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Pyongyang International Film Festival
North Korean film festival
North Korean film festival
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | Pyongyang International Film Festival 2014 (15349304435) (2).jpg |
| hangul | ^평양 국제 영화 축전 |
| hanja | 平壤國際映畵祝典 |
The Pyongyang International Film Festival () is a biennial cultural exhibition held in Pyongyang, North Korea. Until 2002, the film festival was reserved to "non-aligned and other developing countries".
History
The event originated in 1987 as the Pyongyang Film Festival of the Non-aligned and Other Developing Countries (). The maiden event, held from September 1 through September 10, showed short films, features, and documentaries that were judged for competitive awards.
The film festival returned in 1990 and would be regularly held every other year. Recurrent subject matter included domestic cinema that commonly praised the high leadership such as a film shown at the 1992 film festival, verbosely translated, Glory of Our People in Holding the Great Leader in High Esteem, and foreign films about revolutionary resistance.
In 2000, officials widened the acceptable breadth of film watching by screening Japanese films for the first time when Yoji Yamada arrived to present six of his films. 2002 saw further relaxation of rules and since then the festival has been open to more than just "non-aligned and other developing countries".
The ninth festival, held in 2004, moderated cultural restrictions further with the screening of a dubbed and censored version of the British comedy Bend It Like Beckham and U.S.-produced South African drama Cry, The Beloved Country. Bend it like Beckham won the music prize and later it became the first Western-made film shown on television in North Korea.
In 2006, the Swedish horror comedy Frostbite was shown at the festival, the first foreign horror film to ever be shown in North Korea. The Schoolgirl's Diary, which was released the same year, became the first North Korean film in several decades to be picked up for international distribution, when it was purchased by French company Pretty Pictures. It was released in France in late 2007.
Organization
The festival was held in the autumn every two years until 2018; after that, the festival has become yearly, with the 17th edition organized in September 2019. It has an international jury and both competitive and non-competitive submissions. In that sense, it is "structured ... very much like any other international film festival".
Since 2000, the festival has been dominated by films from Western Europe. Many of the films are censored and often have themes emphasising family values, loyalty and the temptations of money. In 2008, 110 films were shown from a total of 46 countries. South Korean films are not shown because of the current political climate. Films critical of North Korea from anywhere in the world are not allowed and neither are sexually explicit films. Anything else goes, and the organizers try to get as many films and visitors to attend. Diplomatic connections or the personal initiative of filmmakers is what often results in a film being admitted. The result is often "an odd mix" of films that are not united by one genre. In recent years, the festival has enjoyed recent popularity abroad, mainly due to the success of South Korean cinema prompting foreign film enthusiasts' curiosity about the North. Consequentially, film submissions have increased and the selection of films has improved in quality.
The festival is one of the few North Korean functions that actively seeks connection with the outside world. Johannes Schönherr, author of North Korean Cinema: A History and a festival delegate in 2000, said "The Pyongyang International Film Festival is a big propaganda event and foreigners who attend the event become extras in the big propaganda show."
Most Japanese films and all American, Taiwanese and South Korean films are banned in North Korea. Taiwanese and South Korean films are banned because of the anti-communist nature of their countries.
