Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Obaltan

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Director
  
Yu Hyun-mok

Music director
  
Seong-tae Kim

Duration
  

Country
  
South Korea

7.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Screenplay
  
Jong-ki Lee, So-woon Na

Writer
  
Beom-seon Lee

Language
  
Korean

Obaltan movie poster

Release date
  
April 13, 1960 (1960-04-13)

Initial release
  
April 13, 1961 (South Korea)

Cast
  
Choi Mu-ryong
,
Kim Jin Kyu
,
Moon Jeong-suk

Similar movies
  
The Gundown (2011)

Tagline
  
Let's get outta here!

Obaltan (Korean: 오발탄), also known as The Aimless Bullet and Stray Bullet, is a 1960 South Korean tragedy film directed by Yu Hyun-mok. The plot is based on the same titled short novel written by Yi Beomseon. It has often been called the best Korean movie ever made.

Contents

Obaltan movie scenes

Plot

The films depicts a man Cheolho, who lives a hard life together with his war veteran younger brother Yeongho, his pregnant wife, and his mother suffering from Posttraumatic stress disorder constantly screaming "Let's get out of here!", due to the aftermath of the Korean War. Cheolho suffers from a toothache but refuses to go to the dentist, despite his brother urging that keeping the toothache is a much worse problem than paying the dentist. Yeongho befriends an actress, Miri. Miri aims to help Yeongho get a job by making him an actor in a film project. While reading his lines for the film's script, Yeongho realizes that his character is being judged for his wounded appearance and he was chosen for the scars he received from the Korean War. Choosing dignity over a rare chance to earn money, Yeongho quits the film. Myeongsuk, Cheolho's sister, is a former nurse who is now a prostitute for American soldiers.

The last, climactic part of the film portrays the brother, Yeongho, robbing a bank using a gun he secretly stole from Seol-hui. After being caught by the police, Yeongho gives up the money, then shortly his gun and himself, breaking down into tears as he is arrested by the police. Yeongho, now in jail, tells Cheolho to take his niece Hae Ok on a trip and be a good father to his wife's child. After hearing that his wife has died from childbirth and failing to even see her body at the hospital or the baby who came out alive, Cheolho finally decides to visit the dentist. While Cheolho has two teeth that must be removed, the dentist refuses to remove more than one tooth for the same day. Adolescent boys try to earn money selling newspapers with the headline of Yeongho's bank robbery. Cheolho tells the taxi driver to take him to the police station to see his brother, but once they arrive, Yeongho orders the driver to keep going anyways constantly repeating his mother's plea "Let's get out of here!". With his family gone and his toothache remaining, the taxi continues to drive aimlessly, leaving Cheolho's fate unknown.

Cast

  • Kim Jin-kyu as Cheolho
  • Choi Moo-ryong as Yeongho
  • Seo Ae-ja as Myeongsuk
  • Kim Hye-jeong
  • Noh Jae-sin
  • Moon Jung-suk
  • Yoon Il-bong
  • Yu Gye-seon
  • Nam Chun-yeok
  • Park Gyeong-hui
  • Reception

    The government banned Obaltan because of its unremittingly downbeat depiction of life in post-armistice South Korea. An American consultant to the Korean National Film Production Center saw the film and persuaded the government to release it in Seoul so that it might qualify for entry in the San Francisco International Film Festival. Director Yu Hyun-mok attended the film's premier in San Francisco in November 1963. Variety called Obaltan a "remarkable film", and noted that its "[b]rilliantly detailed camera work is matched by probing sympathy and rich characterizations."

    Legacy

    The most-cited quote from the film, mentioned in the contemporary Variety review and in later texts on South Korean cinema, is "Let's get outta here! Let's get outta here!"

    Availability

    In December 2002 Obaltan was released on Region 0 DVD in South Korea with English subtitles, but as of November 2007 is currently out of print. Gregory Hatanaka's Cinema Epoch released the film on Region 1 DVD on March 13, 2008.

    References

    Obaltan Wikipedia
    Obaltan IMDb Obaltan themoviedb.org