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Park Chan-wook
South Korean film director, screenwriter and film producer

Park Chan-wook

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
South Korean film director, screenwriter and film producer
A.K.A.
박찬욱 Chan-wook Park Park Chan-uk
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Seoul
Age
61 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Park Chan-wook (Hangul: 박찬욱 Korean pronunciation: [pak̚t͡ɕʰanuk̚ ]; born August 23, 1963) is a South Korean film director, screenwriter, producer, and former film critic. One of the most acclaimed and popular filmmakers in his native country, Park is most known for his films Joint Security Area, Thirst and what has become known as The Vengeance Trilogy, consisting of 2002's Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, 2003's Oldboy and 2005's Lady Vengeance. His films are noted for their immaculate framing, black humor and often brutal subject matter.

Life and career

Park was born and raised in Seoul, and studied philosophy at Sogang University, where he started a cinema-club called the "Sogang Film Community" and published a number of articles on contemporary cinema. Originally intending to be an art critic, upon seeing Vertigo he resolved to try to become a filmmaker. After graduation, he wrote articles on film for journals, and soon became an assistant director of films like Kkamdong, directed by Yu Yeong-jin, and Watercolor painting in a Rainy Day, directed by Kwak Jae-yong (My Sassy Girl).

His debut feature film was The Moon Is... the Sun's Dream (1992), and after five years, he made his second film Trio. Park's early films were not successful at the box office, and he pursued a career as a film critic to make a living.

In 2000, Park directed Joint Security Area, which was a great success both commercially and critically, even surpassing Kang Je-gyu's Shiri as the most-watched film ever made in South Korea. This success made it possible for him to make his next film more independently - Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance is the result of this creative freedom.

After winning the Grand Prix at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival for the film Oldboy, a journalist asked, "in your film, why is the vengeance repeating?". According to Park, he decided to make three consecutive films with revenge as the central theme. Park said his films are about the utter futility of vengeance and how it wreaks havoc on the lives of everyone involved.

Blu-ray box set of The Vengeance Trilogy.

In a May 2004 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Park listed Sophocles, Shakespeare, Kafka, Dostoevsky, Balzac, and Kurt Vonnegut as being influences on his career.

His so-called Vengeance Trilogy consists of Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy and Lady Vengeance. It was not originally intended to be a trilogy. Lady Vengeance was distributed by Tartan Films for American theatrical release in April 2006.

Despite extreme violence in his films, Park is regarded as one of the most popular film directors in Korea, with three of his last five feature films (Joint Security Area, Oldboy and Lady Vengeance) all drawing audiences of over 3 million. This makes Park the director of three films in the thirty all-time highest-grossing films in South Korea. (9th, 29th, 26th respectively as of January 2007).

In addition to being a film director and screenwriter, Park is also a film critic with several published editions to his name. None have been translated into English as of yet.

American director Quentin Tarantino is an avowed fan of Park. As the head judge at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival, he personally pushed for Park's Oldboy to be awarded the Palme d'Or (the honor eventually went to Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11). Oldboy garnered the Grand Prix, the second-highest honor in the competition. Tarantino also regards Park's Joint Security Area to be one of "the top twenty films made since 1992."

In 2006, he was the member of official section jury at the 63rd Venice International Film Festival.

In February 2007, Park won the Alfred Bauer Prize at the 57th Berlin International Film Festival. The award, named after the festival's founder and in praise of movies opening up new perspectives, went to Park for his film, I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK.

In 2009, Park directed his first vampire film, Thirst starring Song Kang-ho which won Prix du Jury along with Fish Tank, directed by Andrea Arnold at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival. He considered directing Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy but ultimately turned it down.

In 2011, Park said his new fantasy-horror film Paranmanjang (Night Fishing) was shot entirely on the iPhone. The film was co-directed with Park's younger brother, Park Chan-kyong who never had any experience on film directing. It was nominated for Berlinale Shorts during the 2011 Berlin Film Festival, which won Golden Bear for Best Short Film.

In 2013, Park directed his first English-language film, Stoker. He said he learned to accelerate the production process and completed filming in 480 hours. Although Park does speak English, he used an interpreter on set. On why the script attracted his attention, Park said: "It wasn't a script that tried to explain everything and left many things as questions, so it leads the audience to find answers for themselves and that's what I liked about the script... I like telling big stories through small, artificially created worlds." On March 2, 2013, Park appeared on a panel discussion about the movie Stoker, held at the Freer Gallery of Art in the Smithsonian's Museums of Asian Art.

In 2014, Park directed a short film commissioned by luxury brand Ermenegildo Zegna, co-written by himself, Ayako Fujitani, Chung Chung-hoon and Michael Werwie, scored by Clint Mansell, and starring Jack Huston and Daniel Wu, and which previously screened at the Rome International Film Festival and the Busan International Film Festival.

