Park Chan-Wook to Preside Over 79th Cannes Film Festival Jury
Park Chan-wook will preside over the jury of the 79th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
The celebrated South Korean director, screenwriter and producer will succeed French actor Juliette Binoche, whose jury handed the Palme dâOr to Jafar Panahiâs Iranian drama âIt Was Just an Accident.â
Known for his baroque and subversive work, Park has a long history with Cannes. He presented his feature debut, âOldboy,â at the 2004 festival, where it won the Grand Prize and later became a cult film. Heâs returned to the competition with most of his films since then, including âThirst,â which picked up the Jury Prize in 2009, âThe Handmaidenâ in 2016 and âDecision to Leave,â which won best director in 2022.
âPark Chan-wookâs inventiveness, visual mastery, and penchant for capturing the multiple impulses of women and men with strange destinies have given contemporary cinema some truly memorable moments,â said festival president Iris Knobloch and director Thierry FrĂ©maux in a joint statement. âWe are delighted to celebrate his immense talent and, more broadly, the cinema of a country deeply engaged with the questioning of our time.â
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Park will become the first South Korean president of the Cannes Film Festival in its 79-year history. Wong Kar-wai is the only other Asian filmmaker to have headed the jury, 20 years ago.
Park, whose latest film âNo Other Choiceâ was nominated for three Golden Globes, said, âThe theater is dark so that we may see the light of cinema. We confine ourselves within the theater so that our souls may be liberated through the window of film.
âTo be enclosed in a theater to watch films, and enclosed again to engage in debate with the members of the jury, this double, voluntary confinement is something I await with great anticipation,â he continued.
Alluding to ongoing wars and political tensions, he said, âIn this age of mutual hatred and division, I believe that the simple act of gathering in a theater to watch a single film together, our breaths and heartbeats aligning, is itself a moving and universal expression of solidarity.â
Cannes has long championed South Korean cinema. Back in 2002, the festival awarded Im Kwon-taek with the best director award for âStrokes of Fire.â Bong Joon-ho became the first Korean director to win the Palme dâOr in 2019 for âParasiteâ and then made history winning best picture, director, screenplay and international feature at the Oscars.
Over the years, Cannes also shined a spotlight on a new generation of South Korean directors who presented their films in competition; notably Hong Sang-soo, with âTale of Cinemaâ in 2005, Kim Ki-duk with âBreathâ in 2007 and Lee Chang-dong with âPoetry,â which won best screenplay in 2010. Others have included Kim Jee-woon with âA Bittersweet Lifeâ in 2005, Yeon Sang-ho in âTrain to Busanâ in 2016, Byun Sung-hyun with âThe Mercilessâ in 2017 and Lee Won-tae with âThe Gangster, the Cop, the Devilâ in 2019.
Source: RhinoEasy News