6.8 /10 1 Votes6.8
Music by Choi Chang-kwon Director Lee Man-hui Music director Choi Chang-Kwon | 6.8/10 Produced by Joo Dong-jin Screenplay by Yoo Dong-hun Initial release 23 May 1975 Screenplay Yoo Dong-Hun | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Starring Baek Il-seobKim Jin-kyuMun Suk Awards Grand Bell Award for Best New Actress Cast Moon Sook, Baek Il‑seob, Kim Jin‑kyu, Kim Yong‑Hak, Choi Jae‑ho Similar The Marines Who Nev, Late Autumn, Coming Back, The Evil Stairs, Wild flowers in the battle |
the road to sampo 1975
The Road to Sampo (Hangul: 삼포가는 길; RR: Sampoganeun gil) is a 1975 South Korean film starring Baek Il-seob, Kim Jin-kyu and Mun Suk. The final and posthumous work of director Lee Man-hee, it is adapted from an original short story of the same name by Hwang Sok-yong.
Contents
Lee collapsed during the editing phase of the film. He was admitted to a hospital and soon died. According to Baek Kyeol, a screenwriter, Lee's health was already at its worst when he took on the project and may have known that he might not live to see the film's completion.
Plot
With little money left and no work during winter, Roh Young-dal (Baek Il-seob), a young construction worker is at a loss where to go when he meets a middle-aged man named Jeong (Kim Jin-kyu) who is on his way back to his hometown. Jeong gets by doing odd jobs using skills he learned while serving time in prison. After more than ten years' absence, he is homesick and dreams of his hometown, Sampo, where he can fish in the sea and tend his crops.
Young-dal and Jeong meet Baek-hwa (Mun Suk), a runaway waitress at a restaurant in town and the three of them begin their journey together. At first, Young-dal and Baek-hwa argue constantly but soon become attached to each other. As they continue their travel to the train station, each reminisces about his or her past.
At the train station, Young-dal buys Baek-hwa a ticket for her onward journey, hinting at a farewell. He and Jeong then depart for Sampo. After finding a job, Young-dal leaves Jeong. When Jeong finally arrives in Sampo, he is shocked to see how his hometown has changed.
Cast
Response
Screen Anarchy's Pierce Conran: The Road to Sampo is a minor masterpiece of Korean Cinema that has given me ample excuse to seek out the rest of Lee Man-hee's work.
Korean film stamps
In 2009, Korea Post issues The Road to Sampo as part of the third series of Korean film stamps, which also includes Yalkae, a Joker in High School, Never Ever Forget Me and Chilsu and Mansu.