Showing posts with label Film-maker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film-maker. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Sofia Coppola In The Gentlewomen



Sofia
Coppola

The unashamedly feminine filmmaking of Sofia Coppola


Text by Holly Brubach
Portraits Inez & Vinoodh
Styling by Jonathan Kaye
Issue n° 15, Spring & Summer 2017

We think we can tell a Sofia Coppola film at a glance — all atmospheric long takes, winsome girls and pastel shades. But at 45, the Oscar-winning director and screenwriter is tackling a surprising new genre with her reimagining of 1971’s The Beguiled, a tense Civil War drama set in the American South, featuring Colin Farrell, Nicole Kidman and no small amount of gore. 

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Controversial South Korean director Kim Ki-duk dies of Covid aged 59



 

Controversial South Korean director Kim Ki-duk dies of Covid aged 59

The director, who faced accusations of sexual misconduct, died while being treated in Latvia

Friday 11 December 2020

Controversial South Korean film-maker Kim Ki-duk has died aged 59 in a Latvian hospital, where he was being treated for Covid-19. The news was initially reported by Vitaly Mansky, director of Latvia’s Artdocfest film festival, and later confirmed by Kim’s family in the Korean media. Kim was understood to be developing a film project set in the Baltic region when he became ill.

Born in 1960, Kim made his name with a series of violent yet aesthetically challenging features, including The Isle (2000) and Bad Guy (2001) – the former of which was sanctioned by the British Board of Film Classification for animal cruelty. Subsequently he became a fixture on the international festival circuit with films such as Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter ... and Spring (2003) and 3-Iron (2004), and he would go on to win the Golden Lion at Venice with his 2012 film Pieta, which the Guardian described as “bristl[ing] with Kim’s trademark anger and agony”.

However, Kim’s directing career was derailed after he was accused in 2018 of rape and sexual assault by three women, along with his regular acting collaborator Cho Jae-hyun. Charges against Kim were dropped for lack of evidence, but he was fined 5m Korean won (£3,480). Kim then sued one of his accusers and the makers of a documentary about the case for defamation, but lost. Kim completed one more film after the scandal, the Russian-language film Dissolve, which was shot in Kazakhstan.

THE GUARDIAN

Three women accuse Korean director Kim Ki-duk of rape and assault

Kim Ki-duk


Three women accuse Korean director Kim Ki-duk of rape and assault

 This article is more than 2 years old

Actors come forward to accuse the renowned film-maker and his regular actor Cho Jae-hyeon – while the director says he only engaged in ‘consensual sexual relationships’


Steve Rose
Wed 7 March 2018


Internationally renowned South Korean director Kim Ki-duk and one of his actors face multiple accusations of rape, assault and sexually predatory behaviour from three women, all actors.

The accusations were made in an investigative documentary broadcast on South Korean TV on 6 March, in which all three remained anonymous. One woman alleges that Kim and male actor Cho Jae-hyeon both raped her after Kim summoned her to his hotel room to “discuss a script”. She claimed that Kim tormented her on a nightly basis when they were filming in a remote village. “It was a living hell … so many nights, he came to my room and slammed the door or phoned me at the room repeatedly until I responded,” she told state broadcaster MBC, adding that the two men, who often work together, “shared stories of raping actresses and there was a sense of competition between them”. She had left acting and had been in therapy for years.

Kim, whose films have won prizes at Cannes, Berlin and Venice film festivals, responded to MBC via text message, “I never tried to satisfy my personal desires using my status as a film director,” and claimed he only engaged in “consensual sexual relationships”. Cho made an apology last month for earlier allegations of sexual abuse, and was removed from his college teaching post and TV medical drama The Cross. In response to the new allegations in MBC’s documentary he told the station, “I’m panicking … I am a sinner. But many of the things I see in news are so different from truth.” He added that he would discuss the matter more “once an investigation begins”.

Another female actor told how Kim demanded to see her naked during a “humiliating” audition process. A third accused Kim of assault last year after he allegedly slapped her and made her perform unscripted sex scenes while filming his 2004 film Moebius. The charge was dismissed in court last December owing to lack of evidence, but Kim was ordered to pay a fine of 5 million won (£3,382). She also claimed that Kim constantly pestered her for sex, and attempted to trap her and another actor in a hotel room, and that she was fired from the movie for refusing his advances. Last month, she launched a social media campaign against the Berlin film festival, where Kim’s film Human, Space, Time and Human played last month. The film’s Korean release has reportedly been postponed indefinitely.

Kim has been one of Korean cinema’s most successful exports over the past two decades, with movies such as 3 IronSpring, Summer, Autumn, Winter… and Spring, and Pieta, the latter two of which were selected as South Korea’s entry for the best foreign language film Oscar. His films often involve themes of sex, violence, abuse and mutilation – often directed against women. The #MeToo movement is gathering pace in South Korean and other cultural figures have also been accused of historic sexual abuse, including leading playwright Lee Youn-taek and poet Ko Un.

THE GUARDIAN