Friday May 18, 2012

Tiger and Bear

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In Review: Leone’s Legacy

vlcsnap 7689905 600x253 In Review: Leones Legacy

Filmmaker Sergio Leone has proven to be one of the most influential of all directors, both in the short and the long term, despite a relatively small output. His 1964 movie A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS launched not only the career of star Clint Eastwood but also a sub-genre that became known as the “spaghetti western”. Leone would make his “Dollars” trilogy (with FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE and THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY) before finally realizing his 1968 masterpiece ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. Following this, Leone would only direct two more films, 1972′s DUCK YOU SUCKER and his final work, 1984′s nearly four hour epic, ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA. Despite this rather scant filmography, Leone and his style have been paid homage to repeatedly over the years, and the connections to his films across world cinema is remarkable. Last Friday, I finally caught Leone’s ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA at the Seoul Cinematheque. Coincidentally, on the weekend, I went to see the new (to Korea) Quentin Tarantino film INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS and then watched the DVD of Kim Jee-won’s THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE WEIRD. Thus last weekend unexpectedly turned into a mini-course on Leone and his aesthetic.

ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA is a very curious work in many ways, a film I both liked and disliked in almost equal measure. The extreme length and the conversion of Leone’s grand style from the western to the gangster genre are both effective, and the parts of the movie that I most enjoyed where the opening (before the childhood flashback) and the conclusion, where Leone can indulge in his gifts for large canvases with his operatic visual and musical style (aided immensely, as always, by composer Ennio Morricone).  It does feel at times like the great final work of a master director. But unfortunately, for a film made by a man who was in his early 50s at the time, this is also a rather juvenile and immature movie, especially in how it deals of sexuality and women. The film has proven controversial for a rape sequence that has been much discussed and debated, but I tend to agree with scholar Leslie Stern, who condemns the sequence not only for humanizing the rapist, but of using the very act of the rape itself as a source of his melancholy. We are ultimately meant to have more sympathy for the rapist than the victim. This is symptomatic of a greater misogyny, a characteristic that is present in most of Leone but is so prominent here that it really derails the story. Certainly this is not a bad film, and a great historical curiosity, not only as Leone’s last work but as the last of these grand auteur films that would come out of Hollywood from the late 70s/early 80s. Like the 1981 disaster HEAVEN’S GATE by Michael Cimino, this film was cut by almost half and proved to be a difficult sell in the new age of the blockbuster. But as a film, it does not approach the greatness of Leone’s westerns, especially ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST.

Tarantino’s INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS is a much better melding of Leone’s style with a different genre, in this case the WWII sub-genre. Although titled and marketed as a tale of Jewish Nazi hunters, it is in fact not centered on the “basterds” but rather on two other characters: Nazi Colonel Hans Landa and a Jewish woman named Shosanna, who survives the massacre of her family that opens the movie. It was released this summer in North America, and thus has already received a great deal of commentary and discussion in its revision of historical facts. One of the disadvantages of seeing a movie late is that you lose the ability to see and comment immediately and thus without hearing other opinions first. But, then again, nobody comes to any film without certain prejudices, and knowing about the story and controversy in advance allowed me to see it from a different and more distanced perspective. The main debate over the film is the depiction of Jews as the terrorizers of Nazis, rather than as purely victims, which is both historically inaccurate and ethically questionable: is watching Jews murder and torture Nazis not an equal affront to humanity as the opposite? However, I think this can be defended on a number of grounds. First, Tarantino establishes the basterds and Shosanna as resistance fighters battling an occupying force. This adds an interesting twist on the use of “scalping” by the basterds; unlike traditional westerns, where the Natives were simply savages, Tarantino rightly establishes here an affinity between the Native resistance fighters against European invaders and the resistance to Nazi occupation. I do not think we can see the Jewish resistance as equivalent to the Nazis. Rather, it brings up the question of using violence to fight any enemy and how one’s humanity can be lost in the process, a theme of intelligent war films as far back as Powell/Pressburger’s THE LIFE AND DEATH OF COLONEL BLIMP in 1943.

