* The 1st Blu-ray release of
Korea Film Archive. 'Housemaids'
"A consensus pick as one of the top three Korean films
of all time, Kim Ki-young's masterpiece The
Housemaid occupies a place all its own within Golden Age Korean
cinema." (Darcy Paquet)
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Price : US$ 27.5
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Pre-order date : 10PM, 29th November 2014 (Korea
standard time)
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Release date : 10 December, 2014
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BD Authoring & Design: Plain Archive &
Propaganda Alternative Graphics
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Beautiful embossed calligraphy on Full Slip
Case
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40p Booklet (Written in Korean &
English)
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Black colored Viva Elite Keep case
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Pre-order Gift : You can
get 2 Extra Plain Archive Exclusive
stickers!!
Video - 1.53:1 MPEG4 / AVC / 1080p / 23.976
fps
Audio - Korean DTS-HD Master Audio Mono
Subtitles - Korean / English / French /
Japanese
Region Code - A/B/C
Running time - 111min
Special Features
1) Commentary by Park Chan-wook (Film Director),
Lee Dong-jin (Film Critic) : Subtitles - Korean, English
2) Martin Scorsese on the Housemaid
3) Directors on Kim Ki-young(Directed by kim
Hong-joon / 48min) : Subtitles - Korean, English, French,
Japanese
4) The Box of Death (79min.)
5) I am a Truck (18min.) : Subtitles - Korean,
English
About Movie
A consensus pick as one of the top three Korean films of all time,
Kim Ki-young's masterpiece The Housemaid occupies a place all its
own within Golden Age Korean cinema. A domestic thriller that
builds in intensity right up until its startling resolution, the
film doubles as a manic tour-de-force and a cutting satire of the
aspirations and values of modern society.
The Housemaid Based on a contemporary news story, the film focuses
on a traditional four-member family which has just moved into a
two-story home. The husband Dong-shik teaches music to women
factory workers, while his wife spends her days at home at the
sewing machine, trying to earn enough money to cover the family
bills. One day she breaks down from overwork, and Dong-shik asks
one of his students to find him a housemaid. However, the maid they
hire acts in strange and unpredictable ways, spying on Dong-shik
and catching rats with her bare hands. Soon an incident occurs
which motivates her to plot a dreadful revenge, and the Confucian
order of the household comes crashing down at the hands of the
surreptitious housemaid.
Asian cinema, and melodrama in particular, tends to portray the
family as the most basic building block of society. Kim's somewhat
twisted cinematic vision focuses on how the supposedly stable
family unit comes apart under pressure. The two-story home in which
Kim sets his film acts as a symbol for Korea's modernizing middle
class, yet behind the placid surface we see darker, more primitive
elements penetrating into the family's space: construction workers
intruding on their daily lives, rats running amok, and the
housemaid herself, wreaking havoc with envy and sexual
forthrightness.
With inspired editing and a restless camera (not to mention that
famous bottle of rat poison), Kim gradually heightens the sense of
tension and claustrophobia, creating scenes of startling intensity.
The performance he draws out of young actress Lee Eun-shim as the
housemaid (on the left in the photo) is unlike anything else shot
in Korea in that decade, or indeed ever since. Sadly, her brilliant
acting may have ended her career -- it's said that viewers'
reactions to her were so strong (audiences reportedly screamed
"Kill the bitch!" during screenings) that producers were unwilling
to cast her in subsequent films. As for the rest of the cast, Kim
Jin-gyu brings a slightly aristocratic air to the role of
Dong-shik, while Joo Jeung-nyeo plays the wife with a bland but
stubborn determination to preserve appearances at all cost. The
children excel in their roles too, including future star Ahn
Sung-ki as the young son.
Though it debuted in 1960 as a box-office hit, The Housemaid was
never given proper recognition until a retrospective of Kim
Ki-young's work in 1997 at the Pusan International Film Festival.
Since then, the film has gradually made its way to retrospective
screenings around the world, drawing forth surprised and passionate
responses from audiences wherever it goes. One hopes that with
time, it will escape from the still overlooked confines of 1960s
Korean cinema to become recognized as a world classic. (Darcy
Paquet)
The Housemaid ("Hanyeo"). Written and directed
by Kim Ki-young. Starring Lee Eun-shim, Kim Jin-gyu, Joo
Jeung-nyeo, Eom Aeng-ran, Ko Sun-ae, Kang Seok-jae, Ahn Sung-ki.
Cinematography by Kim Deok-jin. Produced by Korean Literature
Films, Ltd. 90 min, 35mm, b&w. Released on November 3,
1960.