City Times

Asia’s top film festival opens in shadow of

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Organisers of Asia’s top film festival, which opens in Busan this week, warn that a surge of global interest in the critically acclaimed South Korean movie Parasite masks a damaging underinves­tment in local independen­t cinema.

Bong Joon-ho’s darkly comic tale of class war in the Seoul suburbs won the Palme D’or for best film at Cannes and is firming as an Oscar favourite next year, in what would be the first ever win for a Korean film.

It has been sold to 192 internatio­nal markets – a record for a local production – and has already grossed just over $90 million ahead of its highly anticipate­d October 11 release in the United States.

The film is a crowning achievemen­t for veteran director Bong, whose works have been lauded by the likes of Quentin Tarantino and two-time collaborat­or Tilda Swinton.

His work has long been championed by the Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival, a gala event dedicated to both unearthing new independen­t Asian talent and connecting emerging filmmakers with financiers.

But Parasite’s breakout success “hides a crisis” in the local film industry at large, said Nam Dong-chul, programme director at Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival (BIFF).

Nam said investors and cinema chains needed to help smaller independen­t production­s find an audience in a market dominated by Hollywood-funded blockbuste­rs.

“We have indeed been lazy with building a strong foothold where new talents can blossom,” he said.

“We can take advantage of opportunit­y only when independen­t and art films have a stable market share.”

Impressive line-up

Bong is not slated to appear at BIFF this year as he tours the world promoting his latest work, but the spotlight will shine on an impressive collection of acclaimed internatio­nal award winners.

Call Me By Your Name star Timothee Chalamet and Indian Oscar winner A.R. Rahman are expected to either grace the red carpet during the opening gala on Thursday or make an appearance in the days that follow.

Leaving Las Vegas director Mike Figgis will head the jury for the festival’s main awards, while Japanese auteur Koreeda Hirokazu will be in town to collect the Asian filmmaker of the year award and to present his latest feature, The Truth.

The Korean star parade will be led by opening night co-host Lee Hanee, fresh from the success of her actioner

Extreme Job, now the secondhigh­est grossing in Korean cinema history.

Local films will take pride of place with 20 world premieres in the Korean Cinema Today section alone.

There’s a nod to the rising influence of streaming platforms with four Netflix original production­s on the programme, along with the world premiere of the muchantici­pated Malaysia-hbo co-production The Garden of Evening Mists.

Thursday’s opening film is acclaimed Kazakh director Yerlan Nurmukhamb­etov’s

The Horse Thieves. Roads of Time, starring 2018 Cannes best actress winner Samal Yesleyamov­a.

His last appearance at BIFF saw him awarded the prestigiou­s New Currents prize for early career directors with his drama Walnut Tree in 2015.

BIFF runs from October 3 to 12 and features 303 films from 85 countries.

We can take advantage of opportunit­y only when independen­t and art films have a stable market share.” Bong Joon-ho

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