains today in this divided country.

  • Regie
    • Kim Ki-duk
  • Drehbuch
    • Kim Ki-duk
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Yang Dong-geun
    • Ban Min-jung
    • Kim Young-min
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    4028
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Drehbuch
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Yang Dong-geun
      • Ban Min-jung
      • Kim Young-min
    • 20Benutzerrezensionen
    • 18Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos36

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    Topbesetzung10

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    Yang Dong-geun
    Yang Dong-geun
    • Chang-guk
    Ban Min-jung
    Ban Min-jung
    • Eun-ok
    Kim Young-min
    Kim Young-min
    • Jihum
    Pang Eun-jin
    Pang Eun-jin
    • Chang-guk's Mom
    Myeong Gye-nam
    Myeong Gye-nam
    • Jihum's father
    • (as Gye-nam Myeong)
    In-ok Lee
    • Eun-ok's mother
    Cho Jae-hyun
    Cho Jae-hyun
    • Dog Eyes
    Yeong-im Kim
    Mitch Malem
    Mitch Malem
    Kwon Nam-hee
    • Female Store Owner
    • (as Namhee Kwon)
    • Regie
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Drehbuch
      • Kim Ki-duk
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen20

    7,24K
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    10

    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10Bobhand

    Amazing Movie!!!!

    One of the reasons I enjoyed this film as much as I did is because it is one of those rare films that sticks with you! After I finished watching it, I felt compelled to stay up way later then I should have because I just could not stop talking about it! There was just so much going on! It was so powerful...dark, emotional, complex, intense. However, unlike most reviews that I have read, I noticed a few comedic elements as well. It was kind of a sad funny, but they were scenes that literally gave you a moment to catch your breath and laugh before being thrown back into the darkness... which I felt really made the film that much more powerful! The director is just so talented it's sick! No pun intended!
    8simon_booth

    Not one to watch if you want cheering up...

    Call me strange, but Kim Ki-Duk's THE ISLE is one of my favourite Korean movies. Not just the beautiful imagery, not just those scenes that had people fainting in the theatres, but because I empathised a lot with the characters, and the symbolism of their environment and their actions was very much in tune with my sensibilities. OK, so I'm strange .

    Much as I enjoyed watching it, I won't try and argue that watching THE ISLE is a 'pleasant' experience - not one to leave you with a smile, so I was prepared for something a little bit serious and grim with ADDRESS UNKNOWN.

    It is not a little bit serious and grim at all... it is *completely* serious and amazingly grim.

    Kim Ki-Duk is less interested in exploring the somewhat global issues of human feelings here, but instead wants to explore the feelings of a nation - Korea, still living in the shadow of the Korean war. The characters here come across as a little apersonal (it's ok, I just invented it) because they are embodiments of the country's experience... the division, the loss of autonomy, the dehumanisation that people feel, caught up in the conflicts between North and South and between Capitalism and Communism. Obviously to suggest that this was a universal Korean experience would be unreasonable, though Kim Ki-Duk is not interested in exploring balancing factors in this particular movie. People suffer. And suffer. And suffer. And then they suffer for a while. He is relentless in his examination of the pain that he clearly feels, for himself and for his country.

    It must be said that I know almost nothing about Korean history (though I am learning a lot as I type!), or of contemporary Korean society, so I don't know how common the feelings that Kim Ki Duk expresses here are, or how realistic his assessment of Korea's post war condition is. It all feels very believable, very convincing... but certainly none of the Korean people I have met are quite as utterly miserable as they must be if ADDRESS UNKNOWN were an accurate depiction of their lives.

    I think there is no doubt that for at least some people, and some communities, the feelings that Kim Ki Duk brings to the fore in the movie represent real feelings and real situations. But I think that it must be assumed that it is not an even-handed assessment of the situation, that he was quite certain what he wanted to say and permitted no deviation from it. In a way this is the movie's undoing... it is so relentless in its pursuit that it becomes too easy to get detached from it, to treat it as political allegory rather than a tale of human hardship. A little more warmth, a little bit of humour, maybe just one or two moments where at least one character was *slightly* happy... and I would have been much more able to bond with them, and their tragedies and miseries would have been that much more poignant as a result.

    A fairly small matter, and to a degree this observation may simply be an observation that I am not Korean. The movie is a very personal look at the feelings and circumstances of a nation, and having had no comparable experience myself, it is obvious that I'm going to struggle to fully relate.

    If I couldn't empathise with the characters though, I could at least sympathise with them. The characters themselves were good characters, and the performances were mostly very good. Notable exceptions are the American soldiers in the movie, whose English dialogue and delivery is really quite embarrassingly bad The movie is very light on dialogue - little that is important is expressed through words, because it doesn't need to be. Always a good thing in a movie.