The historical revision I found more of a problem, and one that has been less commented on, is the use of the African French projectionist who works with Shosanna to execute her revenge plan. I could not help but think of a famous analysis by Roland Barthes in his collection MYTHOLOGIES. In an essay titled “Paris Match”, Barthes looks at a photo of an African saluting the French flag and unpacks its ideological significance in defending French colonialism (a picture of the photo and description of Barthes’ analysis can be found here). This ignoring of colonial history is a characteristic of the most famous WWII Hollywood film, CASABLANCA, and can be seen in Tarantino’s film as well. Of course, the caveat is the self-reflective nature of INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS. Like the use of stylistic excess by Leone to comment on the mythology of the western, Tarantino makes his WWII story about WWII films themselves. It is also wish fulfillment, not only in its story of Jewish resistance and the ability to end the war before the worst of the Holocaust took place, but in its ideal of a tolerant, multi-cultural society to oppose the repugnant notion of racial purity. The fact that French society of the time was probably more anti-Semitic than the German society is not of concern to Tarantino. In his ideal fantasy world, his heroes share his values. This includes being anti-racist, but also includes a certain feminist streak that really marks him off from Leone. Ever since the title character of JACKIE BROWN (1997), Tarantino has been creating a number of strong female characters, and while they are still problematic and debatable as feminist figures, they are a far more mature view of women than Leone or most other Hollywood directors give us.

Kim Jee-won’s THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE WEIRD is a much more obvious Leone homage, and has been advertised as an “Oriental Western” (or, as Kim Jee-won once dubbed it, a “Kimchee Western”). This seems like an odd mixture, but in fact the first of Leone’s westerns, A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS, is a very close remake of Akira Kurosawa’s samurai film YOJIMBO (1961). To further complicate things, Kurosawa himself borrowed elements from Dashiell Hammett’s 30s crime novel RED HARVEST. All of this is to say that the western-eastern binary is not as rigid and stable as we may assume, and there has always been a great deal of cross-cultural influence. Unfortunately, Kim takes only the most superficial of ingredients from Leone and instead creates a very standard action film within an exotic setting. It is not a copy of Leone, but it is also not that original itself. The story is set during WWII in Manchuria, and features three Korean characters looking for treasure, not unlike the plot of Leone’s THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY, which was set during the American Civil War. But unlike Leone and Tarantino, Kim focuses a great deal of his running time to action sequences. This is a much more fast-paced work, but because of its lack of attention to character and mood, the result is much more boring, as we sit through action scene after action scene. Because of this, the story and its nationalist metaphor are much less interesting and complex than something like INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS. It copies Hollywood action films and creates Korean characters that mimic the hyper-masculine and cool personas of other blockbusters. This has been a logical extension of the growth of Korean cinema and its industry, which has competed with Hollywood by, in many cases, becoming it. This is especially troubling when a talented director like Kim Jee-won (whose A TALE OF TWO SISTERS is a very stylish and understated horror film) succumbs to this kind of superficiality. Overall, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE WEIRD is not a bad film and one that action film fans may enjoy, but it does not represent the best Korean cinema has to offer.

Perhaps the reworking of a film from Korea’s own cinematic past will prove more interesting and less shallow: appararently director Im Sang-s00 (THE PRESIDENT’S LAST BANG) is remaking Kim Ki-young’s THE HOUSEMAID with actress Jeon Do-yeon (SECRET SUNSHINE). Certainly one to look forward to.

Poached News: Two-day Strike, Hagwon Closures, and Foreigners Fingerprinted in 2012

4031126623 6272b22d6f b Poached News: Two day Strike, Hagwon Closures, and Foreigners Fingerprinted in 2012

Korean Railway Workers Union are staging a two-day strike starting today at 9 am in non-metropolitan areas. Workers in urban area such as Seoul will join the walkout tomorrow. The Korea Railroad Corporation expects service disruptions over the next two days on subway Line 1, passenger trains, and freight trains, but plans to hire emergency workers to minimize the impact. Workers at the Korea Gas Corporation, Korea Pension Service, and the Kyungpook National University Hospital will join railway workers tomorrow, and all four groups say they will hold a series of strikes until November 20th. The unions representing these workers are members of the Federation of Korean Trade Unions and Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, who also hinted a few weeks ago at a general strike for December if the government passes controversial labour reforms.

