biff

History

영화 정보

Three Henpeck Generations

4th(1999) Special Programs in Focus

 

  • CountryKorea
  • Production Year1967
  • Running Time105min
  • Format 35mm
Program Note
This is one of a handful comedies Yu Hyun-Mok has directed in his career, enabling us to examine his cinematic world from another point of view. Three generations of the Gong family′s battle of the sexes are depicted. Not having a single central character defies the traditional dramatic code, yet this film utilizes a Grand Hotel-like method of storytelling that makes this a film in the classic Hollywood tradition. Yet, due to the Japanese influence on Korean cinema in those days, this film also follows a unique oriental trend in 1960′s family melodrama. Entangled, speculative love affairs and subsequent misunderstandings involving family members and their acquaintances unfold in humorous, non-serious ways. Such a style makes Yu′s comedy unique. Other films, such as School Excursion and Ill Give You Everything maintained this comedy trend, based mostly on modern-day complications in interpersonal relationships and the glorification of humanism, showing another side of Yu Hyun-Mok′s world of cinema. (Jung Jae-Hyung)
Director
Director
YU Hyun-Mok
Yu Hyun-Mok is a film pioneer responsible for cultivating the aesthetics of Korean cinema who also had immense influence on other filmmakers. He directed 43 features including the classic An Aimless Bullet which many consider as the single greatest Korean film ever made. Born in 1925, Yu Hyun-Mok began his film career in 1955 with The Crossroad. Since then, he has pursued auteurism in the midst of a turbulent modern history and the barren nature of Korean cinema. His films represent a mirror which reflect Korea’s social reality in a critical manner, questioning society in the following manner: reality vs. existence in [An Aimless Bullet] (1961), religion vs. ideology in [Martyr] (1965) and [Rainy Days] (1979), and tradition vs. modern times in [Daughters of the Pharmacist Kim] (1963) and [Three Henpeck Generation] (1967). Yu Hyun-Mok has journeyed in search of human life. He also presents a unified aesthetic exploration of reality and ample experimentation in cinematic images. His latest project is 1995’s [Mommy, Star and Sea Anemone].
Photo
Credit
  • Director YU Hyun-Mok 유현목
  • Cast Choi Nam-Hyun, Heo Jang-Gang, Shin Sung-Il, Hwang Jung-Soon, Yoon Jung-Hee
  • Cinematography Choi Young-Ji
  • Production Company Keuk Dong Entertainment
    C/O Korean Film Archive
    kfa@cinematheque.or.kr