
With a special presentation of Kore-Eda Hirokazu’s Award-Winning Broker, the acclaimed Return To Seoul, and closing with Hansan: Rising Dragon, The London Korean Film Festival returns to London this November.
The London Korean Film Festival will return to celebrate its 17th year from 3 November – 17 November 2022, featuring 35+ cinema screenings in leading venues around London. The London Korean Film Festival has grown from humble beginnings to become one of the longest-running and most respected festivals dedicated to Korean cinema in the world.
They’ve built a name upon presenting lineups consisting of everything from the country’s most successful blockbusters to thought-provoking independents from its finest auteurs. Across a variety of finely curated strands, they aim to cater for general audiences to committed cinephiles, and everyone in between. The 17th London Korean Film Festival is organized by the Korean Cultural Centre UK with the support of the Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports & Tourism, Korean Film Council.
SCREENINGS
Screenings at last year’s festival were very well received by audiences, closely selling out at 8 cinema venues. This year’s festival returns to 10 cinemas within London and two regional venues: Cine Lumiere, Garden Cinema, Lux, Rio Cinema, V&A Museum, ICA, Genesis Cinema, Picturehouse Central, Regent Street Cinema, and HOME Manchester and Glasgow Film Theatre.
THE DETAILS
Following the announcement of Choi Dong-hoon’s Alienoid opening the London Korean Film Festival (LKFF), the festival is proud to reveal its 2022 programme filled with critically acclaimed films, exciting new talent, Korean box office hits, the latest K-Horror films, powerful female filmmakers and boundary-pushing documentaries. The world’s longest-running film festival dedicated to Korean cinema runs from 3 November – 17 November 2022 in cinema venues across London.
With the biggest programme dedicated to Korean cinema outside of the country itself, the exciting programme includes 35+ films across strands including Cinema Now, Special Focus, After Dark: K-Horror, Indie Talents, Women’s Voices, Documentary, Shorts, and Artist Video.
THE CONTENT
Kim Han-min’s follow-up to The Admiral: Roaring Currents (2014), the naval warfare blockbuster that remains the most successful Korean film of all time, Hansan: Rising Dragon closes the festival on 17th November at Regent St Cinema. The gala screening is followed by a Q&A with Kim Han-min. The prequel returns to the legendary exploits of Joseon Era admiral Yi Sun-sin and, teeming white knuckle tension, steers us through an impeccably realized and epic David-vs-Goliath struggle out in the open sea. The Admiral: Roaring Currents also features as a Special Screening earlier in the programme.
As part of the LKFF collaboration with the V&A exhibition Hallyu! The Korean Wave, Choi Dong-hoon’s crime caper, The Thieves features in the special screening programme. One of the region’s largest co-productions with a fantastic Korean and Hong Kong ensemble cast, including Squid Game’s Lee Jung-Jae, and a gripping high-impact caper story, The Thieves is one of the biggest grossing films in Korea’s box office history. The special screening is followed by a Q&A with Choi Dong-hoon and a reception at the V&A.
BROKER AND THE ANCHOR
Among the Special screenings is Kore-Eda Hirokazu’s Award-Winning Broker – one of the year’s most highly acclaimed films, The whimsical and beautifully crafted film played in competition at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival and won Song Kang-ho (Parasite, The Host) a Best Actor award at Cannes – making history as the first Korean actor to do so. The screening is followed by a Q&A with the film’s translator Darcy Paquet.
Cinema Now offers an exciting range of films from the past year, the very latest in Korean cinema. Jeong Ji-Yeon’s mesmerizing psychological thriller The Anchor plays out its genre tropes to dizzying perfection, while also addressing the inequalities and traumas which women both face and hand down in Korean society. The screening is followed by a Q&A with Jeong Ji-Yeon at Picturehouse Central.
RETURN TO SEOUL, HOT-BLOODED, AND STELLER: A MAGICAL RIDE
In the riveting Return To Seoul, which premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival under the Un Certain Regard section, director Davy Chou centers on a woman searching for her identity, inspired by the real-life experience of Chou’s friend. The protagonist is played by Park Ji-min in a critically acclaimed breakthrough performance. Byun Sung-Hyun’s Kingmaker is a saga of aspiration and ambition set during the dictatorship era of 1963-1979 and is powered by two excellent performances by Sul Kyung-gu(The Book of fish) and Lee Sun-Kyun(Parasite).
