Japanese actor Odagiri Joe smiles during a press conference in the Busan International Film Festival at Busan Cinema Center in Busan, South Korea, on Oct 7. The film festival, the biggest in Asia, showcases more than 300 films from 70 countries during Oct 6-14. (AP)
Korean war still haunts filmmaker Huppert teams up with Asian directors

BUSAN, South Korea, Oct 7, (AP): The Korean War ended nearly 60 years ago, but it still haunts South Korea’s most celebrated filmmaker.
Speaking in an interview Friday on the sidelines of the Busan International Film Festival, Im Kwon-taek said he did not imagine he would be so successful when he was a boy selling combat boots on the streets of Busan while the city was besieged by North Korean forces in a 1950 attack.
“The brutal scenes of the war are still hard for me to swallow,” Im said, recalling the 1950-53 war that has left Korea divided between north and south to this day.
Im said his cinematic philosophies have kept changing since he shot his first film in 1962, but he has devoted his decades-long career to restoring a sense of humanity through movies.
Winner of a best director award at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival for “Chihwaseon” ‚Äî a movie about a 19th-century Korean painter ‚Äî the 76-year-old is considered the most prolific and respected of South Korean filmmakers.
Im said that ideologies sparked the Korean War, “but we gained nothing but devastation and a line that still divides us.”

Humans
“Humans deserve to live like humans. I have tried to deliver the message that no ideology is worth the loss of humanity.”
Tension along the military demarcation between North and South Korea still runs high. It intensified when North Korea bombarded a front-line South Korean island last year and killed four people. South Korea also holds North Korea responsible for the sinking of a warship that left 46 sailors dead last year.
Im has received numerous awards at home and abroad and has made more than 100 movies in his career. But he said suffering from the Korean War is so deeply engraved in him that he is doubtful he can make a film that can fairly portray the conflict. Instead, he encouraged younger directors to tackle the Korean War, saying they can be more objective.
During the nine-day festival, Im will be joined by other internationally acclaimed directors like France’s Luc Besson, Japan’s Shunji Iwai and Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul, and movie stars like South Korea’s Jang Dong-gun, Japan’s Joe Odagiri and China’s Tang Wei, according to organizers.
The Busan International Film Festival will close next Friday with Japanese director Masato Harada’s “Chronicle of My Mother.”


French actress Isabelle Huppert says curiosity has drawn her to Asia and helped her discover the region’s innovative talents.
Huppert made inroads into Asia as an actress this year when she starred in Filipino director Brillante Mendoza’s “Captured.” In the thriller, she plays a hostage taken by a group of terrorists.
Huppert has appeared in more than 90 productions since making her screen debut in 1972. She received the best actress award at the Cannes Film Festival for her 2001 role in “The Piano Teacher.”
She told reporters Friday that she is now working with South Korean director Hong Sang-soo on a new film.
“Since the very beginning, I’ve been attracted to going on the road,” she said on the sidelines of the Busan International Film Festival. “I was never willing to stay in my country. I wanted to travel.”
Huppert said she noticed a “kind of proximity” between French and South Korean movies when she discovered Hong’s “Woman Is the Future of Man,” a satirical 2004 movie about two men and their mutual former girlfriend.
Huppert said she began to approach Asia “out of curiosity” and is impressed by its filmmakers’ “capacity to invent.”
“It’s alive. It’s vivid,” she said.

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