Public schools have been closing in response to the increasing H1N1 alert across Korea, but private after-school schools have yet to face the same closures. However, the education ministry announced that it will begin to urge hagwons that are close to public schools that have already been closed to help prevent the spread of the flu by keeping students at home as well.

Korea will introduce a fingerprint scan for all foreigners entering the country starting in 2012. With similar policies currently in effect in the U.S. and Japan, the Justice Ministry says the policy does not discriminate against foreigners and that Koreans over the age of 17 have to provide fingerprints when apply for their resident registration cards. The change is also being seen as a way to shorten the process for foreign professionals who are filing for a change of workplace.

Poached News: Dongguk Cries Foul Over Yale Legal Battle, Trot Singers Boycott Awards Show and Web Browsers Block Korea Herald

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Rhetoric in Dongguk’s University bizarre battle with Yale (the real one) heats with Dongguk claiming Yale is playing dirty. Trot singers are boycotting the Mnet music awards claiming the awards are unfairly judged. In other news of foul play a Busan couple has been accused of faking the husbands death to cash in on the insurance. The case that started in 2002 is now close to the end of the statute of limitations. Limitations of another kind have the Korean Herald’s website blocked as containing malware by Chrome and Opera.

Poached News: S.K To Deploy Troops to Afganistan, H1N1 High Alert, State-developed Test to Replace TOEIC

3948203614 2fbf63ef33 Poached News: S.K To Deploy Troops to Afganistan, H1N1 High Alert, State developed Test to Replace TOEIC

The South Korean government has announced plans to send troops and police officers to Afghanistan to protect S.K aid workers. The move comes two years after the S.K government withdrew it’s 200 troops following a hostage crisis in which the Taliban killed 2 kidnapped aid volunteers while demanding a troop withdrawal. On the health-care front, the S.K government is considering raising its alert status for influenza A (H1N1) to “Red”, its highest level. The anti-epidemic alert could mean school closures and travel restrictions across the country. In less dire news, Korea is pushing for a state-developed, standardized English test that will replace English proficiency tests in the College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT) and TOEFL and TOEIC by 2012. The Minister of Education is quoted in the Korea Times as saying “The new exam surpasses other similar exams in its credibility because of the fact that it is supported and approved by the state.” Life is also getting tougher for expats as as poll says that expatriates recommend marrying a Korean spouse in order to make the transition into Korean society. Other benefits of marrying a Korean is their apparent ability to squirrel away a few won is quite impressive. A Tttobokki vendor in Ulsan managed to save 160 million won ($135,329) over the years, one a day at a time.

Korea Back in the Day

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Recipe of the Week: Dill Pickles

pickles Recipe of the Week: Dill Pickles

Unless you live in Seoul and you have lots of money to blow dill pickles are probably off the menu in Korea. But they certainly don’t have to be. It turns out that making your own is dead simple and takes less than a week and you don’t even need any canning equipment. All you need is a big jar, some fresh cucs, a dash of spice and some salt. Dill, of course, is one of those spices and can be hard to find here. The best solution is to grow your own or bring some dried dill with you. You can of course just skip the dill and just leave it out.

1/4 cup of Alkali salt
2 liters filtered water
4 bags of Emart cocktail pickles
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
1 tablespoon red pepper flakes
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon dill seed
1 large bunch dill

Fill a clean glass jar with boiling water to sterilize it.

Combine the salt and water and dissolved.

Rinse the cucumbers thoroughly and cut off the stems.

Place the peppercorns, pepper flakes, garlic, dill seed and fresh dill into your sterilized jar and fill up with washed cucs.
Pour the brine mixture over the cucumbers until they are completely cover. Pour the rest of the salt water into a sandwich-sized ziptop plastic bag and seal. Place the bag on top of the pickles making sure that all of them are completely submerged in the brine. Set in a cool, dry place.

The fermentation is complete when the pickles taste sour and the bubbles have stopped forming; this should take approximately 3 days. After that, but the lid on the jar and place in the refrigerator. Store for up to 2 months in the refrigerator, skimming as needed. If they go soft or start to stink they have gone off and you need to chuck them. But they won’t last that long, I assure you.

Tiger and Bear

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