<p>Born in 1926, Shin Sang-ok is recognized as one of the masters of Korean cinema. After graduating from Tokyo Art School, he debuted as a director with "The Evil Night" in 1952 and went on to direct more than 70 films in five decades. Highly-acclaimed retrospectives of his work were screened at th
Split screen Korea : Shin Sang-ok and postwar cinema
β Scribed by Chung, Steven; Sin, Sang-ok
- Publisher
- Univ Of Minnesota Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 272
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Shin Sang-ok (1926β2006) was arguably the most important Korean filmmaker of the postwar era. Over seven decades, he directed or produced nearly 200 films, including A Flower in Hell (1958) and Pulgasari (1985), and his career took him from late-colonial Korea to postwar South and North Korea to Hollywood. Notoriously crossing over to the North in 1978, Shin made a series of popular films under Kim Jong-il before seeking asylum in 1986 and resuming his career in South Korea and Hollywood.
In Split Screen Korea, Steven Chung illuminates the story of postwar Korean film and popular culture through the first in-depth account in English of Shinβs remarkable career. Shinβs films were shaped by national division and Cold War politics, but Split Screen Korea finds surprising aesthetic and political continuities across not only distinct phases in modern South Korean history but also between South and North Korea. These are unveiled most dramatically in analysis of the films Shin made on opposite sides of the DMZ. Chung explains how a filmmaking sensibility rooted in the South Korean market and the global style of Hollywood could have been viable in the North.
Combining close readings of a broad range of films with research on the industrial and political conditions of Korean film production, Split Screen Korea shows how cinematic styles, popular culture, and intellectual discourse bridged the divisions of postwar Korea, raising new questions about the implications of political partition.
β¦ Table of Contents
Content: Introduction: visible ruptures, invisible borders --
The century's illuminations: the enlightenment mode in Korean cinema --
Regimes within regimes: film and fashion in the Korean 1950s --
Authorship and the location of cinema: in the region of Shin films --
Melodrama and the scene of development --
"It's all fake": Shin Sang-ok's North Korean revisions --
Conclusion: post-development pictures.
β¦ Subjects
Sin, Sang-ok, -- 1926-2006 -- Criticism and interpretation. Korea (South) -- In motion pictures. Sin, Sang-ok, -- 1926-2006. PERFORMING ARTS -- Reference. PERFORMING ARTS -- Film & Video -- History & Criticism. Motion pictures. Korea (South)
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