Cart | |
Director: | Boo Ji-young |
Producer: | Jamie Shim[1] |
Starring: | Yum Jung-ah Moon Jeong-hee |
Cinematography: | Kim Woo-hyung |
Editing: | Kim Sang-bum Kim Jae-bum |
Studio: | Myung Films 9ers Entertainment |
Distributor: | Little Big Pictures |
Runtime: | 110 minutes |
Country: | South Korea |
Language: | Korean |
Gross: | [2] |
Cart is a 2014 South Korean drama film directed by Boo Ji-young[3] [4] [5] about employees of a retail supermarket who band together when the contract workers are laid off, it is both an ensemble drama and a social critique.[6] [7]
It made its world premiere in the City to City: Seoul sidebar of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.[8] [9] [10] [11] Cart will also screen at the 19th Busan International Film Festival and the 34th Hawaii International Film Festival.[12]
Sun-hee, a veteran cashier and mother of two, works at a large retail supermarket alongside Hye-mi, a single mother. Both are friendly with Soon-rye, a cleaning lady nearing retirement age, and all of them are temporary workers. Sun-hee is a model employee who works diligently in the belief that once she gets promoted as a regular worker, she'll be able to provide more for her children. However, their corporate employer abruptly notifies them that all the temporary workers will be laid off. Faced with these wrongful dismissals, Sun-hee, Hye-mi, Soon-rye, and fellow female employees such as naive ajumma Ok-soon and twenty-something Mi-jin, resolve to go on strike. They stage a series of increasingly impassioned protests against the company's exploitative practices, which gains more strength when junior manager Dong-joon, the only male representative of the store's labor union, joins in. The shy and passive Sun-hee, who finds herself thrust to the demonstrations' front lines, discovers within herself untapped resources of determination and resilience, which has an unexpected effect on her relationship with her estranged high school-age son, Tae-young. But as the women realize the power they can wield by taking a mutual stand, the company plays the workers against each other and Hye-mi, the leader of the strike, caves to the company's pressure and gives up.
The film is largely inspired by a 2007 incident in which Homever, a supermarket chain owned by E-Land Group, dismissed temporary workers, mostly women, and replaced them with outsourced employees to bypass a new law requiring that employees be given regular-worker status after a certain period. Dismissed employees and labor unions went on strike in front of the supermarket for 512 days until the matter was settled, with some employees reinstated.[15] [16] [17] [18] Director Boo Ji-young also studied the plight of irregular cleaning staff at major universities in Korea, including Hongik and Yonsei.[19] [20]
Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 15th Women in Film Korea Awards | Woman of the Year in Film | Yum Jung-ah | |
2015 | 10th Max Movie Awards | Best New Actor | Doh Kyung-soo | |
20th Chunsa Film Art Awards[21] | Best Actress | Yum Jung-ah | ||
Best Screenplay | Kim Kyung-chan | |||
9th Asian Film Awards[22] | Best Newcomer | Doh Kyung-soo | ||
51st Baeksang Arts Awards[23] [24] | Best Actress | Yum Jung-ah | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Moon Jeong-hee | |||
Best Screenplay | Kim Kyung-chan | |||
24th Buil Film Awards | Best Actress | Yum Jung-ah | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Moon Jeong-hee | |||
Best Screenplay | Kim Kyung-chan | |||
35th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards[25] | Top 10 Films of the Year | Cart | ||
52nd Grand Bell Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Doh Kyung-soo | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Kim Young-ae | |||
36th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Moon Jeong-hee | ||
Best Screenplay | Kim Kyung-chan |