Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA documentary on five young wannabe stuntmen working in the South Korean film industry.A documentary on five young wannabe stuntmen working in the South Korean film industry.A documentary on five young wannabe stuntmen working in the South Korean film industry.
- Prix
- 3 victoires au total
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Kwak Jin-seok
- Self
- (as Jin-Suk Kwag)
Kim Won-jung
- Self
- (as Won-Jung Kim)
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This is one of my favorite documentaries of all time, which came completely out of the left field as I didn't think I would find the topic particularly interesting. Yet the documentary is as engrossing as the best dramas. It made me laugh, it made my heart break, it made me cringe with second-hand embarrassment, as the documentary deftly followed each man and showed them as flawed and human and sometimes ridiculous, but always with a dose of warmth and empathy that made it clear it was not ridiculing anyone even as it made us laugh at them, not always with them. And it showed me a world I couldn't even imagine where safety of stunt performers is not even an afterthought and yet they continue to pursue their dream. Mostly.
I've seen this movie a long time ago and yet it stayed with me and I often retell parts of it to people. If that's not a characteristic of an amazing movie, I don't know what is.
I've seen this movie a long time ago and yet it stayed with me and I often retell parts of it to people. If that's not a characteristic of an amazing movie, I don't know what is.
I saw this at the Melbourne International Film Festival. It was fantastic in large part because it was new. I saw it paired with "Theater of War," whose idea was that little people enable unhealthy societies. That film presumed that structure in film and theater was what powered narrative in individuals and societies. It was a powerful notion: Top-down long form narrative influences individuals whose individual actions and commitment aggregate into societal impulse. Top to bottom, bottom to top.
This is the opposite. It is purely all bottom.
It is a documentary, about the making of a documentary by some stuntmen who participate in the making of movies. These movies are Korean action films where chaos is the baseline, and the illusion of chaos involves the stunts that these guys do. The form is that we have a female narrator, who also produces and is the girlfriend of one of the stuntmen. She gives a meandering account of the history of four stuntmen from the day they audition for stunt school. One of these guys — her boyfriend — has his history start at birth.
The charm of this is that it has no narrative structure whatever. There are some notions introduced: the danger, the personal incompetences, the nature of the film business, the unevenness of the lives... But it is essentially a bunch of episodes and skits put together from what appears to be their actual unrehearsed lives, and stuff that is clearly fabricated. Its all the stuff of dorm room horsing around, a sort of nerd macho meets illusion. The lives are aimless. The movies they help make are aimless and the film we are watching is so aimless we keep waiting for it to either develop structure or end.
And yet, it is so guileless, so human that there is enough that we follow. It could have been edited down, maybe a half hour or more removed. It could have been structured even. But that would have defeated the effect, which is a profound empty center worthy of — and in some ways superior to — Goddard.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
This is the opposite. It is purely all bottom.
It is a documentary, about the making of a documentary by some stuntmen who participate in the making of movies. These movies are Korean action films where chaos is the baseline, and the illusion of chaos involves the stunts that these guys do. The form is that we have a female narrator, who also produces and is the girlfriend of one of the stuntmen. She gives a meandering account of the history of four stuntmen from the day they audition for stunt school. One of these guys — her boyfriend — has his history start at birth.
The charm of this is that it has no narrative structure whatever. There are some notions introduced: the danger, the personal incompetences, the nature of the film business, the unevenness of the lives... But it is essentially a bunch of episodes and skits put together from what appears to be their actual unrehearsed lives, and stuff that is clearly fabricated. Its all the stuff of dorm room horsing around, a sort of nerd macho meets illusion. The lives are aimless. The movies they help make are aimless and the film we are watching is so aimless we keep waiting for it to either develop structure or end.
And yet, it is so guileless, so human that there is enough that we follow. It could have been edited down, maybe a half hour or more removed. It could have been structured even. But that would have defeated the effect, which is a profound empty center worthy of — and in some ways superior to — Goddard.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 217: Fighting and Best Worst Movie (2009)
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 49 052 $ US
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
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By what name was Woo-ri aek-syeon-bae-woo-da (2008) officially released in Canada in English?
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