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Cosford Cinema kicks off first annual summer series with ‘Pushing the Limit: Korean New Wave Cinema’

filmFor its inaugural summer film series, the Bill Cosford Cinema will host a three-week event, “Pushing the Limit: Korean New Wave Cinema.” Beginning Friday, July 10 and running through Sunday, July 26, the Cosford will screen a wide array of some of South Korea’s most acclaimed films.

Dominated by the thriller and horror genres, South Korean films are also filled with poetic dramas and provocative character studies. The Korean New Wave series offers something for everyone. It’s an opportunity for avid fans to see a diverse range of celebrated cinema as well as a fitting introduction for newcomers looking to make some discoveries.

First up, on July 11 and 12 are The Coast Guard (2002) and The Red Shoes (2005). In Ki-duk Kim’s The Coast Guard, South Korean border patrol agents struggle amidst heated tensions in their own ranks as they stand watch on the dividing line between their country and North Korea. An unfortunate twist of fate leads one agent to question his personal code of honor and confront his own critical mistake. The Red Shoes, directed by Yong-gyun Kim, adapts Hans Christian Andersen’s classic tale of the same title into an updated story about a Korean woman who finds a pair of pink slippers on a subway platform. Bringing the shoes home, the single mother becomes obsessed with their surrounding mystery until she realizes that she may be caught up in a deadly curse.

Spider Forest and Memento Mori are slated to screen from July 17 to 19. In the atmospheric, supernatural thriller Spider Forest (2004, Il-gon Song), a TV producer loses his way in the middle of a dark forest. Upon entering a cabin, he stumbles upon two murders and realizes one of the victims is his girlfriend. He begins to question his sanity as he tries to solve the puzzle of the disturbing crimes and get to the truth behind the convoluted myth of these woods. Memento Mori (1999), the second film in the “Whispering Corridors” trilogy, has become a staple in the so-called K-Horror (or Korean Horror) genre. Two teenage girls explore their attraction to one another as they resist the confining social pressures of their all-female boarding school. Told in flashbacks, this film by Tae-yong Kim and Kyu-dong Kim explores memory, perception, and self-disclosure, as one of the girls comes to term with the other’s untimely death.


Concluding the series from July 24 to 26 are Samaritan Girl and Bloody Tie. Samaritan Girl (2004) brought director Ki-duk Kim a Silver Bear Award at the Berlin Film Festival. It tells the story of a novice prostitute and the good friend who functions as her Madame. After falling in love with one of her customers, the call girl commits suicide, leaving her friend to retrace her path and sleep with each of her former clients. This consuming, profound drama features a riveting performance by Jim-min Kwak as the friend. Bloody Tie (also known as Bloody Ties) is a 2006 police action film. A detective initiates an uneasy relationship with a mid-level drug dealer in his efforts to bring down a powerful new warlord. Driven by stellar cinematography and deft verbal sparring, this award-winning film’s strength lies in its gifted performances and close attention to character.

Ticket prices are $8 for general admission; $6 for UM faculty, staff, and alumni; and free for students. For show times and more information, visit www.cosfordcinema.com.

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