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Joint Security Area

 
Wikipedia: Joint Security Area (film)
Joint Security Area

Joint Security Area movie poster
Hangul 공동경비구역JSA
Hanja 共同警備區域JSA
RR Gongdong Gyeongbi Guyeok JSA
MR Kongdong Kyŏngbi Kuyŏk JSA
Directed by Park Chan-wook
Produced by Lee Eun
Written by Park Sang-Yeon (novel)
Jeong Seong-San
Park Chan-wook
Lee Mu-young
Starring Lee Young Ae
Lee Byung-Hun
Song Kang-ho
Music by Cho Young-Wook
Cinematography Kim Seong-bok
Editing by Kim Sang-beom
Distributed by CJ Entertainment
Release date(s) September 9, 2000 (South Korea)
Running time 108 min.
Country South Korea
Language Korean
English
French
German

Joint Security Area (2000) is a South Korean film directed by Park Chan-wook. Its plot revolves around efforts to unravel the truth behind an illegal shooting at the politically and militarily sensitive North-South Korean border.

Contents

Plot

The film begins when two North Korean soldiers are killed in the DMZ at a North Korean border house. Alarms sound on both sides, and North and South Korean soldiers are quickly deployed at the scene, resulting in an exchange of gunfire. Sgt. Lee Soo-hyeok (Lee Byung-Hun) despite an injured leg runs from the North Korean side and attempts to reach the South Korean side. He is shortly rescued while the gunfire continues.

Two days later, the fragile relationship between the two Koreas now relies on a special investigation conducted by Swedish and Swiss investigators from the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission to ensure that this incident does not erupt into a serious conflict. The mission is led by Swiss Army Major Sophie (Lee Young Ae). Her mother is Swiss and her father is Korean; however, this is her first time in Korea.

As Sgt. Lee Soo-hyeok (a South Korean soldier on border duties) has confessed to the shootings, it is up to Sophie to investigate why the two Koreas have contradicting accounts of events. Sophie proceeds to read the story of Soo-hyeok's experience which tell of him being knocked out and kidnapped while defecating. He then wakes up tied up in the North Korean border house, before proceeding to secretly free himself and shoot three North Korean soldiers, leaving two dead. However, Soo-hyeok is totally unresponsive to Sophie and will not answer any of her questions. On asking Soo-hyeok's comrades about him, she receives stories praising his courage defusing a mine he stepped on, or of throwing rocks at the North Korean house; however this gets her nowhere. Sophie then visits North Korea whose sole survivor of the shooting Sgt. Oh Kyeong-pil (Song Kang-ho) tells a different story: one in which Soo-Hyeok barges into the border house and shoots everyone before retreating when the wounded Kyeong-pil fights back.

The autopsy report shows that one soldier was shot first in the chest and then in the head, while the other, Jeong Woo-jin, was shot eight times repeatedly, more indicative of a grudge than an attempt at escape. The events that led to the killing of two North Korean soldiers are then shown throughout the film in a series of flashbacks. First, the depositions of each surviving soldier are shown, providing conflicting versions on that night's events. Major Sophie looks further into the case and discovers that things are not quite as they seem.

Reception

By early 2001 Joint Security Area had become the highest grossing film in Korean film history,[1] remaining so until eclipsed[clarification needed] by Friend, Silmido and Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War. This success allowed Park Chan-wook to get the financial leeway to make his subsequent movies.

Within two weeks of its release the film had taken in one million admissions.[citation needed] A DVD of the movie was presented to North Korea's leader Kim Jong-II by South Korea's President Roh Moo-Hyun during the Korean summit in October 2007.[2]

Awards and nominations

Main cast

  • Lee Young Ae – Major Sophie E. Jang (Switzerland)
  • Lee Byung-Hun – Sgt. Lee Soo-hyeok (South Korea)
  • Song Kang-ho – Sgt. Oh Kyeong-pil (North Korea)
  • Kim Tae Woo – Pvt. Nam Sung-shik (South Korea)
  • Shin Ha-kyun – Pvt. Jeong Woo-jin (North Korea)
  • Herbert Ulrich (German Wikipedia: Herbert Ulrich) – Swedish officer

See also

References

External links

Bibliography

  • Kim, Kyung-hyun (2004). "9. 'Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves': Transgressive Agents, National Security, and Blockbuster Aesthetics in Shiri and Joint Security Area". The Remasculinization of Korean Cinema. Durham and London: Duke University Press. pp. 259–276. ISBN 0-8223-3267-1. 

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