Regina Leader-Post

A winning Decision?

Filmmaker Park discusses latest movie that could be headed for Academy Award glory

- JAKE COYLE

Long before Bong Joon Ho's Parasite triumphed at the Oscars and Squid Game circled the globe, Park Chan-wook was astonishin­g worldwide audiences with his sumptuousl­y stylistic, outrageous­ly violent and devilishly elaborate vision of Korean cinema.

His latest, Decision to Leave, is in some ways more restrained than Park's previous films.

It lacks the brutal violence of Oldboy (2003) or the eroticism of The Handmaiden (2016).

But it might be his most devastatin­g.

The film, which is South Korea's Oscar submission, is a twisty noir entwined with a love story. Park Hae-il plays a Busan police detective who becomes infatuated with a murder subject (Tang Wei). Their evolving relationsh­ip plays out as an investigat­ion. Intricate and mischievou­s, Decision to Leave is yet another genre tapestry for the masterful Park to make an elegant plaything of. At the Cannes Film Festival in May, it won him best director.

Q The room you write in has been compared to the room that traps the protagonis­t of Oldboy. Is that true?

A (Laughs) When we designed the house, we made a room specifical­ly for me to write in.

It's a small room with just a table and desk and it almost feels like you're going to suffocate inside. But I don't just write in that room. I really write anywhere. I write in offices, cafés, hotels and on the plane.

Q What was on your mind when you when you and your co-writer, Chung Seo-kyung, wrote Decision to Leave?

A At that time, I was working on post-production for Little Drummer Girl, and I had to direct the entire six-episode series myself.

It took a lot of time and was also very physically demanding. I became home sick. Of course my wife was with me, but still. During that post-production phase, my co-writer went on a family trip to London and met me twice at a café. We had general conversati­ons about what my next work should be.

The two core principles that we started off with were: I wanted the film to be a Korean film and I wanted it to play in theatres.

Q Your film suggests that everyone's guilty in love, but suspicion will kill it.

A That's a nice way to express it. When you're in love, you're naturally curious about the other person. You want to know more about them. Throughout this process of love, there's always that sense of doubt that makes you want to dig in deeper. When that takes a dramatic form, it might even turn into stalking their social media or looking at the phone or asking questions to test if they're lying. A lot of people do such things or have the desires to do such things. When you reach that point of doubt and suspense, I think it really becomes similar to a detective's investigat­ion.

Q Love might not be what some immediatel­y think of as the principle theme of your films. Why do you think you keep returning to love stories?

A All of my films are basically about people in love. But each of these works in my filmograph­y have their own genre elements, like thriller or horror. I think that comes off too strongly and makes people forget it's about love. An artist's occupation is naturally to explore what mankind really is, and I believe the best subject to explore the characteri­stics of mankind through is love. But even as an entertaine­r, love is the best subject. Love has thrill, it has mystery, it has comedy, it touches you and it horrifies you.

Q How technology shapes the lives of men and women has also been a hallmark of your films. Why did you crowd Decision to Leave with phones, text messages and translatio­n apps?

A I wanted this movie to feel very classical and have these mythical elements. If you consider the last scene, it really resembles Orpheus. But I didn't want this to be the kind of classical film with handwritte­n letters. If I wanted to do that, I could have put it in a setting where there were no phones. A lot of directors feel the desire to do this. Instead, I chose to actively incorporat­e modern technology, even more than you see in shows about teenagers like Euphoria. Making that decision was a significan­t moment for me.

 ?? MONGREL MEDIA ?? Park Hae-il, left, stars as Det. Jang Hae-joon and Tang Wei is a murder suspect in director Park Chan-wook's Decision to Leave.
MONGREL MEDIA Park Hae-il, left, stars as Det. Jang Hae-joon and Tang Wei is a murder suspect in director Park Chan-wook's Decision to Leave.
 ?? ?? Park Chan-wook
Park Chan-wook

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