The Borneo Post

Bong Joon-ho: South Korea’s boundary-pushing satirist

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SEOUL: South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho has been on quite a wild ride this awards season.

That trip reached its climax Sunday when he made history with “Parasite,” the first nonEnglish-language film ever to win a best picture Oscar.

The film, a vicious satire about the widening gap between rich and poor, took home four Academy Awards – for best picture, best director, best original screenplay and best internatio­nal feature after winning the Palme d’Or at Cannes, a Golden Globe and two Baftas.

“We never write to represent our countries,” said the 50-yearold Bong.

“But this is (the) very first Oscar to South Korea. Thank you.”

Later, as he accepted the prize for best internatio­nal feature, he said in English, eliciting laughs from the audience: “Yeah, I’m ready to drink tonight.”

As the night wore on and “Parasite” kept collecting awards, Bong was overcome.

“It’s very hard to believe. It’s such a great honor,” he said backstage.

Bong – who is known for his dark and genre-hopping thrillers – already had a series of critical and commercial hits behind him before “Parasite” and is one of South Korea’s best-known faces.

His triumph on Hollywood’s biggest night should take him to new heights.

The significan­ce of Bong’s win “cannot be underestim­ated both for Korean cinema and non-English language cinema as a whole,” Jason Bechervais­e, a professor at Korea Soongsil Cyber University, told AFP.

“It will obviously go down in the history books.”

Bong grew up in an elite artistic family in Seoul – his maternal grandfathe­r was a renowned novelist while his late father and all of his siblings are university professors in fields including fashion and fine art.

He studied sociology at the South’s prestigiou­s Yonsei University and reportedly took part in street protests while enrolled there during the country’s pro-democracy movement in the 1980s.

Bong once told an interviewe­r he had been arrested for using petrol bombs.

He was among the first wave of South Korean filmmakers to blossom after the country’s full democratis­ation, which opened the door for a cultural renaissanc­e.

His “Memories of Murder” – a 2003 feature film based on reallife serial killings that rattled the nation in the 1980s – was seen as a metaphor for a repressive society under military rule.

Bong’s 2006 monster blockbuste­r “The Host” portrayed an incompeten­t government left helpless in the wake of a disaster.

In 2014, parallels were drawn between the film and the Sewol ferry sinking that killed 300, mostly schoolchil­dren.

His 2013 “Snowpierce­r” depicted a dystopian future in which the last humans on Earth – who survived a failed attempt to stop global warming – travel endlessly on a train separated according to class, and the lower class revolts.

Tilda Swinton, who was in “Snowpierce­r,” also starred in Bong’s Netflix-produced 2017 scifi action-adventure “Okja” about a country girl trying to save a geneticall­y-engineered beast from a greedy multinatio­nal firm.

Quentin Tarantino – whose “Once Upon a Time... In Hollywood” won two Oscars on Sunday – once likened the South Korean to “Steven Spielberg in his prime”. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? South Korean film director Bong Joon Ho poses with his engraved awards as he attends the 92nd Oscars Governors Ball at the Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, California.
— AFP photo South Korean film director Bong Joon Ho poses with his engraved awards as he attends the 92nd Oscars Governors Ball at the Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, California.
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