• Kim Ki-duk
  • Record Type: Electronic resources : monographic
    Author: ChungHye Seung, 1971-
    Secondary Intellectual Responsibility: Project Muse
    Place of Publication: Urbana
    Published: University of Illinois Press;
    Year of Publication: c2012
    Description: 1 online resource (x, 161 p.)ill. :
    Series: Contemporary film directors
    Personal Subject: Kim - Ki-dok - Criticism and interpretation -
    Online resource: http://muse.jhu.edu/books/9780252093791/
    Notes: Includes filmography
    Summary: This study investigates the controversial motion pictures written and directed by the independent filmmaker Kim Ki-duk, one of the most acclaimed Korean auteurs in the English-speaking world. Propelled by underdog protagonists who can only communicate through shared corporeal painand extreme violence, Kim's graphic films have been classified by Western audiences as belonging to sensationalist East Asian "extreme" cinema, and Kim has been labelled a "psychopath" and "misogynist" in South Korea. Drawing upon both Korean-language and English-language sources, Hye Seung Chung challenges these misunderstandings, recuperating Kim's oeuvre as a therapeutic, yet brutal cinema of Nietzschean ressentiment (political anger and resentment deriving from subordination and oppression)
    ISBN: 9780252093791electronic bk.
    ISBN: 9780252078415pbk.
    ISBN: 0252078411pbk.
    ISBN: 9780252036699hbk.
    ISBN: 0252036697hbk.
    Content Note: Beyond "extreme": the cinema of ressentiment. Kim Ki-duk: towards a more perfect imperfection-- An auteur is born: fishhooks, critical debates, and transnational canons -- On suffering and sufferance: postcolonial pain and the "purloined letter" in Address unknown -- Reconciling the paradox of silence and apologia: Bad guy, The isle, and 3-iron -- Neofeminist revisions: female bodies and semiotic chora in Birdcage inn and Samaritan girl -- The bodhisattva inner-eye: inwardly drawn transcendence in Spring, summer, fall, winter -- and spring -- Interview with Kim Ki-duk: from Crocodile to Address unknown / by Kim So-Hee
Reviews
Export
pickup library
 
 
Change password
Login