Jump to content

Spider Forest

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from The Spider Forest)
Spider Forest
Hangul
거미숲
Revised RomanizationGeomisup
McCune–ReischauerKŏmisup
Directed bySong Il-gon
Written bySong Il-gon
Produced byAhn Min-jun
StarringKam Woo-sung
Kang Kyung-hun
CinematographyKim Cheol-ju
Edited byChoi Jae-geun
Music byYun Min-hwa
Distributed byChungeorahm
Release date
  • September 3, 2004 (2004-09-03)
Running time
113 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Budget$1,300,000

Spider Forest (Korean거미숲; RRGeomi sup) is a 2004 South Korean horror-drama[1] written and directed by Song Il-gon.

Plot

[edit]

Awaking alone in the middle of a dark forest, Kang Min sees a secluded cabin nearby and wanders towards it. Upon entering the small home, he is shocked to discover a brutal, bloody crime had taken place. A man, hacked repeatedly by a sickle, lies on the floor, dead. Min hears a noise nearby and discovers his girlfriend Su-Young, stabbed and nearly dead, stammering something about "spiders."

Before he could save his loved one, Min is caught off guard by the killer who unexpectedly emerges and dashes out of the cabin. Min grabs the sickle and pursues the dark figure through the shadowy woods of the Spider Forest, only to be temporarily knocked out with a blunt blow to the face. Min, being disoriented and slightly dazed, sees the killer enter into a tunnel on a road nearby and stumbles after him. Yet upon entering the tunnel, a speeding SUV collides with Min and throws him to the ground, severely injured by the impact.

As he lies on the pavement with his blood streaming across the ground, the dark figure approaches Min and stands mere inches away, as if mocking his inability to capture him. Min extends his arm, desperately trying to grab him, but in vain and he soon loses consciousness...

Min wakes-up fourteen days later at a local hospital with his head heavily bandaged. His friend, a police detective named Choi, is at his bedside to both comfort and question him about the murders. Min discovers that he, in fact, is the prime suspect of the killings due to his fingerprints being on the sickle that he picked up and his relationship with the victims. Choi, wanting to believe in his friend's innocence, asks Min to tell him everything that had happened leading up to the brutal crime. Weaving in and out of consciousness, Min tries to reconstruct the bizarre events, but it proves to be a too difficult task. Min finds that there are some details he cannot remember, while other details he can't even be sure they actually happened. The boundary between dreams and reality become blurred as he tries to piece together his enigmatic past in an effort to complete a puzzle that will, hopefully, prove his innocence...

Cast

[edit]

Screenplay

[edit]
  • Writer/director Song had originally written a script that thoroughly explained the mystery driving the plot, then deliberately removed as much of that explanation as he thought he could get away with.[2]
  • His storytelling method is very much from the European arthouse mode: he leaves the answers, the interpretation, up to the audience.[2]
  • Director Song on the script:

I started to write about one man's real story: how he killed two people, how he grew up, what happened with his wife, what he saw when he was young, his first girlfriend. The second story is when he wakes up. It's another story, about how he desires and how he wants to be. It's like his dream. Desire changes the reality … into the unreal. That's why I had the idea to write two stories about this character. And then I started to mix what was real and what was his dream, what he really wants. I started to make it a mystery as well. But we have to know about his unconscious, that's why I had to transfer or take out the real facts and start to re-mix the stories. And that's why it took so long to write the script. It was a painful time for me.

— Song Il-gon, Don't Forget Him When He's Cool: An Interview with Song Il-gon
  • The director also "brought a lot of mythology into Spider Forest, like Orpheus."[2]

Budget issues

[edit]
  • The film's budget was US $1.3 million, which is low for a Korean film. The average is usually around $3 million.[2]
  • Director Song said it was very difficult to get the money to make and finish the film.[2]
  • Thirty percent of the money came from KOFIC [Korean Film Commission][2]
  • Director Song adds, "The government supported it, which was very important."[2]

Actors' pay

[edit]
  • Actress Suh Jung accepted a back-end deal in lieu of a large up-front salary. Suh Jung received very little compensation for her points contract, which was only tied to domestic release.[2]
  • Leading man Kam Woo-sung's salary was 20 percent of the film's production budget, about US$260,000.[2]

Box office

[edit]
  • The film encountered difficulties in finding a domestic audience. It gained little more than 30,000 admissions in Seoul, one-tenth of the average (Korean pictures averaged more than 300,000 admissions in Seoul in 2004).[2]
  • According to Song, it was successfully sold to various foreign territories at the European Film Market.[2]
  • Total South Korea box office: 83,411 admissions.[3]

Critical response

[edit]

Domestic

[edit]
  • The film's short domestic run received scant attention from local critics.[2]
  • The Korea Herald astutely, but disapprovingly, referred to the film as a "a jigsaw puzzle with some of its pieces missing", calling attention to Song's intentional plot-trimming strategies.[2]
  • The Korean Times said the film was "a web of psychological twists and turns that will leave you trying to get untangled long after you leave the theater." The review added, "The story does get pretty muddled at times but at its best moments the film is as frightening an experience as they come."[4]
  • The Dong-A Daily News describes the film as "an unusual movie that drives audiences to solve a puzzle that never ends... [It] belongs to the mystery thriller genre, but its sophisticated editing makes the movie devoid of fast story development, the major feature of a mystery thriller."[5]

International

[edit]
  • Due to distribution on multiple film festival circuits (not to mention an extensive release on DVD by Tartan Video), the film received more attention from international critics than it received from its own country.
  • Eye Weekly, which reviewed the film at The International Toronto Film Festival, referred to the film as a "supernatural thriller" with "a dark look, a genuinely puzzling (and engrossing) set-up, and a couple of memorable ghostly passages." However, it asks in a condescending manner, "Why can't it make even a lick of sense?" [6]
  • Twitch also reviewed the film at The International Toronto Film Festival, describing it as "well written, well executed and well shot," but concludes by stating, "the film as a whole somehow ends up being slightly less than the sum of its parts."[7]

Film festivals

[edit]

Release dates

[edit]

Awards

[edit]
  • Award: 2004 - Nominated - Golden Seashell - San Sebastián International Film Festival[10]
  • Award: 2004 - Nominated - Best Supporting Actress (Kang Gyeong-Heon) - Korean Film Awards (MBC)[11]
  • On the top ten Korean films for 2004 by Koreanfilm.org[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Geomi sup (2004) - IMDb".
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m James Brown, Don't Forget Him When He's Cool, Senses of Cinema.
  3. ^ Ranked Box-Office Results (2004), Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved on March 5, 2008.
  4. ^ Joon Soh, 'Spider Forest' Weaves Tangled Web The Korean Times.
  5. ^ Seung-Jae Lee, A Mystery Thriller: "Spider Forest" Dong-A Daily News.
  6. ^ Nayman, Adam (September 9, 2004). "A fest for the eyes". Eye Weekly. Archived from the original on 2004-09-18. Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  7. ^ Todd Brown, TIFF Report Twitch.
  8. ^ Josh Ralske, Allmovie Synopsis allmovie.com.
  9. ^ a b Release Dates imdb.com.
  10. ^ Awards & Nominations imdb.com.
  11. ^ Awards cinemasie.com
  12. ^ Paolo Bertolin and Tom Giammarco, Korean Cinema in 2004: Impressions and Top-Ten Lists Koreanfilm.org.
[edit]