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Sanda

Wide Angle

Family · Social Criticism · True Story · Labor  

  • CountryKorea,South
  • Production Year2013
  • Running Time93min
  • Format HDCAM
  • ColorColor
Program Note
What are labor movement leaders of the 1980s and ’90s doing today, 20 years later? This film begins with the daily lives of four middle-aged Korea Telecom laborer “ajussis.” They “live,” hanging off of utility poles, making repairs below manholes, eating lonely meals of soup and rice, making sales, and getting on the red-eye train once a week to see their families. They are within us and among our neighbors, quietly living day by day. But the moment they start talking, what they do becomes more than just “living.” That’s because they have all dreamed of a world for laborers, fighting against Korea Telecom’s unfair layoff program, in the past, present and future. Sanda is not a grand narrative about the history of labor movements. Neither is it a behind-thescenes documentary contrasting the past and present to make us reminisce over history. It simply portrays today’s labor scene by talking with individuals living, or surviving, today. As we listen on, we come to reconstruct our own experiences. (HONG Hyosook)
Director
Director
Mire KIM
She started making independent documentaries in 2000 and she directed I’m Not a Worker (2003), Physical Work (2005) and Staying Out (2009). I’m Not a Worker won the documentary award at the Fribourg International Film Festival in 2004. Staying Out depicting the sit-in demonstration of female workers at a retailer was screened at the Busan International Film Festival and the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival.
Photo
Credit
  • Director Mire KIM 김미례
  • Cast LEE Hae-gwan, JANG Gyo-soon, SON I-lgon, SEO Gi-bon
  • Cinematography Yoon-man CHOI
  • Editor Na-ri KIM
  • Music Byong-oh KIM