Nabi (film)

Not to be confused with the 2003 South Korean film Mr. Butterfly.
Nabi

Theatrical poster
Hangul
Revised Romanization Nabi
McCune–Reischauer Nabi
Directed by Moon Seung-wook
Produced by Park Ji-yeong
Kim Chang-hyo
Written by Moon Seung-wook
Jeong Hye-ryeon
Starring Kim Ho-jung
Kang Hye-jung
Jang Hyun-sung
Music by Jeong Hoon-young
Cinematography Kwon Hyuk-jun
Edited by Kim Deok-yeong
Lee Jang-uk
Distributed by Buena Vista International
Release dates
  • October 13, 2001 (2001-10-13)
Running time
116 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean
Budget US$380,000

Nabi (나비, literally "Butterfly") is a 2001 South Korean film. Directed by Moon Seung-wook, Nabi was shot on digital video and transferred onto 35mm film, filmed on a low budget of $380,000. It marked the feature film debut of Kang Hye-jung, who won Best Actress at the 5th Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival for her role as Yuki. Nabi also starred Kim Ho-jung, who won the Bronze Leopard for Best Actress at the 54th Locarno International Film Festival.

The film is a science fiction tale set in a near future Korea, where an "oblivion virus" which causes memory loss has become the centre of a tourist industry aimed at those who wish to forget the past. Anna Kim, a German woman of Korean descent, seeks the virus in order to erase painful memories and, along the way, develops a close bond with her driver and her teenage guide.

Plot

The film is set in an unnamed Korean city of the near future, a city plagued with acid rain, lead poisoning, and the "oblivion virus". People come from all over the world on guided tours of the city deliberately seeking the virus. Victims of lead poisoning are quarantined in sanatoriums for the protection of tourists, and forced abortions are carried out to prevent the births of deformed babies.

Anna Kim (Kim Ho-jung) is one such tourist who arrives in the city having booked a tour with the Butterfly Travel Agency. Anna wishes to become infected with the virus in order to forget the painful memories of her abortion. Her "virus guide", Yuki (Kang Hye-jung), is seven months pregnant and unwell, but needs the money to support herself and her unborn child. K (Jang Hyun-sung), their driver, is new to the agency and starting his first assignment. An orphan with no memory of his real family, he keeps an old photograph of himself as a child on the dashboard of his taxi; he picks up other passengers in the hopes that someone will recognize him, even though this is against agency policy.

After meeting Yuki and K at the airport, Anna is taken to a number of virus exposure sites, but their early attempts at finding the virus are cut short by acid rain storms. Finding out about Yuki’s pregnancy and poor health, Anna requests a new guide. K, suspicious of Yuki’s behaviour, reports her to the authorities as a suspected lead poisoning victim. Nevertheless, after Yuki treats Anna for exposure to acid rain, a bond starts to develop between them, and the three spend some time together. Anna cooks a meal for Yuki, and in return Yuki reveals her collection of personal items from previous clients, memories she is safeguarding should those people ever wish to remember their past again. After Anna leaves, Yuki is taken away by the city authorities.

Continuing without Yuki as a guide, K continues to drive Anna around the city. At first Anna is frustrated by K's efforts to learn about his own past, but they begin to understand each other as they spend more time together. One night, they are involved in a road accident and their taxi veers over the side of a bridge; Anna rescues K from the water below and manages to resuscitate him, though she later requires treatment herself.

Having recovered from the accident and with her time in Korea drawing to a close, Anna begins to make arrangements for her return home. However, she decides to track down Yuki and uses the last of her money to buy her release. They resume their search for the virus, but are cut short once again when Yuki’s water breaks. Knowing that she will not survive the birth, Anna urges Yuki to put her own health first, though Yuki is adamant that she will have the baby. Unable to reach the hospital in time, Anna fulfils Yuki’s wish to have a water birth, and, assisted by K, takes her down to the beach where she delivers the baby in the sea. Yuki later dies in hospital.

As Anna and K search through Yuki’s belongings, they discover an old passport with Anna’s photo in it, suggesting that this is not the first time she has been to the city in search of the virus. Having no memory of such a visit, Anna goes to the Butterfly Travel Agency headquarters where she demands answers, but as she has signed a waiver they refuse to divulge any information. Later, she tells K how she wanted to adopt Yuki’s son in order to make a fresh start, but that she knows he needs the child more than she does.

Three years later, K is still working as a driver for the agency. No longer searching for answers to his past, he now keeps a photograph of Anna in his taxi, along with one of him and his adopted son.

Production, style and themes

Produced on a budget of $380,000,[1] Nabi was shot on digital video and later transferred to 35mm film.[2] Filming took place on location in Busan, South Korea, as well as Kobe and Osaka, Japan.[3]

A typical shot from Nabi, emphasizing the film's use of water (in this case a swimming pool) with blue and aqua colours.

