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Im Kwon taek

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Hangul
  
임권택

Name
  
Im Kwon-taek

Hanja
  
林權澤

Role
  
Film director

Revised Romanization
  
Im Gwontaek

Spouse
  
Chae Ryeong (m. 1979)

McCune–Reischauer
  
Im Kwont'aek


Im Kwon-taek BIFF Exclusive Im Kwontaek Anthem Magazine

Children
  
Kwon Hyun-sang, Im Dong-jun

Awards
  
Cannes Best Director Award

Nominations
  
Palme d'Or, Cesar Award for Best Foreign Film

Movies
  
Revivre, Seopyeonje, Painted Fire, Chunhyang, Beyond the Years

Similar People
  
Ahn Sung‑ki, Ho‑jung Kim, Kang Soo‑yeon, Kwon Hyun‑sang, Gyu‑ri Kim

The korean film night im kwon taek s retrospective


Im Kwon-taek (born May 2, 1936) is one of South Korea's most renowned film directors. In an active and prolific career, his films have won many domestic and international film festival awards as well as considerable box-office success, and helped bring international attention to the Korean film industry. As of spring 2015, he has directed 102 films.

Contents

Im Kwon-taek Im Kwontaek Picture Gallery HanCinema The

Early life

Im Kwon-taek ImKwontaekphotojpg

Im Kwon-taek was born in Jangseong, Jeollanam-do and grew up in Gwangju. After the Korean War, he moved to Busan in search of work. He then moved to Seoul in 1956, where Jeong Chang-hwa, director of Five Fingers of Death (1972), offered him room and board for work as a production assistant. Jeong recommended him for directing in 1961.

Career

Im Kwon-taek Im Kwontaek

Im's directorial premiere was with the 1962 film, Farewell to the Duman River (Dumanganga jal itgeola).

Im Kwon-taek 41 Im Kwontaek brought Korean tradition to screen

Before 1980 he was known primarily as a commercial filmmaker who could efficiently direct as many as eight genre pictures a year, helping to fulfill the quota for domestic pictures set by the government [1]. His desire to make more artistically satisfying films began to show itself with his 1978 film Jokbo (Genealogy or The Family Tree), but the turning point of his career came with the 1981 film Mandala. From this point his films have been regarded as art-house cinema, and have been regularly shown at international film festivals, and have won numerous awards.

Im Kwon-taek Im Kwontaek39s career enters new chapterINSIDE Korea

Im has continued to explore themes from Korea's past while also focusing on the Korean cultural identity in modern times. Among Im's most notable recent films are Sopyonje (1993) and Chunhyang (2000), both of which concentrate on the traditional Korean musical art of pansori. The latter film was also based on a traditional Korean legend. Apart from being a critical success, Sopyonje was also a success at the box office, becoming the first domestic film to draw over a million viewers in Seoul alone. Chihwaseon (2002) was also a critical success, earning him Korea's first Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival. Im Kwon-taek was awarded an honorary Golden Bear award at the Berlin Film Festival in 2005.

Im Kwon-taek's status, brought on by the critical success of his films, overlapped with a period of the film movement called "New Korean Cinema" or "Korean New Wave". Along with other directors, such as Park Gwang-su and Jang Sun-woo, Im is recognized as one of the founding figures of the movement, which gained international critical recognition and acclaim for Korean Cinema.

In April 2007, Im released his 100th film Beyond the Years, an informal sequel to Sopyonje. In November 2007 the French government announced that it would make Im a knight of the French Legion of Honor.

In 2013, a museum dedictated to Im opened in Busan, on the Dongseo University Centum City Campus.

A documentary on Im, Im Kwon-taek Project (2017) by well-known film critic-turned-director Jung Sung-il, is expected to be released in the second half of 2017.

Personal life

He married the actress Chae Ryeong, who appeared in several of his films. Their two sons Im Dong-joon and Im Dong-jae (the latter uses the stage name Kwon Hyun-sang) are also active in the film industry.

References

Im Kwon-taek Wikipedia