MAIFF 2026  -

KFFC

Chilsu and Mansu

May 16

Cinéma du Parc

Fiction

109

minutes

Korean

Content Warning:

About the Film

Director

Park Kwang-Su

Country

South Korea

Year

1988

Program

Curated by

Description

An aimless young man and his sign-painter friend draw a crowd when they climb to the top of a high-rise billboard.

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About the Director
Park Kwang-Su
Director
Park Kwang-su (b. 1955) is the central voice, if not the progenitor, of the remarkable Korean New Wave of the late 1980s and 1990s. In major films such as To the Starry Island, A Single Spark and The Uprising, Park introduced a new political outspokenness into popular Korean cinema, an emboldened realist address of urgent, and frequently controversial, socio-cultural and historical themes. Although little known in the US, Park played a crucial role in shaping South Korea’s first authentic independent film movement by challenging the long tradition of draconian government censorship renewed with new severity in the wake of the 1980 Kwangju Massacre. Transforming quintessentially Korean themes into thought-provoking and deeply engaging narrative features, Park’s films helped introduce contemporary South Korean cinema to its first truly international audience – a cause dramatically furthered by Park’s founding of the Pusan International Film Festival in 1996. Beginning his artistic career first as a sculptor at Seoul National University, Park’s blossoming interest in cinema led him into a Super-8 collective and, upon graduation, the Seoul Film Group, an activist film club closely tied to the vibrant student protest movement. Study at Paris’ ESEC film school introduced Park to the rich tradition of political counter-cinema which would directly inform the subject and tone of his extraordinary first feature, Chilsu and Mansu which subversively transforms the popular formula of the “buddy” comedy into an angry portrait of working class disenchantment. Park’s subsequent films continued this subtle politicization of popular film genres in order to engage a range of once-taboo themes, using, for example, the bio-pic in A Single Spark to explore the troubled history of Korean labor unions, or The Uprising’s historical epic to give new perspective on Korea’s difficult colonial legacy. United by their stylish sophistication and structure, Park’s critically acclaimed films of the late 1980s and 1990s together represent one of the highpoints in contemporary Korean cinema.
Film Stills
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Awards & Festival Recognition

Locarno Film Festival: 1989 Nominee Golden Leopard, Best Film, Park Kwang-su Grand Bell Awards: 1989 Winner Grand Bell Award, Best New Director, Park Kwang-su –1989 Winner Grand Bell Award, Best Screenplay, Adapted, In-seok Choi – 1989 Winner Grand Bell Award, Best Sound Effects, Young Kil Lee Korean Association of Film Critics Awards: 1989 Winner Korean Association of Film Critics Award, Best Actor, Park Joong-hoon– 1989 Winner Korean Association of Film Critics Award, Best New Director, Park Kwang-su

Press & Articles

https://lareviewofbooks.org/blog/the-korea-blog/unbearable-preposterousness-westernization-park-kwang-sus-chil-su-man-su-1988/