Dongju: The Portrait of a Poet
동주

Sat 15 Nov, 11:45am

BFI Southbank

  • Director

    Lee Joon-ik

  • Cast

    Kang Ha-neul, Park Jeong-min

  • Genre

  • Release Date

    2016

  • Runtime

    110 mins

  • Cert

    12

  • Awards

    Paeksang Arts Awards (2016) - Film Awards - Grand Prize, Best New Actor
    The Korean Association of Film Critics Awards (2016) - Best Screenplay
    Busan Film Critics Association Awards (2016) - Best Screenplay
    The Blue Dragon Awards (2016) - Best Screenplay, Best New Actress
    Korea Gold Awards Festival (2016) - Best New Actor, Bronze Medal for Cinematography
    Director's Cut Awards (2016) - Best New Actor, Best Production of the Year prize
    Chunsa Film Festival (2017) - Best Supporting Actor
    London Korean Film Festival (2016)
    New York Asian Film Festival (2016)

This understated black-and-white film uses creative cross-editing to contrast the youths of poet Yoon Dong-ju (Kang Ha-neul) and his cousin and comrade Song Mong-gyu (Park Jeong-min). The two young men, whose relationship crossed literature and belief, friendship and frustration, were arrested and imprisoned in a Fukuoka prison during the Japanese occupation. Yoon Dong-ju died on 16 February 1945, and Song Mong-gyu died only 20 days later on 7 March 1945. Rather than a huge historical drama, the film examines the tragedy of the times through the quiet lens of everyday silence and language.

Dongju: The Portrait of a Poet chooses the blank margin rather than exaggeration. It captures the ethics and fears of youth through poetry, dialogue, and small gestures, and asks a question that is still valid today: Through what is liberation possible? It relies on a background of historical events but also uses the poetic density of mise-en-scène to draw out the inner lives of the characters and remains a paragon of how Korean films deal with the idea of ‘memory.’

Park Se-ho