    It is the younger characters of the movie that are centre stage, those who were born years after the Korean war ended, but are still suffering its consequences. It's always refreshing to see young actors deliver mature performances, and this is one such example.

    THE ISLE probably impacted me mostly because of the visuals - the beautifully photographed and haunting environment in which the movie took place. ADDRESS UNKNOWN is not nearly as pretty, which can partly be based on location, but also the fact that the style is a lot more realistic, gritty even, as opposed to THE ISLE's abstractness. It is still well filmed though.

    I wrote of THE ISLE after seeing it:

    "if you want to take away the beauty of his film, you have to be willing to pay the price of the horror"

    ADDRESS UNKNOWN is a less successful movie for me because once you get past it's horror, instead of beauty you find there's just a bit more horror . OK, it's not as bad as that... but the tone is quite unremittingly bleak. I don't know whether to recommend the movie or not. I liked it, but I'm not sure how many others will. Definitely not a movie to put on to take your mind off a troublesome day anyway!
    9Atavisten

    It all falls down

    This is gritty and bleak realism at its best. We are in a countryside village on the border to North-Korea were poverty and war (both the Korean war and the continuation of the cold war) takes its toll on the villagers. Prospects are none, but some think of America as one and therefore learns English. This also provides some of the small pieces of comedy in the movie, for example when some youngsters try to translate from a hustler magazine or when two bullies are tough with speaking English with strong Korean accent; Koreans have trouble pronouncing f for instance.. Some other comedy is the US army battalion running and crawling everywhere and the war veteran crazy for medals always bragging about killing 3 commies.

    Anyway this very grim and bleak realism is obviously made as a political commentary. I don't blame any of them, they are victims of their circumstances. I sympathize with every one of them. Kim Ki-Duk don't blame anyone either, the Americans are portrayed as human, not as heroes nor devils, but the theme of globalization and colonization still lies implied in the movie. Actually its full of commentary. I wont get into it here.

    I know there's a big difference between countryside Korea and big city Korea, but even though I cant say if its real or not, I believe this to be quite realistic. The utter consequences the movie depicts of course is fiction and made to emphasize the horror and drama, this is a movie after all.

    This was not very well received in Korea and understandably so, it takes up problems that are very actual today and brings up a painful past. To get rid of these problems it is very important however, that someone like Kim Ki-Duk makes these kind of movies and for people to see them. So go see it!! But its not a pleasant watch.
    3Max-Stirner-1800

    "Do you want some suffering on your despair?"

    Kim Ki-Duk has been one of my favorite directors for a long time - or so I thought. The intensity of films like "Seom" or "Bin-Jip" was exicting when I was younger but the older I get, the more do I feel exhausted by the endless suffering and violence in this man's movies.

    This whole film is about a bunch of people in South Korea who all hate themselves or each other, who are miserable and mean and use every opportunity to hurt or humiliate each other.

    Non of them is sympathetic, not even the ones who are clearly supposed to be rather sympathetic (the women, as expected).

    Men seem to have given up on things and women all want to learn english and move to america, the holy and chosen land where rivers are filled with milk and honey, or at least make out with an american soldier who is stationed in South Korea in order to humiliate their husbands or hurt their fathers or brothers.

    There isn't even any plot, let alone a resolution. You get implicated animal cruelty and animal abuse at times when characters don't insult each other or proceed to kill their mothers or puppies.

    I don't think I've gotten softer (although I really appreciate some nature documentary more than ever now) but I kinda grew out of watching people or even animals suffer, even there is a supposed touch of social commentary in it.
    Mac-148

    Dog of a movie

    There's a scene in this film where a man plays with a puppy. When the puppy, wagging its tail, approaches, the man, at first affectionate, slaps its nose. Two or three times. It is the most heartless moment in a cruel and vacuous movie. The cruelty is everywhere and stops the audience caring about anyone or anything. Except the dogs. Couple of questions. How does a bullet in the eye get fixed with what looks like soy sauce? Since when did a traditional Korean family allow a teenage daughter to bonk her U.S. soldier boyfriend in the family home? And where did the director drag up those American actors? Friday night in Itaewon? Boy oh boy they were bad. The boyfriend was bad, out of control and saying truly scary things. He blamed it all on the Korean mountains that were closing in on him. Hello? Calling Planet Earth? On top of that, in a movie set in the 1970s, no period pop music. Unforgivable. A real dog.

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      Referenced in Arirang - Bekenntnisse eines Filmemachers (2011)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 2. Juni 2001 (Südkorea)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Südkorea
    • Sprachen
      • Koreanisch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Address Unknown
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Kim Ki-Duk Film
      • LJ Film
      • Prime Entertainment
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 57 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.78 : 1

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