Moon Sung-Keun – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Mon, 10 Nov 2025 04:28:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Moon Sung-Keun – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Sun-Woo Jang – Ggotip AKA A Petal (1996) (HD) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/11/sun-woo-jang-ggotip-aka-a-petal-1996-hd/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/11/sun-woo-jang-ggotip-aka-a-petal-1996-hd/#comments Thu, 13 Nov 2025 03:06:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=260633 During the 1980 Gwangju massacre, a young girl witnesses her mother’s death as soldiers kill protesters opposing the military regime. The film sparked public demand for truth, leading the government to open classified files on the tragedy. A.Petal.1996.1080p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.x264-MNRV.mkvGeneralContainer: MatroskaRuntime: 1h 41mnSize: 4.32 GiBDXVA: CompatibleMinimum settings: Not metVideoCodec: x264Resolution: 1920x1080Aspect ratio: 16:9Frame rate: 24.000 fpsBit rate: …

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During the 1980 Gwangju massacre, a young girl witnesses her mother’s death as soldiers kill protesters opposing the military regime. The film sparked public demand for truth, leading the government to open classified files on the tragedy.



A.Petal.1996.1080p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.x264-MNRV.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1h 41mn
Size: 4.32 GiB
DXVA: Compatible
Minimum settings: Not met
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 1920x1080
Aspect ratio: 16:9
Frame rate: 24.000 fps
Bit rate: 6 000 kb/s
Audio
Korean 2.0ch AAC LC @ 128 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/3B9C070E6EAF386/A.Petal.1996.1080p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.x264-MNRV.mkv

Language(s):Korean
Subtitles:English

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Lee Chang-don – Chorok mulkogi AKA Green Fish (1997) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/01/lee-chang-don-chorok-mulkogi-aka-green-fish-1997/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/01/lee-chang-don-chorok-mulkogi-aka-green-fish-1997/#respond Wed, 29 Jan 2025 01:04:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=238988 Returning home and finding his town drastically changed, a former soldier falls in with gangsters. Quote: Lee Chang-dong’s wrenching, tonally nuanced first film, Chorok mulkogi (Green Fish, 1997), packs a quiet wallop. By turns emotionally coercive, visually subtle, and as ruthless as the ritual pummeling its main character endures with a fatalistic surrender, Green Fish …

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Returning home and finding his town drastically changed, a former soldier falls in with gangsters.

Quote:
Lee Chang-dong’s wrenching, tonally nuanced first film, Chorok mulkogi (Green Fish, 1997), packs a quiet wallop. By turns emotionally coercive, visually subtle, and as ruthless as the ritual pummeling its main character endures with a fatalistic surrender, Green Fish careens from breaking point to breaking point, resting only for a moment until the next crisis of sadness. We run a marathon through its portrayal of everyday life in modern South Korea, where gangsters clutch visions of their own blasted sense of importance and simple folk rarely rise above the struggles of getting by. Both are trapped in a world in which stark high-rises stand where acacias once grew.

The film’s physical centre is Makdong (Han Suk-gyu), who has just been discharged from army service. On the train home, he leans precariously from the train only to see a beautiful woman doing the same a few cars ahead. The rushing wind blows her purple scarf away from her into Makdong’s face. As soon as he gathers it to catch another glimpse of the woman (Miae, played with a vicious sensuality by Shim Hye-jin), she has disappeared. She appears again and again, tempting, teasing but never fully satisfying Makdong, who follows her and opportunity into one dark, dangerous corner after another.

Miae, a singer, is the gun moll of petty gangster Bae Tae-gon (Moon Seung-keun). Like any gang leader, he runs a “family” of sorts and takes care of them as he uses them to assert his authority over his turf. Makdong leaves his own, simple family behind to look for work and is quickly welcomed into this family of thugs whose leader takes a special liking to Makdong. Almost immediately, Bae tells Makdong he can call him brother.

Lee mixes predictable plot devices of gangster movies with less predictable, even surprising elements of human comedy, and enough melodrama to reach past the critics and festival crowd. One of Makdong’s brothers, afflicted with cerebral palsy, serves as both a foundation for and a reminder of what the film critic Acquarello describes as the encapsulation of “the ennobling beauty and quiet tragedy of human imperfection” (1). Lee pays homage to this imperfection elsewhere in his work, notably in Oasis (2002) and Shi (Poetry, 2009).

Lee appears to know his American cinema. In a scene that recalls the family picnic in Arthur Penn’s Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Makdong briefly returns briefly to his real family, only to watch their reunion disintegrate into chaos after one of his four brothers begins to abuse his wife. Elsewhere, in a scene that owes much to Martin Scorsese, Bae’s hoodlums prepare to bury a man who has disrespected the gang. Against a backdrop of blue mist, he’s forced to dig his own grave, strip and endure sexual torture until he urinates on one of Bae’s gang members. His cohorts laugh a laughter that comes too easily to those whose existence centers on violence and not easily enough to those whose daily struggles go unrewarded. And in a nod to Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather (1972), Lee frequently uses food and meals as a unifying motif. Near the end of the film, a trumpet mournfully follows a rare tender scene with Bae and Makdong, who has become, in effect, a father figure as well as a “brother”.