Director Moon Seung-wook received his filmmaking education in Poland at the National Film School in Łódź, and Offscreen critic Peter Rist detected in Nabi traces of that country's tradition of romantic-pessimism,[4] while Koreanfilm.org found the film's "clear Eastern European visual pattern" to be reminiscant of Tarkovsky and Kieślowski, the latter a former teacher of Moon's.[3] Water is used throughout the film in various forms—rain, showers, swimming pools, and the ocean—resulting in a continuous stream of blue and aqua-tinted images, described by Shelly Kracier of Senses of Cinema as being "subtly shaded, eerily translucent, and suffocatingly dreamlike... [creating] an underwater world in which the characters seem suspended, floating in voids of their own, unmoored by their own particular estrangements with their pasts".[2]

The premise of Nabi has been compared to Song Il-gon's Flower Island, another South Korean film released in 2001. Both films feature three central characters, each with differing goals but sharing an emotional pain that allows them to develop a strong bond, and both films use a plot device—Nabi's "oblivion virus" and the magical Flower Island—promising take away painful memories.[3] Lisa Roogen-Runge of Senses of Cinema found the "oblivion virus" similar to the magic wine used by Wong Kar-wai in his 1994 film Ashes of Time, and also noted the physical scars bore by each of the three main characters in Nabi, in each case connected to their childhood or relationship with children.[5]

Release

Nabi was released theatrically in South Korea on 13 October 2001, and received a total of 5,700 admissions in Seoul.[6] It was also screened at the following film festivals:

Nabi was released on DVD in South Korea on 7 September 2002.[3]

Critical reception

The scene where Yuki gives birth in the sea was described by Shelly Kracier of Senses of Cinema as "the most shattering single scene I saw" at the 26th Toronto International Film Festival, held in 2001.

In a report of the 26th Toronto International Film Festival for Senses of Cinema, Shelly Kraicer found much to praise about Nabi, highlighting Kim Ho-jung's "masterful performance as Anna", and adding, "One scene, though, remains unforgettable. As Anna and K help Yuki struggle to give birth half immersed in the sea, pounded by the surf, their ferocious intensity combines with Moon's agitated digital cameras to create a tour de force: this was the most shattering single scene I saw in Toronto."[2] Peter Rist of Offscreen also identified the birth scene as "One of the film’s best", and stated, "There are some gaps in the narrative and too much reliance is placed on dialogue, but the acting is outstanding, especially by the two principal women".[4] G. Allen Johnson of indieWire found the film to be "worthy of cult status... properly weird and dripping with atmosphere", and despite being "sometimes sluggish", it was nevertheless "typical of the inventiveness in genre filmmaking that has characterized recent Korean filmmaking."[9] Darcy Paquet of Koreanfilm.org praised both the director and two lead actresses, describing Nabi as a "beautiful and strange film [which] offers its viewers a memorable experience".[16]

Lisa Roosen-Runge was less glowing in her report of the 20th Vancouver International Film Festival for Senses of Cinema, saying, "I admit that the revelation about Anna's expired passport did not make any sense to me, and I was confused by the extra non-Yuki character played by the same actress. I also did not find the epilogue completely necessary. Still, [Nabi] is recommended as an unusual film despite the minor caveats."[5] Comments made in the San Francisco Bay Guardian were somewhat critical of Moon Seung-wook's direction, saying, "some of his favored technical tactics (in particular, camera work that lurches during moments of emotional upheaval) become heavy-handed", though Kim Ho-jung's performance was singled out as the film's "chief strength".[17]

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2001 5th Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival[7] Best Actress Kang Hye-jung Won
54th Locarno International Film Festival Bronze Leopard for Best Actress[18] Kim Ho-jung Won
Young Critics' Award[7] Nabi Won
2002 16th Wine Country International Film Festival[12] Best Sound Design Won
Best Cinematography Won
Gaia Film Award for Environmental Awareness Nabi Won

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Korean Cinema 2001" (PDF). Korean Film Commission. 2001. p. 19. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Kraicer, Shelly (October 2001). "East Asian films at the 26th Toronto International Film Festival - A Report". Senses of Cinema. Retrieved 2010-10-13.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Koreanfilm Weekly #7". Koreanfilm.org. Archived from the original on 2008-06-24. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  4. 1 2 Rist, Peter (2002-10-31). "A Visit to Korea: A Tale of Pi-Fan, 2001". Offscreen. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  5. 1 2 3 Roosen-Runge, Lisa (October 2001). "The 20th Vancouver International Film Festival - A Report". Senses of Cinema. Archived from the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  6. "Commercial Releases in 2001: Ranked Box-Office Results for Seoul". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  7. 1 2 3 "5th 2001". PiFan History. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  8. "Incontri con il Cinema Asiatico, 2001 second edition". Asiatica Film Mediale. 2001. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  9. 1 2 Johnson, G. Allen (2002-03-20). "FESTIVAL: Asian American Film Fest Celebrates 20 Years, Still Waiting For A Smash". indieWire. Retrieved 2010-10-13.
  10. "Le Festival Black Movie, cinémas des autres mondes, 12e édition" (in French). Black Movie. 2002. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  11. Stoner, Deni. "The Butterfly". Heroic Cinema. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  12. 1 2 Paquet, Darcy (2002-10-29). "Korean Film Newsletter #15 -- October 23, 2002". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  13. "51st Melbourne international Film festival: Korean Films in the Spotlight". Australia-Korea Foundation. 2004-01-14. Archived from the original on 2007-08-31.
  14. "Silver Lake Film Festival 4: The Big 5". Silver Lake Film Festival. 2003. Archived from the original on 2008-07-07. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  15. "Nabi" (in Polish). 4. Festiwal Filmowy Era Nowe Horyzonty. 2004. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  16. Paquet, Darcy. "Korean Movie Reviews for 2001". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  17. Huston (2002-10-04). "Long story short: Notes on the S.F. International Asian American Film Festival's 2002 programs". San Francisco Bay Guardian Online. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  18. Elley, Derek (2001-08-12). "Late Locarno Row". Variety. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
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