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Crackling Hilarity in Dasepo Naughty Girls

In the early going it appears likely that Lee Jae-Yong’s adaptation of popular online comic Dasepo Naughty Girls might just do the impossible and dethrone Yudai Tamaguchi’s Cromartie High School in the absurdly hysterical high school comedy department.

Shot with a candy coated color scheme and leaping from a song and dance number featuring a fetching swarm of pink clad go-go dancers to a mass exodus for the doctor’s office on news that a teacher has tested positive for syphilis to clandestine video game prostitution to … well, you get the picture.

Dasepo Naughty Girls begins as a rapid fire candy fluff spin on high school life that is every bit as absurd, high energy and sketch oriented as Yamaguchi’s Cromartie, only this film boasts much higher production values. But Korea just wouldn’t be Korea if its films followed their expected arcs and over the course of its run time Dasepo finds an unexpected heart, moving from full throttle comedy with fluorishes of character to an odd little character piece sprinkled liberally with bizarrely comic touches.

 

It is a cheery, good natured bit of work considerably less Naughty than you’d expect from a film featuring liberal doses of both transvestite and transexual characters – ’saucy’ would be a better description – and more than a little different than you may expect but it is, nonetheless, a very good time. I just wish those go-go dancers got more screen time.

Read more at TwitchFilm.com

 

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Related

Korea’s ‘The Host’ Rocks My Socks
Brutally Raw and Brilliantly Inspiring Old Boy
Untold Scandal, The Korean Les Liaisons Dangereuses
Samaria (Samaritan Girl)

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Untold Scandal, The Korean Les Liaisons Dangereuses

Plot Synopsis: Based on the novel ‘Les Liaisons Dangereuses,’ this film is set in aristocratic 18th-century Korea at the end of the Chosun Dynasty. The irresistible temptress Lady Cho asks her cad of a younger cousin, Jo-won, to deflower the innocent young Soh-ok, who is to become her husband’s concubine.

But, his attentions soon shift to the graceful and aloof Lady Sook, who lives according to her convictions as a Catholic. Jo-won becomes obsessed with seducing this chaste woman who has remained celibate for nine years since her husband’s death.

However, conquering the most virtuous woman in the land proves to be more difficult than Chosun’s notorious playboy expects.

Customer Reviews

I’m a young adult, not an artsy-fartsy kind of guy, and most foreign films are just bizzare… but this movie was very good. If you’ve seen Dangerous Liasons, you will like this Korean version of the story. Heck, if you’re any part Korean like me, you’ll enjoy it even more!

Most people overlook how Korean society was, since China and Japan overshadow them in history. The way the characters interact with each other, and the cool clothing and atmosphere make for a movie that is both mentally and intellectually stimulating!

It has all sorts of elements, mostly drama of course, and will evoke many emotions from amusement to sadness. I feel that most people will find at least one character in this movie with whom they can empathize and become attached to their destiny in the film. Give it a chance! ~ M. Mounce (New Mexico, USA)

This movie is incredibly stunning both in acting and imagery. The actors, especially Lee Mi-suk & Bae Yong Joon, give believable & deliciously wicked performances. Not to mention the scenery, full of rich vibrant colors that will take your breath away. It is definitely worth watching. I highly recommend it. ~ Tania M “Film Addict, Music Fan, Doll Collector” (Puerto Rico)


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Samaria (Samaritan Girl)

samaritan girl

In addition to Chan-wook Park (“Old Boy”), South Korea has one of the most talented directors working in cinema today in Ki-duk Kim. Like his fellow countryman, Kim’s films are raw, emotional and uncompromising, though they tend to focus more on the psychological rather than the visceral, dealing with the darker aspects of human desire.

Perhaps for this reason, or perhaps because his films lean more towards the abstract and art-house, he is not quite as well known internationally.

However, “The Isle”, “Bad Guy”, and more recently, “Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter..and Spring” have earned worldwide release and praise, and word is at last spreading that Kim is a director of considerable skill.

“Samaria”, his most recent effort, was shot quickly and on a low budget, though this never shows onscreen. It is a powerful and moving film that provides a thought-provoking view on the controversial subject of teen prostitution, and is well deserved of its recent win at the Berlin Film Festival.

The story follows two schoolgirls, Yeo-jin (Ji-min Kwak) and Jae-yeong (Min-jeong Seo). In order to raise money for their trip to Europe, Jae-yeong works as a prostitute while Yeo-jin sets up clients and manages the money.

The two have very different views on what they are doing. Jae-yeong is happy to sleep with men for money, imagining herself as a modern incarnation of Vasumitra, a legendary prostitute who converted men to Buddhism through the act of sex. She seems to enjoy her work and is happy to form relationships with the men she meets.

Yeo-jin, on the other hand, feels dirty at being involved, jealous of the feelings Jae-yeong has for her clients, and guilty about the fact that it is her friend who is selling herself. However, after a tragic accident, Yeo-jin is forced to confront her feelings and to reassess her passive role. Things get worse when her father discovers what she is doing and, unable to accept his daughter’s actions, takes matters into his own hands.

This is obviously controversial material, and Kim, who also wrote the script, handles it skillfully and objectively. Shying away from the surreal touches that characterized “The Isle” or the gritty sleaze of “Bad Guy”, he simply sets events in motion and lets the story tell itself. This is not to suggest that his approach is cold; far from it, as in Jae-yeong, Yeo-jin, and her father, Kim creates a set of painfully believable characters that the viewer cares deeply about.

However, it is left to us to judge their actions, and whilst the film follows a definite narrative course, there are many different interpretations of the psychology behind the characters and their reactions to events.

Read more at Beyond Hollywood

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