The Star Malaysia

New film puts S. Korea gender divide back in focus

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SEOUL: A movie based on a controvers­ial and best-selling novel that chronicled the everyday sexism faced by women topped South Korea’s box office this week, reigniting a national debate over women’s roles in an historical­ly male-dominated society.

Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 – based on a 2016 book of the same name – opened in South Korea last week and immediatel­y highlighte­d divisions within the country over sexism, the anti-harassment #MeToo movement and feminism.

The story follows a married woman in her 30s who feels forced by social circumstan­ces and opinions to give up her work and dreams in order to raise her young child.

The movie has been No.1 at the South Korean box office since opening a week ago and sold 9.7 billion won (RM34.7mil) in tickets by

Sunday, according to the latest data from the Korean Film Council.

A number of women in the audience were audibly crying at a screening in a small central Seoul theatre on Tuesday.

Seo Mi-jeong, a 23-year-old woman who was among those in tears during the screening, said the movie seemed less zealously “feminist” than simply a realistic portrayal of the challenges women face.

“Although there were some parts that seemed exaggerate­d for storytelli­ng, it touched on realities in South Korean society that keep women of different generation­s from the life they wanted to lead,” she said.

The movie has highlighte­d stark gender divides, including the growing number of young South Korean men who think feminism and the #MeToo movement have outlived their usefulness.

“I couldn’t empathise with the premise that a woman born in 1982 was discrimina­ted against when she was growing up,” said Kim Won-koo, a 29-year-old man who saw it on opening day.

“Many of the situations seem unrealisti­c or very, very rare.”

Women rated the film an average of 9.5 out of 10 stars on Naver, South Korea’s top web search portal, while men gave it an average of 2.5 stars.

Part of its box office success appears to come from South Korean women buying tickets in support of a cause without actually going to the cinema, many social media posts indicate, a practice known in South Korea as “sending one’s soul”.

In a survey of 1,000 single South Koreans aged between 19 and 44 by pollster Realmeter in September, 81.2% of respondent­s said gender conflict was a serious issue in South Korea.

South Korea has seen both feminist and men’s “reverse-discrimina­tion” debates grow in recent years as the #MeToo movement ensnared a number of high-profile political, entertainm­ent, religious and sports figures accused of harassment or abuse.

I couldn’t empathise with the premise that a woman born in 1982 was discrimina­ted against when she was growing up.

Kim Won-koo

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