Starring: Song Gang-Ho, Mun So-Ri, Lee Jae-Eung
Director: Im Chan-Sang
Studio: Cinexus
Rating: 15+
Genre: Drama
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About This DVD
Han-mo is a sole barber in Hyoja-dong, where the President lives. A rigged
election by rounding off brings him a son (He gets married to Kyung-ja by
forcing her that she has to give a birth to a baby over 5 months like rounding
off.) 4.19 revolution restores his belief that a barber was originally the same
with a doctor in the ancient time. After a military government is founded by
5.16 coup d'etat, the hair cut decree is announced and Han-mo's barber shop is
packed with customers.
From remembering gruesome serial murder cases and Cold-War suicide commandoes,
based-on-a-true-story films have become quite the flavor in the past year and,
given this year's lineup, will probably remain so for a while. So it is a little
surprising that the new film "Hyoja-dong Ibalsa (The President's Barber)," in
which President Park Chung-hee and his staff members play significant roles,
starts off with a disclaimer stating that all the characters and the events in
its film are wholly and entirely fictional.
What the film does, in fact, is take a series of defining moments in modern
Korean history and filter them through the point-of-view of the so-called
"common man." The result is a blurring of fact and fiction that is at its best a
poignant social commentary of the 1960s and '70s and at its worst a gross
over-simplification of a complex reality.
The "common man" here is played by veteran actor Song Gang-ho, who puts on a
predictably impeccable performance as Han-mo, a barber living in Hyoja-dong
within walking distance of Chong Wa Dae, the residence of the nation's
president.
There's something Forrest Gump-ish about Han-mo as he lives through one of the
most volatile periods in South Korea's history, including the controversial
election and resignation of Korea's first president Rhee Syng-man, and later the
18-year-rule of Park Chung-hee's authoritarian regime. (The film, incidentally,
never refers to the presidents by their names, but it's quite clear who they're
meant to be.)
But these developments all go over the head of our simple barber, whose life
revolves around his shop, his new wife Min-ja (Mun So-ri) and son Nak-an (Lee
Jae-eung). Even after he becomes the barber for President Park (Cho Yong-jin), a
job that fills him with pride but also gives him too close a view of
Chongwadae's internal battles, Han-mo never sheds his naive image of being an
unwitting pawn to a larger game.
"President's Barber" takes full liberty with historical accounts for dramatic
and comic effect - such as adding the element of diarrhea to one of the more
sensitive moments in the 1960s - and as a historical lesson, the film leaves
much to be desired. But as the disclaimer makes plain, "President's Barber" is
all fiction and, taken as such, is a fairly entertaining look at how the
personal can be connected to the political.
Audio Format: | DTS, DD 5.1 Surround, DD 2.0 Stereo |
Video Format: | Widescreen 1.85:1 (Anamorphic) |
Languages: | Korean |
Subtitles: | English, Korean |
Country Made: | Korea |
Region Code: | 3 |
Year Made: | 2004 |
Running Time: | 116 / 204 |
Special Features: | Disc 1 * Feature + Deleted Scenes * Commentary by Director and Producer Disc 2 * Making Film - Production Diary * Hidden Story - Korean History * Music Video * Poster * Trailer * Premiere * Netizen's Gaze |
Availability: |
Usually ships in 5-10 days |
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