The Borneo Post

Thriller under fire for depiction of brutally abused women

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SEOUL: Noir-thriller ‘ V. I. P.’, which opened in theatres last week, has come under heavy fire for its excessivel­y lengthy and detailed depiction of the sexual abuse and murder of a female character.

In one long take, the camera dwells on several male characters, including Kim Kwang-il, a ruthless serial killer from North Korea played by Lee Jong- seok, caressing, torturing and choking a naked female victim lying on a table.

Viewers expressed outrage and exasperati­on at the scene. Online reviews said it was an unnecessar­y and exploitati­ve display of cruelty that made no contributi­on to the plot.

One particular review went viral, apparently written by a woman who had been sexually assaulted.

“A female victim, played by an actress who looks as innocent as can be, is raped by three men, completely naked and dripping blood. She is then injected with a shot and beaten. This scene lasts for over five minutes,” the review said. “( Male characters) who are described (as embodying) ‘justice’ beat their subordinat­es and hit all objects around them just because they’re mad. ... When will the film scene stop praising women’s nude scenes as sensationa­l acting?”

Director Park Hoon-jung, who helmed ‘V.I.P.’, professed “shock” over such responses to his film.

“In my directoria­l judgment, I felt that Kwang-il’s demon-ness had to be highlighte­d to make the film convincing until the end. But I was mistaken about the degree (of violence). I feel like I was very ignorant,” Park said in an interview with local media.

At the same time, Park admitted he had decided to push through despite negative feedback in the production stage. Various crew members had expressed their discomfort at the torture scenes.

“If we filmed the strangulat­ion scene from far away, the demonic character became weaker. ... I had to make it so that Kwang-il’s emotion and psychology would be clearly visible on his face when he was committing a crime. So we decided to endure the discomfort. It was a mistake to simply think ‘It’s uncomforta­ble for us ( male crew members). It’ll probably be even more uncomforta­ble for women.’”

Park, who helmed ‘New World’ (2013), is a director notorious for his depiction of the dark, jaded world of men, and has in the past been called out for the lack of powerful female characters in his works.

“Until now, I thought that my inability to write women characters came from my little understand­ing of women. But ( I realise) that my gender sensibilit­y wasn’t dull, it was nonexisten­t. I had thought that at least I wasn’t a male chauvinist, but I’ve learned from this incident that I cannot help being a Korean man (who doesn’t understand women).”

The film’s distributo­r has been quick in coming to its defence.

“The biggest issue in film production is ‘ diversity,’” said Choi Jae-won, head of local production at Warner Bros. Korea, the film’s distributo­r. “Because it is (the big) screen and not (a TV) broadcast, there has to be diversity in the stories and expression. Because of the specificit­y of the film, it contains expression­s that are described as ‘extreme.’”

Choi also described blind criticism of the film as “a sort of violence close to fascism.”

Film critic Jung Ji-wook agrees that artistic expression should be given free rein. “But it is a thin line between what is artistical­ly necessary and what is exploitati­vely crude. There is no hard- and-fast rule. But the fact of the matter is that many people felt extreme revulsion while watching this film.”

While self- censorship should not be encouraged, the creator should “take responsibi­lity” for his or her work, Jung remarked.

 ??  ?? Jang Dong-gun in a scene from ‘V.I.P.’.
Jang Dong-gun in a scene from ‘V.I.P.’.

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