Taegukgi (film)

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Taegukgi

Movie poster of Taegukgi
Directed by Kang Je-gyu
Produced by Seong-hun Lee
Written by Kang Je-gyu
Starring Jang Dong-gun
Won Bin
Music by Dong-jun Lee
Cinematography Kyung-Pyo Hong
Editing by Kyeong-hie Choi
Distributed by Showbox
Release date(s) February 6, 2004 (South Korea)
Running time 148 min.
(longer version)
Language Korean
Budget $12,800,000
IMDb profile
Korean name
Hangul 태극기 휘날리며
Hanja 太極旗 휘날리며
Revised Romanization Taegeukgi Hwinallimyeo
McCune-Reischauer T'aegŭkki Hwinallimyŏ

Taegukgi Hwinallimyo (Hangul: 태극기 휘날리며) is a 2004 South Korean war film directed by Kang Je-gyu. It tells the story about the effect of the Korean War on two brothers. The film's title is the name of the pre-war Flag of Korea as well as the postwar Flag of South Korea. It was released in the United Kingdom as Brotherhood: Taegukgi and the United States as Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War.

Kang Je-gyu made a name for himself directing Shiri and was able to attract top talent and capital to his new project, eventually spending US $12.8 million on production. The film became one of the biggest successes in Korean film history up to that time, attracting 11.74 million people (almost 25% of South Korea's population[citation needed]) to the theatre, beating the previous record holder Silmido.

Contents

[edit] Plot

While digging up remains at a Korean War battlefield to set up a memorial site, the South Korean Army excavation team notifies an elderly man that they identified some remains as his own. He believes that they may be those of his brother and drives over to the site with his granddaughter.

The story then shifts to Seoul in June of 1950, where the Lee family lives. Jin-tae Lee (Jang Dong-gun) owns a shoeshine stand to pay for his younger brother Jin-seok's (Won Bin) education with the help a boy named Yong-seok Jin-seok teaches to. Jin-tae's fiancée Young-shin (Lee Eun-ju) works with the Lee's noodle shop. On June 25, North Korea invades the country, and chaos erupts across the nation. Jin-seok is conscripted into the army and his brother tries his best to get him off the train but fails. The two brothers are forcibly conscripted into the army and go on their way to the battlefield. Over there they experience the horror of war such as surviving their first artillery strike in which Jin-seok nearly dies of a heart attack in shock from the first experience. Jin-tae is told by his commanding officer that if he can earn the highest award for a South Korean soldier which is the Taeguk Cordon of the Order of Military Merit, his brother can be sent home. Jin-tae willingly volunteers for dangerously suicidal missions such as planting landmines right underneath the enemy's nose just before they are ambushed by North Korean soldiers in which one South Korean trooper steps on one of their own mines in confusion and has his left leg blown off. In another mission, he destroys an enemy bunker by setting it on fire in a desperate South Korean counter attack against the North Korean Army. He is promoted to the rank of Chungsa (Sergeant), but Jin-seok believes his brother is risking his life for the glory of being appreciated and having attention. Soon American led U.N. forces invade South Korea from Incheon in assisting and the pushing out of North Korean forces out of the country and all the way up to China. During the battle of Pyongyang, Jin-tae captures an important North Korean commander and is finally awarded with the medal, at the cost of the life of a close friend named Yong-man's, frustrating Jin-seok.

The South Koreans' hopes of the war ending soon are shattered as China enters the war on the communist side, invading North Korea en masse and pushing South Korean and U.N. forces in a desperate retreat south. During a retreat in which the convoy is bombarded with a massive artillery barrage, Jin-tae murders Yong-seok when some prisoners make a stand with a hostage. Yong-seok is the same boy that worked for him at his shoeshine place before the war and to whom Jin-seok was a teacher before war (he had been conscripted into the North Korean army after Seoul was first captured, and he was among the prisoners), which infuriates Jin-seok as he witnesses his brother turn into a hateful killing machine. On their way home Jin-tae gets his medal and Young-shin is captured and taken by the anti-Communists Federation before Jin-seok's eyes when it is later discovered she signed up for the Communist Workers' Party of Korea to get food for the family while saying that the South Korean government gave them nothing in time of need. After Jin-seok escapes from a guard and Jin-tae tries to hold the anti-Communists back even with untrue comments they make such as accusing her of being a whore, a chaotic attempt by prisoners is made to escape. Amongst it all, Young-shin is shot and killed by an anti-Communist and the brothers are arrested for trying to rescue her. Jin-seok cries out as Young-shin's body thrown into the trench along with the other previously executed prisoners. In the jail, Jin-seok silently mocks Jin-tae for Young-shin's death. Jin-tae is later brought in for questioning by a security commander. After refusing to release is brother, a Chinese artillery strike takes place. The security commander then orders the prison to be set on fire where Jin-seok is being held. Trying to rescue his brother, Jin-tae loses his consciousness in the artillery strike and wakes up to mistakenly believe his brother is dead. He brutally kills the security commander by stoning him to death just before he is restrained by Chinese soldiers.