In September 2014, it was announced that Park would adapt Fingersmith, a historical crime novel by Sarah Waters. The film entered production in mid 2015 and ended on October 31, 2015.That film ended up becoming The Handmaiden and premiered in competition to rave reviews at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, where Artistic Director Seong-hie Ryu won the Vulcain Prize for the Technical Arts and also where it got nominated for both the Palme d'Or and Queer Palm; the film also won Best New Actress (Tae-ri Kim), The Buil Readers' Jury Award and Best Art Directin (Seong-hie Ryu) at the 2016 Buil Film Awards.

In October 2014, it was announced that Park had signed on to direct the sci-fi body-swap film, Second Born.

Filmography

Film

YearFilmCredited as
DirectorWriterProducer
1992The Moon Is... the Sun's DreamYesYesNo
1997TrioYesYesNo
2000AnarchistsNoYesNo
Joint Security AreaYesYesNo
2001The HumanistNoYesNo
2002Sympathy for Mr. VengeanceYesYesNo
A Bizarre Love TriangleNoYesNo
2003OldboyYesYesNo
2005Lady VengeanceYesYesNo
Boy Goes to HeavenNoYesNo
2006I'm a Cyborg, But That's OKYesYesYes
2008Crush and BlushNoYesYes
2009ThirstYesYesYes
2013StokerYesNoNo
SnowpiercerNoNoYes
2016The HandmaidenYesYesYes
Second BornYesNoNo

Short film

YearFilmCredited as
DirectorWriterProducer
1999JudgmentYesYesYes
2003If You Were Me (segment "Never Ending Peace And Love")YesYesNo
2004Three... Extremes (segment "Cut")YesYesNo
2011Night FishingYes*YesYes
60 Seconds of Solitude in Year Zero (segment)YesYesNo
2013Day TripYes*YesNo
V (music video for Lee Jung-hyun)Yes*YesNo
2014A Rose RebornYesYesNo

* Directed with his brother Park Chan-kyong

Awards

YearEventAwardFilm
2001Deauville Asian Film FestivalLotus Award for Best FilmJoint Security Area
Seattle International Film FestivalNew Director's Showcase Special Jury PrizeJoint Security Area
2002Blue Ribbon Awards, JapanBest Foreign Language FilmJoint Security Area
Seattle International Film FestivalEmerging Masters Showcase Award
2003Fantasia Festival, MontrealBest Asian FilmSympathy for Mr. Vengeance
Philadelphia Film FestivalJury Award for Best Feature FilmSympathy for Mr. Vengeance
2004Cannes Film FestivalGrand PrixOldboy
Asia Pacific Film FestivalBest DirectorOldboy
Bergen International Film FestivalAudience AwardOldboy
Grand Bell Awards, South KoreaBest DirectorOldboy
Sitges Catalonian International Film FestivalBest FilmOldboy
Stockholm International Film FestivalAudience AwardOldboy
2005Bangkok International Film FestivalGolden Kinnaree Award for Best DirectorOldboy
Venice Film FestivalCinemAvvenire AwardLady Vengeance
2006Bangkok International Film FestivalGolden Kinnaree Award for Best DirectorLady Vengeance
Fantasporto, PortugalOrient Express Section Grand Prize for Best FilmLady Vengeance
Sarasota Film FestivalAudience Award for Best in World CinemaLady Vengeance
2007Berlin International Film FestivalAlfred Bauer AwardI'm a Cyborg, But That's OK
Montréal Festival of New CinemaZ Tele Grand Prize Feature Film AwardI'm a Cyborg, But That's OK
Sitges Catalonian International Film FestivalBest ScreenplayI'm a Cyborg, But That's OK
2008Fantasporto, PortugalInternational Fantasy Film Award - Special MentionI'm a Cyborg, But That's OK
2009Cannes Film FestivalJury PrizeThirst
2011Berlin Film FestivalGolden Bear for Best Short FilmNight Fishing
2017KOFRA Film AwardsFilm Industry Figure of the YearThe Handmaiden

Recurring cast in Park Chan-wook's films

ActorJoint Security AreaSympathy for Mr. VengeanceOldboyCutLady VengeanceI'm a Cyborg, But That's OKThirst
Song Kang-hoYesYYesYYesYYesY
Shin Ha-kyunYesYYesYYesYYesY
Choi Min-sikYesYYesY
Yoo Ji-taeYesYYesY
Lee Young-aeYesYYesY
Lee Byung-hunYesYYesY
Kang Hye-jungYesYYesYYesY
Kim Byeong-okYesYYesYYesY
Oh Dal-suYesYYesYYesYYesY

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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