Lee’s use of doubling links key elements in Green Fish, nowhere more elegantly than in his use of the term “brother”. In his quest for a family outside his own, Makdong confuses the temporary, unsatisfying brotherhood of his gang family for his own deeply layered, complex, difficult family. When he tells Bae about his dreams to run a restaurant with his family, he is sitting in a dilapidated shell of a building Bae himself hopes to turn into a thriving restaurant and club. Neither can escape the mirror he looks into in scene after scene. Death brings them together as well, in ways that I won’t reveal to preserve some of the surprises that occur in the film’s last act.

Poetry, both visual and literary, figures prominently. The family photographs on view in the film’s opening frames, and their deeply held meaning for Makdong, reappear in a cruel way in the film’s last moments. For Miae, one of the photographs solves a mystery as it pushes her off a cliff into revelatory, painful memory. The hard-won connections in Green Fish are rare and explosive, as when Makdong, in an emotional phone call, begs his brother to remember the green fish from their childhood.

Green Fish establishes Lee as a master of human frailty, his characters’ weaknesses evolving into strengths. Makdong arrives home with nothing except his knapsack, which he leaves behind and that enables Maei to find him later. His family, which seems to come unglued in the picnic scene, draws him back after his adventures with the South Korean mobsters. There is only one family. Death, physical deformity, loss, the emotionally bereft – all come to the well in Lee’s devastating, acutely intelligent film. He examines precisely these and other human voids in his characters. We are told that nature abhors a vacuum. In Green Fish, the vacuum is filled by something like fate, to the benefit of characters who might not know it, who live on with the ache created by these elements missing from their lives. Some, like Makdong, never know how close they are to finding salvation. Like the poetic inspiration in Poetry, salvation lurks nearby, as close as the face in the mirror, as immediate as a childhood memory.



Green.Fish.1997.BDRIP.FM.4K.576p.x264.AAC.KJNU.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1 h 51 min
Size: 3.37 GiB
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 1024x552
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 4 000 kb/s
BPP: 0.295
Audio
#1: Korean 2.0ch AAC LC @ 161 kb/s
#2: English 2.0ch AAC LC @ 163 kb/s (Commentary with Korean cinema historian Pierce Conran & film critic James Marsh)

https://nitro.download/view/AEE97910B4405D0/Green.Fish.1997.BDRIP.FM.4K.576p.x264.AAC.KJNU.mkv

Language(s):Korean, English commentary
Subtitles:English

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Sun-Woo Jang – Ggotip AKA A Petal (1996) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/02/ggotip-aka-a-petal-1996/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/02/ggotip-aka-a-petal-1996/#comments Fri, 02 Feb 2024 01:26:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=215600 Ggotip (1996) Synopsis:A young girl is caught up in the 1980 Gwangju massacre, where Korean soldiers killed hundreds, if not thousands, of protesters who opposed the country’s takeover by the military the year before. Flashbacks show the girl seeing her mother shot to death in the massacre. The film spurred the Korean public to demand …

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Ggotip (1996)
Ggotip (1996)

Synopsis:
A young girl is caught up in the 1980 Gwangju massacre, where Korean soldiers killed hundreds, if not thousands, of protesters who opposed the country’s takeover by the military the year before. Flashbacks show the girl seeing her mother shot to death in the massacre. The film spurred the Korean public to demand the truth behind the incident, and their government eventually opened previously classified files on the massacre.

Review:
The first mature attempt in Korean culture to come to terms with the Kwangju Massacre of 1980, an unhealed wound comparable with the Tiananmen Square massacre in the minds of Chinese. A young woman, nameless and mentally disturbed, wanders the countryside looking for her brother; she runs into a heavy-drinking labourer and starts tagging along behind him. He tries to get rid of her by insulting, abusing and finally raping her, but she stays with him. Through flashbacks (two of them animated) we learn what the man doesn’t know: how the girl’s brother and mother died, why she cracked mentally. The girl is perhaps too fragile a symbol to personify the entire nation’s trauma, but Jang’s shattering film none the less sets a new benchmark for the serious treatment of politics and sex in Korean cinema.
— TimeOut.

Ggotip (1996)
Ggotip (1996)
Ggotip (1996)
A.Petal.1996.DVDRip.x264.DD2.0.mkv

General
Container:  	Matroska
Runtime: 	1h 40mn
Size: 	1.09 GiB
Video
Codec: 	x264
Resolution: 	716x360 ~> 716x402
Aspect ratio:  	16:9
Frame rate: 	23.976 fps
Bit rate: 	1 352 Kbps
BPP: 	0.219
Audio
#1:  	Korean 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 Kbps

https://nitro.download/view/9471057E3311B63/A.Petal.1996.DVDRip.x264.DD2.0.mkv

Language(s):Korean
Subtitles:English (muxed)

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