A Flower in Hell
A Flower in Hell (Korean: 지옥화; Hanja: 地獄花; RR: Jiokhwa) is a 1958 South Korean film directed by Shin Sang-ok.[3] For her performance in the film, Shin's wife, Choi Eun-hee was given the Best Actress award at the 2nd Buil Film Awards.[4] During the Korean War, director Shin Sang-ok had shared an apartment with a prostitute in order to live more comfortably rather than sharing a one-room evacuation apartment with several families, giving him insight in the subject of the film.
A Flower in Hell | |
---|---|
Korean name | |
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Jiokhwa |
McCune–Reischauer | Chiok'wa |
Directed by | Shin Sang-ok[1] |
Written by | Lee Jeong-seon |
Produced by | Shin Sang-ok |
Starring | Choi Eun-hee Kim Hak |
Cinematography | Gang Beom-gu |
Edited by | Kim Yeong-hui |
Music by | Son Mok-in |
Distributed by | Seoul Films Co., Ltd. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Box office | $7,203[2] |
Plot
Two weeks after leaving the army, Dong-shik (Cho Hae-won), arrives in post-Korean War Seoul in search of his brother, Yeong-shik (Kim Hak-a), hoping to bring him back home to take care of their mother. The city is destitute, with few jobs, high crime, a huge American military presence, and a thriving black market economy.
The next day, Dong-shik finds Yeong-shik at the market and chases him through the streets. He only catches up when Yeong-shik stops to flirt with his girlfriend, Sonya, an in demand prostitute. Later at the river, Dong-shik meets Sonya's friend Julie, who speaks about the tribulations of being a prostitute and jokingly offers to marry him. When Yeong-shik comes back from his date, Dong-shik tries to convince makes his case for them to leave the city but Yeong-shik insists on staying. Yeong-shik tries to leave him with some money before being called out to work.
Later that night, Yeong-shik and his gang sneaks onto the American base during a party to steal supplies, employing prostitutes to distract the guards. Dong-shik arrives at Sonya's residence to try to convince her to stop seeing his brother. Instead, Sonya seduces Dong-shik and his family photograph drops out of his pockets as he lays with her. They later go on a date by the river, which Yeong-shik eventually finds out about and beats Dong-shik for.
Dong-shik, having failed to retrieve his brother and unable to pursue his relationship with Sonya, prepares to head back home. At the crossroad, he sees Sonya greeting Yeong-shik goodbye. Before Dong-shik leaves, he has one final lunch with her.
Sonya offers to leave Yeong-shik for good and suggest that they could move to Hong Kong. She even reports Yeong-shik's heist so that she could runaway with Dong-shik with no strings attached. When Dong-shik finds out, he leaves immediately to find his brother. Sonya follows shortly after.
With the tip, the military police easily prevents the gang's activities. Yeong-shik and others are slowly killed one after another as they attempt to escape from the police's pursuit. Yeong-shik eventually gets shot himself and crashes into the river.
Dong-shik finally catches up to Yeong-shik and retrieves him from the river bank. When Sonya arrives, she tries to convince Dong-shik not to leave her. He ignores her pleas and leaves to retrieve his truck. Yeong-shik overhears her confessions and slowly chases Sonya further into the river. Deterred by the mud and failing to beg for mercy, Sonya eventually succumbs to Yeong-shik's approach and dies by his knife. Yeong-shik then dies by his own injuries.
With his brother and lover dead, Dong-shik prepares to head home. Julie sees him off and returns his family photograph. Dong-shik proposes to Julie and they both head back to the countryside.
Cast
- Choi Eun-hee as So-nya[1]
- Kim Hak as Yeong-shik
- Jo Hae-won as Dong-shik
- Kang Sun-hee as Judy
Reception
Wally Adams of Asian Movie Pulse have said that "despite the rather questionable buildup in places, The Flower in Hell is potent and mostly progressive early South Korean cinema that manages respectably level-headed examination of the society's outcasts". He then elaborated about it, adding that "it serves as a fascinating progenitor of the genre-meshing trends that the industry would become known for worldwide today".[5]
According to Panos Kotzathanasis of HanCinema, the film was a "great production", adding to it that it "[is] one of those movies that stay relevant forever, through a combination of artistry and realism".[6]
References
- "The Flower in Hell (Ji-oghwa) (1958)". Korean Movie Database (KMDb). Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- "The Flower In Hell (1958)". Korean Film Council. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- Bergan, Ronald (2006-04-19). "Obituary: Shin Sang-Ok". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- Paquet, Darcy. "A Flower in Hell (1958)". koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- Adams, Wally (2019-11-09). "Film Review: The Flower in Hell (1958) by Shin Sang-ok". Asian Movie Pulse. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- Kotzathanasis, Panos (2018-08-25). "[Guest Film Review] "The Flower in Hell" + Full Movie". HanCinema. Retrieved 2021-07-06.