Women Directors to Make a Splash at Busan International Film Festival
Popular star
LEE Na-young’s return to the screen, the North Korea-themed indie drama
Beautiful Days, has been set as the opening film of next month’s 23rd
Busan International Film Festival. During press conferences held in Busan and Seoul on September 5th,
LEE Yong-kwan and Jay JEON, the recently reinstated Festival Chairman and Festival Director of BIFF, revealed this year’s lineup, which comprises 323 films from 79 countries.
From director
Jero YUN, who was in Busan last year with the co-directed documentary
Letters (2017) and screened his short film
Hitchhiker (2016) in the Cannes Film Festival’s Directors’ Fortnight lineup in 2016,
Beautiful Days stars
LEE Na-young (
HOWLING, 2012) as a woman who loses contact with her family when she escapes North Korea. Closing the festival this year will be
Master Z: The Ip Man Legacy, the latest film in the HK period action franchise, directed by martial arts choreography legend YUEN Woo-ping.
The program is also notable for featuring a 30% ratio of women directors. The gender representation is particularly evident in this year’s signature New Currents competition, which features four works by women, including
House of Hummingbird, the promising debut feature of short filmmaker
KIM Bora.
The retrospectives at BIFF this year include a celebration of the centenary of Filipino cinema, a program on classic Korean filmmaker
LEE Jang-ho and the brand new ‘Busan Classics’ program, which this year will include Orson Welles’ recently completed
The Other Side of the Wind, piece that debuted at the Venice International Film Festival, among other classics from around the world.