Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Parasite' filmmaker's secret debut unearthed by new documentary

EUR -
AED 3.880804
AFN 71.307406
ALL 98.671396
AMD 413.781933
ANG 1.90505
AOA 962.50995
ARS 1065.010551
AUD 1.625982
AWG 1.901814
AZN 1.799017
BAM 1.963835
BBD 2.134282
BDT 126.318047
BGN 1.955911
BHD 0.398309
BIF 3059.806755
BMD 1.056563
BND 1.419575
BOB 7.304716
BRL 6.273657
BSD 1.0571
BTN 89.254043
BWP 14.440882
BYN 3.459272
BYR 20708.636875
BZD 2.130668
CAD 1.48193
CDF 3032.335873
CHF 0.93192
CLF 0.037424
CLP 1032.631627
CNY 7.656943
CNH 7.655893
COP 4633.430713
CRC 539.91426
CUC 1.056563
CUP 27.998922
CVE 111.652276
CZK 25.269979
DJF 187.772468
DKK 7.458231
DOP 63.868826
DZD 141.040829
EGP 52.47473
ERN 15.848447
ETB 133.610026
FJD 2.395915
FKP 0.833963
GBP 0.833364
GEL 2.889743
GGP 0.833963
GHS 16.478969
GIP 0.833963
GMD 75.016124
GNF 9119.195528
GTQ 8.155369
GYD 221.149638
HKD 8.221302
HNL 26.735392
HRK 7.536738
HTG 138.638575
HUF 412.919692
IDR 16761.951049
ILS 3.866376
IMP 0.833963
INR 89.179423
IQD 1384.779164
IRR 44454.892992
ISK 144.707116
JEP 0.833963
JMD 166.973199
JOD 0.749424
JPY 159.673625
KES 136.824475
KGS 91.702052
KHR 4257.94947
KMF 495.475292
KPW 950.906395
KRW 1469.309554
KWD 0.324798
KYD 0.880892
KZT 531.278845
LAK 23210.420146
LBP 94659.27457
LKR 307.601515
LRD 189.211505
LSL 19.178773
LTL 3.119757
LVL 0.639105
LYD 5.172163
MAD 10.591537
MDL 19.35994
MGA 4946.120853
MKD 61.536346
MMK 3431.675754
MNT 3590.201377
MOP 8.471242
MRU 42.021946
MUR 49.362879
MVR 16.324113
MWK 1832.956479
MXN 21.780853
MYR 4.69378
MZN 67.512357
NAD 19.178773
NGN 1785.622965
NIO 38.899162
NOK 11.690923
NPR 142.801919
NZD 1.791984
OMR 0.406769
PAB 1.0571
PEN 3.985357
PGK 4.262339
PHP 61.985389
PKR 293.729122
PLN 4.303693
PYG 8262.808673
QAR 3.852773
RON 4.976835
RSD 116.996375
RUB 119.557515
RWF 1456.538996
SAR 3.968965
SBD 8.865188
SCR 14.354314
SDG 635.524361
SEK 11.529808
SGD 1.416032
SHP 0.833963
SLE 23.976476
SLL 22155.605053
SOS 604.157718
SRD 37.392294
STD 21868.723099
SVC 9.249935
SYP 2654.646351
SZL 19.175642
THB 36.455126
TJS 11.336919
TMT 3.708537
TND 3.320763
TOP 2.474578
TRY 36.596995
TTD 7.175427
TWD 34.324037
TZS 2795.254968
UAH 44.011439
UGX 3900.868761
USD 1.056563
UYU 45.304298
UZS 13581.248611
VES 49.445224
VND 26820.854443
VUV 125.437295
WST 2.949492
XAF 658.642596
XAG 0.035105
XAU 0.000401
XCD 2.855415
XDR 0.808589
XOF 658.651986
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.06155
ZAR 19.231556
ZMK 9510.331807
ZMW 28.831286
ZWL 340.212889
  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

'Parasite' filmmaker's secret debut unearthed by new documentary
'Parasite' filmmaker's secret debut unearthed by new documentary / Photo: Anthony WALLACE - AFP

'Parasite' filmmaker's secret debut unearthed by new documentary

Oscar-winning "Parasite" filmmaker Bong Joon-ho's first movie -- about a trapped gorilla dreaming of a different life -- was hidden from the world for three decades, but a new documentary has brought it to light.

Text size:

"Yellow Door: '90s Lo-fi Film Club" showcases Bong's formative years as an obsessive film enthusiast and aspiring filmmaker, as well as a group of quirky young South Korean cinephiles who came together in the early 1990s.

This cohort -- dubbed "Yellow Door" for the colour of their office entrance -- included both Bong and the documentary's director, Lee Hyuk-rae.

Until this year, only Yellow Door members had ever seen Bong's debut film, "Looking for Paradise," which features a stuffed gorilla locked in a basement, fantasising about a real banana tree and battling excrement that comes to life as a worm.

Bong made the film in his own basement in 1992 and screened it for Yellow Door members later that year, turning bright red with nervousness.

The film is seared in the memories of the club's other members.

"I believe that the essence of Bong Joon-ho's films today can be traced back to that gorilla," Choi Jong-tae, one of the members, says in the documentary.

In an interview with AFP, Lee said he was deeply inspired by Bong's amateur debut, and revisiting it in light of the film director's subsequent rise to global prominence was a key motivation for making the documentary.

"When the (final) twist was revealed in the movie, everyone present there really felt a heart-pounding sensation," he said of the 1992 screening.

"As Bong continued to accomplish things that were beyond our imagination at that time, my desire to watch his debut film (again) grew increasingly intense."

- First Academy Award -

One of the most recognisable figures in South Korean cinema, Bong made history in 2020 by becoming the first director from his country to win an Academy Award for his powerful satire of inequality, "Parasite".

He was already well known then for his dark and genre-hopping thrillers, including the 2006 monster blockbuster "The Host" and the 2003 crime drama "Memories of Murder".

But Lee's documentary captures an earlier era of South Korean cinema, when the country's films were obscure overseas and local cinephiles were seeking new content to expand their horizons.

Lee said members of Yellow Door were mostly stuck viewing poor-quality VHS tapes, which in the case of foreign films came without subtitles.

But they happily watched anyway, because they were desperate.

Bong religiously collected VHS tapes, and he meticulously analysed Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 classic "The Godfather" by sketching cartoons of its scenes.

The documentary -- currently streaming on Netflix -- captures light-hearted and youthful moments from the film group's early days, including blurry photographs that members took of each other.

"We were a film group and the photographs (we took) were out of focus," Bong says in the documentary.

- 'Social misfits' -

Bong majored in sociology at university and many members of the group had no formal training in cinema.

One member described the cohort as "social misfits".

Lee said many members of the group had been involved in student activism in the 1980s against South Korea's then-authoritarian government, but felt adrift following Seoul's political liberalisation in the 1990s.

"It seems like people who were wandering aimlessly, unsure what they wanted to do but acutely aware of the places they didn't want to be, fortuitously encountered each other ... at the Yellow Door," Lee told AFP.

In a way, the trapped protagonist in Bong's first movie embodied what the cohort was feeling at the time, he added.

Since then, Bong's signature films -- including "Parasite", "Snowpiercer" and "The Host" -- have featured basements as spaces symbolic of repression, violence and dark secrets.

Yellow Door members have since followed diverse professional paths, spanning cinema, speech therapy, education and academia.

But cinema has always held a special significance for Bong, Lim Hoon-ah, one of the members, says in the film.

"To me, cinema was a romantic (fantasy), but (Bong) Joon-ho really thought of it as his reality," she said.

(A.Berg--BBZ)