Hot Blooded is the long-awaited directorial debut by acclaimed novelist and screenwriter Cheon Myeong-Kwan and is a norish tale on the tribulations of a gangster in a multi-layered performance by Jung Woo.
In Stellar: A Magical Ride, director Kwon Soo-Kyung embarks on a comedic road chase fueled with nostalgia and charm. Romance gets a second chance in Director’s Intention by Kim Min-Geun with a location scout and a film director taking a trip down memory lane.
SEIRE AND CONTORTED
LKFF presents a widely and feverishly appreciated genre, rooted in psychological and emotional reality, with its After Dark: K-Horror strand. Park Kang’s intense, ambiguous feature Seire (the 3-week confinement period for mother and newborn) is a subtle, serious, slow-burn exposé of one man’s inner psyche, both waking and dreaming.
Drawing liberally (if dynamically) on both Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining and Kim Jee-Woon’s A Tale Of Two Sisters, Contorted by Kang Dong-hun places a child in harrowing peril and concerns a house and a family both haunted where mental illness and domestic history merge into one.
GUIMOON, THE FIFTH THORACIC VERTEBRA, AND CASHBAG
Set in a community center where a mass murder took place, Guimoon: The Lightless Door involves a paranormal investigator who discovers a door to another world in a wild, bewildering and increasingly frantic ghost train of a ride by Sim Deok-Geun.
The Fifth Thoracic Vertebra by Park Sye-young is a melancholic, monstrous, experimental horror dealing with a creature’s need to feed but also sets human drama and dreams against an irrational canvas of nature.
Park’s short film Cashbag is programmed alongside and follows a man in a series of nocturnal transactions ending always in a similar waterside location.
FEMALE FILMMAKERS
Female filmmakers and talent continue to be front and center of the festival in the dedicated Women’s Voices strand. A Women’s Voices networking event launches the strand ahead of the screening of Kim Jung-Eun’s Gyeong-ah’s Daughter on 13th November. The screening is followed by a Q&A with Kim Jung-Eun at Cine Lumiere.
Other powerful and thought-provoking titles within the strand include Byun Gyu-Ri’s Coming To You on two mothers coming to terms with their children’s sexuality and join the ‘Queer Children’s Parents Club’.
SPECIALLY SELECTED
In collaboration with the Seoul International Women’s Film Festival, the following films have been selected: Bae Cyan’s auto-fiction documentary Dear Chaemin, which examines violence against queer communities in Seoul and among Asian communities in Europe; Yang Yoon-Jung’s school drama Special Scholarship which deals with fierce politics among students of different demographics; Jeon Chae-lin’s Dear Kimsisters in 1959 that takes a look at the impact and influence of the popular The Kim Sisters female pop group at the height of the Cold War and the provocative Nipple War 3 by Paek Siwon sets out to question Korean society’s views on women’s bodies.
KANG SOO-YEON
The programme includes a Special Focus strand dedicated to internationally celebrated, acclaimed actress Kang Soo-Yeon. Beloved within Korea as a young actor, Kang became well known on the international stage with her breakout role in Im Kwon-Taek’s The Surrogate Woman in 1987. Kang won the Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the 44th Venice International Film Festival for her role, making her the first Korean actor to receive an award at a major international film festival. Considered a national treasure, Kang passed away on 7th May 2022 of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 55.
Additional Kang Soo-Yeon films at the festival include Come Come Come Upward (1989), for which she won a Best Actress Award at the 1989 Moscow International Film Festival; The Road To The Race Track (1991) for which she won multiple Best Actress Awards at Asian Film Festivals; Girls’ Night Out (1998) which showed her comedic talents; and Rainbow Trout (1999) which won the Special Jury Prize at the Tokyo International Film Festival in 2000.
Founder and former chairman of the Busan International Film Festival, Kim Dong-ho, and Director of the Korean Film Archive, Kim Hong-Joon will be participating in the Forum event dedicated to Kang and Korea’s cinema landscape of her era. Kang was the co-director of BIFF from 2015-2017. Both Kim Dong-ho and Kim Hong-Joon will be participating in Q&As following the screenings of Come Come Come Upward and The Road To The Race Track.