In truth, Jin-seok had been transferred to a military hospital after barely escaping with his life with the help of a friend and getting shot. He learns that his brother had defected to the North Koreans from two South Korean military officers. At first he doesn't care and shows apathy, but when he reads Jin-tae's letter to their mother and is brought to tears, he immediately rejoins the army to fight at the 38th parallel. He is refused by a commander to engage in battle and is assigned as a watchtower observant, but he beats the guards and runs over towards enemy lines. After being nearly killed by the North Koreans for being suspected as a spy, they send him with an escort to validate his claim, but a battle breaks out. U.S. fighter planes dive down from the sky and cause severe damage to the defenses in which many North Koreans soldiers are killed with an additional South Korean artillery bombardment. The South Korean troops charge towards the lines to engage the enemy. Jin-seok fights his way through the fierce hand to hand combat before the feared North Korean Infantry Unit known as "Flag Unit", commanded by Jin-tae, arrives to reinforce the North Korean lines. The fighting brutally escalates to what seems like South Koreans getting killed by the hundreds, and eventually forcing a desperate South Korean retreat.

After killing a few South Korean soldiers and not recognizing his own brother, Jin-tae tries to kill Jin-seok in anger. The two fight while Jin-seok begs his brother to recognize him. When Jin-tae is about to shoot him, he is wounded by a bayonet strike. Jin-seok tries to carry him off the battlefield, but is wounded himself as well. Jin-tae finally recognizes his brother after Jin-seok reminds him of their mother, his dead fiancee Young-shin and the taking care of her grave as well as his dream to see his younger brother go to college. Jin-seok askes him to come with him but Jin-tae convinces him to leave, promising that he will meet him back at home. The wounded Jin-seok begins running across the battlefield as bullets fly across him and explosions erupt around him while retreating along with so many other South Korean soldiers. Jin-tae turns to an abandoned machine gun and begins to gun down North Korean infantry to cover his fleeing brother. The North Koreans finally manage to hit Jin-tae in a barrage of bullets. Jin-tae gives one last look at his brother before dying on the battlefield.

The film returns to the modern day, and the now aged Jin-seok is shown at the dig site begging his brother's remains to speak to him, citing the promises that the two made for after the war. His granddaughter looks on with empathy realizing how much her grandfather had lost during the conflict. The film then returns to the past, ending in the aftermath of the Korean War, where Jin-seok returns to his mother, sees the shoes his brother began for him, and then heads off with the family's younger children in a peaceful Seoul ending the movie.

[edit] Reception

At the 50th Asia Pacific Film Festival, Taegukgi won the "Best Film", while Kang Je-gyu was awarded the "Best Director". [1] It was one of four Korean movies screened at the 2006 International Fajr Film Festival in Iran.

At the 2004 Grand Bell Awards, the main awards for film in South Korea, Taegukgi won three technical awards, for art direction, cinematography and sound effects.

According to the numbers at Box Office Mojo, Taegukgi earned $1.1 million in the United States playing in limited release. It earned a further $68.7 million worldwide to finish as the 75th highest grossing film in the world in 2004.

In addition to its record-breaking reception in South Korea, the film has also achieved positive responses abroad. It currently holds a fresh rating of 80 percent at Rotten Tomatoes. Most positive reviews cite its unflinching portrayal of war and praise it for showing the brutality of both the North and South Korean armies.

[edit] Soundtrack

 

Prologue (main theme)

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The music was composed by Dong-jun Lee, and released on February 23, 2004 as a single CD, produced by Yejeon Media in Korea and Avex Trax in Japan.[1][2] It has 25 tracks,[3] with seven bonus tracks, including a solo piano and chamber ensemble arrangement of the main theme.[4] The "haunting" main theme's lyricism,[5] present throughout several of the tracks, was compared favorably to music of film score composers Ennio Morricone and John Williams.[4] Although it was received generally positively,[4] one critic argued that the film was tragic enough, and needed "a more subtle soundtrack."[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Taegukgi OST. YesAsia (2004). Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  2. ^ Taegukgi Soundtrack. KoreaPop (2004). Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  3. ^ Taegukgi Hwinalrimyeo. Soundtrack Collector (2004). Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  4. ^ a b c Larson, Randy (2004). Brotherhood of War, The (Tae Guk Gi). Music From the Movies. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  5. ^ Cornelius, David (2005-02-18). Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War. eFilmCritic. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  6. ^ Marchant, Tim (2005-06-02). Taegukgi hwinalrimyeo (2004). Movie Gazette. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Silmido (film)
Top box office of Korea
2004-2005
Succeeded by
The King and the Clown