Major award winners
| Year | Golden Torch Award | Best Director | Best Actor | Best Actress |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1987 | 1st | PRK A Broad Bellflower | IRI Jamshid Mashayekhi | |
| for The Grandfather | ||||
| 1990 | 2nd | IRI Little Bird of Happiness | EGY Omar Sharif | |
| for The Puppeteer | ||||
| 1992 | 3rd | PRK Nation and Destiny (Parts 1 & 2) | IRI Alireza Khamseh | |
| for Apartment No.13 | ||||
| 1994 | 4th | VIE The Wild Reed (Cỏ lau) (directed by Vuong duc) | IRI Abolfazl Poorarab | |
| for The Bride | ||||
| 1996 | 5th | CHN Red Cherry | ||
| 1998 | 6th | PRK Myself in the Distant Future | IRI Khosrow Shakibai | |
| for Long Lost Sisters | ||||
| 2000 | 7th | IRI The Lost Love | SYR Bassam Kousa | |
| for The Extras | ||||
| 2002 | 8th | RUS The Star | PRK Kim Chol | |
| for Souls Protest | ||||
| 2004 | 9th | CHN Gone Is the One Who Held Me Dearest in the World | CHN Wang Zhiwen | |
| for On the Other Side of the Bridge(《芬妮的微笑》) | ||||
| 2006 | 10th | GER Before the Fall | FRA Stéphane Brizé | |
| for Not Here to Be Loved | BEL Jan Decleir | |||
| for Off Screen | ||||
| 2008 | 11th | CHN Assembly | CHN Feng Xiaogang | |
| for Assembly | BIH Saša Petrović | |||
| for It's Hard to Be Nice | ||||
| 2010 | 12th | CHN Walking to School | IRI Khosro Masumi | |
| for Wind Blows in the Meadow | RUS Fyodor Dobronravov | |||
| for A Man at Home | ||||
| 2012 | 13th | GER Lessons of a Dream | DPRKBEL Nicholas Bonner, Anja Daelemans, Ryom Mi Hwa | |
| for Comrade Kim Goes Flying | GER Daniel Brühl | |||
| for Lessons of a Dream | ||||
| 2014 | 14th | GER My Beautiful Country | CHN Shi Wei(石伟) | |
| for The Ferry(我的渡口) | CHN Zhou Guangda(周光大) | |||
| for The Ferry | ||||
| 2016 | 15th | DPRK The Story of Our Home | RUS Oleg Asadulin | |
| for Green Carriage | RUS Andrey Merzlikin | |||
| for Green Carriage | ||||
| 2018 | 16th | CHN Old Aunt(老阿姨)(North Korean title for the film meant "The Woman Behind the Man") | RUS Klim Shipenko | |
| for Salyut | CHN Li Xuejian | |||
| for Old Aunt(老阿姨)(North Korean title for the film meant "The Woman Behind the Man") | ||||
| 2019 | 17th | IRI Orange Days | RUSAleksey Sidorov for T-34 | CHNShen Teng for Pegasus |
| 2025 | 18th | RUSCHN Red Silk | RUSCHNAndrey Volgin for Red Silk | PRKthe actor for Days and Nights of Confrontation(대결의 낯과 밤) |
References
- Gluckman, Ron (September 27, 2004). "Kim Puts On a Festival". Newsweek, p. 45.
- "To Pyongyang with love". (October 16, 2004). The Economist.
Works cited
References
- James Bell. (January 2009). "In a lonely place: North Korea's Pyongyang International Film Festival". British Film Institute.
- "Pyongyang International Film Festival".
- (10 February 2012). "In a lonely place: North Korea's Pyongyang International Film Festival".
- Schwankert, Steven. (7 October 2011). "Pyongyang Film Festival Set for 2012".
- (31 December 2010). "First Western film aired on N. Korean TV". United Press International.
- Kim, Young-jin. (31 December 2012). "British soccer flick a hit in Pyongyang". The Korea Times.
- Elley, Derek. (24 September 2006). "N. Korean festival draws int'l crowd".
- Burke, Jason. (2006-10-22). "Cinematic bombshell from Kim". The Guardian.
- [http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-fg-film11-2008oct11,0,7893170.story?page=1 "North Korea Film Festival"], ''LA Times'', October 11, 2008.
- (24 September 2016). "Festival brings (some) world cinema to Pyongyang".
- Moxley, Mitch. (2015-02-03). "The Reddest Carpet: I Survived the North Korean Film Festival". GQ Magazine.
- (10 January 2014). "NSƯT Ngọc Bích có tài "phân thân"".
- (2002-09-14). "Pyongyang Film Festival closes". [[Korean Central News Agency]].
- "英 '슈팅 라이크 베컴' 평양영화제서 음악상".
- (2006-09-22). "Pyongyang Int'l Film Festival Closes". [[Korean Central News Agency]].
- (2008-09-27). "Pyongyang International Film Festival Closes". [[Korean Central News Agency]].
- (2010-09-24). "Int'l Film Festival Closes". [[Korean Central News Agency]].
- link
- "북한, 제18차 평양국제영화축전 폐막".
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