DOCUMENTARY
The Documentary strand features The 2nd Repatriation by Kim Dongwon focuses on political prisoners living in Seoul, who still hope for repatriation to North Korea. The film is a follow-up to the director’s 2003 documentary Repatriation about the 63 long-term ‘unconverted’ political prisoners repatriated to North Korea in 2000. Also featured is Melting Icecream by Hong Jinhwon, a documentary based on archival footage and I Am More is a fascinating study of ‘life as a stage’ by Lee II-ha as he depicts the life of More (Mo Jimin) a popular drag artist.
INDIE TALENTS
Indie Talents showcases new and emerging filmmakers and includes Lee Ji-Eun’s The Hill of Secrets (2022 Berlinale, Generation Kplus Competition) on a young girl caught between two conflicting worlds, played by Moon Seung-a, one of Korean cinema’s most exceptional child actors. Hot in Day, Cold at Night (2022 Berlin International Film Festival, Forum) might appear to be a depressing tale of economic hardship, but filmmaking-screenwriting duo Park Song-Yeol and Won Hyang-Ra – who also play the leading roles – have an entirely different tone in mind. Although not quite a comedy, the film’s finely-calibrated blend of sardonic humor and touching vulnerability have made this one of the year’s most talked-about Korean independent films.
A quietly observed film with strong resonance, A Lonely Island in the Distant Sea by Kim Mi-young is a thoughtful consideration of a man facing the unexpected. Through My Midwinter, Oh Seong-ho’s debut feature deals with a relationship under pressure and is made vivid by the performances of Kwon Da-ham and Kwon So-Hyun (a former member of K-pop group 4Minute) as the stressed but sympathetic couple.
THE JEONJU SHORTS
The Jeonju Shorts strand consists of a selection of shorts from this year’s awards winners (in the Shorts category) at the Jeonju International Film Festival including In The Dry Stream by Kang Ji-Hyo, a subtle and poignant tale of childhood dreams that must make way for unhappy adult realities. Wunderkammer 10.0 by Ki Yelim, Park Soyun, and Jung Inwoo, part science fiction, part social commentary, part art installation, this short is both a mystery and a manifesto. Moon Hyein’s Transit tests the bonds of friendship in light of gender transition.
Students seek freedom and revenge in Yoo Jongseok’s Light It Up at 2 AM. Framily by Kim In-Hye deals with the complications of family ties and how they can strengthen in adversity. Paek Siwon’s Layers of Summer contemplates if unrequited love can be rekindled. 29th Breath by Kook Joong-Yi focuses on an aspiring actress who keeps getting cast as a zombie and struggles to keep her dream alive – with dramatic consequences. In Kim Min-Ju’s Trade, the lives of two very different, troubled people collide and they strive to outwit one another for their own again.
THE ARTIST VIDEO STRAND
In the Artist Video strand, LUX and the LKFF join forces to present the first UK solo exhibition by Korean artist Yun Choi, who collects images, words, and behaviors marked by Korean banality and remixes them for her videos and multimedia installations, tracing collective belief and reverie that underlie absurd socio-political phenomena. The exhibition at LUX presents two films that explore language as a bodily experience: the latest rendition of Choi’s film Where the Heart Goes_Poetry Collection (2022), and Viral Lingua (2018), a collaborative film made with Minhwi Lee.
ABOUT THE KCCUK
Since being opened by the Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism in January 2008, under the jurisdiction of the Embassy of the Republic of Korea, the KCCUK has gone from strength to strength in its role of enhancing friendship, amity, and understanding between Korea and the UK through cultural and educational activities.
As well as presenting a diverse range of ongoing monthly events focused on Korean film, drama, education, and literature, the KCCUK regularly welcomes Korean luminaries from many cultural fields to discuss their work, organizes the annual film festival as well as traditional and contemporary musical performances and holds a number of exhibitions throughout the year, allowing artists to showcase their talent. From the KCCUK’s central London location (just off Trafalgar Square), the institution’s dedicated cultural team work to further develop established cultural projects, introduce new opportunities to expand Korean programmes in the UK, and to encourage ongoing cultural exchange.
IMAGE GALLERY
You can follow all and find out all the latest news on social media at:
Facebook: @theLKFF
Twitter: @koreanfilmfest
Instagram: @london_korean_film_festival
The 17th London Korean Film Festival 2022 will take place from 3 November – 17 November. You can book your tickets here.
Source: The London Korean Film Festival
Carl Roberts is the News Editor for The Future of the Force. Aside from being our horror genre aficionado, he is also passionate about Star Wars, Marvel, DC, and the Indiana Jones movies. Follow him on Twitter where he uses the force frequently!