Deuljwi Explained

Deuljwi
Native Name:
Child:yes
Hide:no
Header:none
Hangul:들쥐
Rr:Deuljwi
Mr:Tŭljwi
Director:Na Woon-gyu
Producer:Hyeon Seong-wan
Starring:Na Woon-gyu
Shin Il-seon
Ju Sam-son
Yun Bong-chun
Lee Geum-yong
Cinematography:Lee Chang-yong
Editing:Na Woon-gyu
Distributor:Choseon Kinema
Runtime:80 minutes
Country:Korea
Language:Silent film
Korean intertitles
Budget:800 won

Deuljwi is a 1927 Korean film written, directed, edited by and starring Na Woon-gyu (1902–1937). It premiered at the Danseongsa Theater in Seoul.[1]

Plot

The plot concerns a young couple who have made a marriage vow with each other. Their marriage is thwarted when the woman is forced to marry a rich gangster. A fighter for justice called "Deuljwi(Field Mouse)" stops the wedding, kills the gangsters, and returns the bride to her betrothed.[1]

Reception

The film was considered to be work of art that symbolically represent the invasiveness of Japanese colonialists with the rich gangster being the Japanese and the man who was stolen of his potential wife being the korean nation and was banned by the Japanese authorities on the very next day of release.[1] The film was the first one to be banned and was able to be screened after cuts.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 들쥐. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture.