26 Years | |||||||||
Director: | Cho Geun-hyun | ||||||||
Producer: | Choi Yong-bae[1] [2] | ||||||||
Starring: | Jin Goo Han Hye-jin Bae Soo-bin Im Seulong | ||||||||
Music: | Lee Jin-hee Kim Hong-jib | ||||||||
Cinematography: | Kim Tae-kyung | ||||||||
Editing: | Hahm Sung-won Son Yeon-ji | ||||||||
Distributor: | Invent Stone Corp. Chungeorahm Film | ||||||||
Runtime: | 135 minutes | ||||||||
Country: | South Korea | ||||||||
Native Name: |
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Language: | Korean | ||||||||
Gross: | [3] |
26 Years is a 2012 South Korean film based on the popular 2006 manhwa serialized online by manhwaga Kang Full.[4] It is the fictional story of five ordinary people (a sports shooter, a gangster, a policeman, a businessman, and head of a private security firm) who band together in order to assassinate the man responsible for the massacre of innocent civilians in Gwangju in May 1980.
The story deals with one of the most tragic and critical events in South Korean history. On May 18, 1980, in the city of Gwangju, state troops were ordered to open fire on civilians, killing and wounding thousands. Former president Chun Doo-hwan is believed to have given the order, and although he is not named explicitly in the film, the target of the assassination attempt is clearly meant to represent Chun, who was convicted in 1996 of crimes related to the Gwangju Massacre, but later pardoned by President Kim Dae-jung.
26 years later in 2006, five people who consider themselves as some of the biggest victims of the massacre, plot a top-secret project to exact revenge by assassinating the man responsible. Kwon Jung-hyuk is a newly recruited policeman who lost his family in the massacre; he is now responsible for the cars that have access to the target's house. Kwak Jin-bae is a young gangster from an organized crime group whose father was also killed. Olympic sharpshooter Shim Mi-jin, a CEO from a large company and the director of a private security firm are also involved. As a former president, "that man" lives under police protection in an affluent district of Seoul, but through a combination of ingenuity, skill, and well-placed money they are able to draw within shooting distance of their target.[5] [6]
Kang Full's webtoon illustrated the brutal suppression by the dictatorial administration of the time, putting emphasis on the overcoming of interpersonal and societal barriers.[10] [11]
In 2008, the film was originally set to be directed by Lee Hae-young based on his own adapted screenplay titled 29 Years, with Ryoo Seung-bum, Kim Ah-joong, Jin Goo, Chun Ho-jin, and Byun Hee-bong cast in the lead roles.[12] [13] But the production came to a halt once investors pulled out from funding the film ten days before filming began because of its controversial politically sensitive content, and rumors were rife that the pressure had originated from the conservative government.[14]
After nearly four years of languishing in pre-production limbo due to financial difficulties, online donations poured in from 15,000 individuals amounting to (US$646,000), with singer Lee Seung-hwan contributing another (US$923,000), toward the film's (US$4,246,000) production cost. Another investor was television personality Kim Je-dong.[15] The crowdfunding enabled the production to finally begin filming Lee's script with a new cast and director on July 19, 2012.[16] [17] Filming wrapped on October 10, 2012.[18] The film's ending credits roll for more than 10 minutes, as they include all 15,000 donors' names. Director Cho Geun-hyun said at the movie's press conference, "When one does something terribly wrong and hurts others, they should at least apologize. And even if he or she chooses not to, they should be punished for what they’ve done. This is common sense, not some political idea."[19]
The film debuted at the top of the box office,[20] [21] selling 1,108,714 tickets in only a single week on release.[22] It reached 2.5 million admissions in mid-December 2012, resulting in a total of nearly 3 million in January 2013.
2014 Golden Cinema Festival