Key Points

Park Chan Wook's highly anticipated film 'No Other Choice' will open the 30th Busan International Film Festival. The movie stars Lee Byung-hun and Son Yejin in their first on-screen pairing as a married couple. Following its world premiere in Venice, the film will make its Asian debut in Busan. BIFF hopes this selection will revitalize global interest in Korean cinema.

Key Points: Park Chan Wook's 'No Other Choice' to Open Busan Film Festival

  • Park Chan Wook returns with first film since 'Decision to Leave'
  • Lee Byung-hun and Son Yejin star as a married couple in crisis
  • Film to premiere in Busan after Venice debut
  • BIFF aims to reignite global interest in Korean cinema
2 min read

Park Chan Wook's 'No Other Choice' to open 30th Busan International Film Festival

Park Chan Wook's latest film 'No Other Choice' starring Lee Byung-hun and Son Yejin will open the 30th Busan International Film Festival.

"I am deeply moved and excited to experience the premiere of Park Chan-wook's desired project alongside diverse audiences on the festival's opening day. – Jung Hanseok, BIFF Director"

Busan, August 4

The 30th Busan International Film Festival (BIFF) has selected critically acclaimed director Park Chan-Wook's 'No Other Choice' as its opening film, reported Variety.

It will mark the return of Park Chan to the big screens three years after 'Decision to Leave', for which he won best director at Cannes.

According to the outlet, the film stars 'Squid Game' actor Lee Byung-hun in the lead role. He plays the role of Man-su, a man whose comfortable life unravels when he's suddenly dismissed from his job, forcing him into a desperate struggle to protect his wife Miri (Son Yejin), their two children, and their home, reported Variety.

The story follows Man-su as he embarks on what the festival describes as "his own war of survival."

Lee, who will also serve as host of this year's opening ceremony, teams up with Son Yejin for their first on-screen pairing as a married couple.

The cast also includes Park Hee-soon, Lee Sung-min, Yeom Hye-ran, and Cha Seung-won.

Park described the project as a "long-awaited passion project" at BIFF 2019, and the film will receive its Asian premiere in Busan, following its world premiere at Venice, as reported by Variety.

"I am deeply moved and excited to experience the premiere of Park Chan-wook's desired project alongside diverse audiences on the festival's opening day," said BIFF festival director Jung Hanseok.

"I sincerely hope that its selection will build meaningful momentum to garner greater attention and foster renewed interest in Korean cinema," added Jung as quoted by Variety.

The selection comes at a significant moment for Korean cinema, with BIFF positioning the film as one that "embodies what audiences most hope to see" and can "reinvigorate Korean cinema at this pivotal moment."

Park made his directorial debut with 'The Moon Is... the Sun's Dream' (1992) and went on to create groundbreaking works including 'Joint Security Area' (2000), the Vengeance trilogy ('Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance,' 'Oldboy,' 'Sympathy for Lady Vengeance'), 'Thirst' (2009), 'The Handmaiden' (2016), and 'Decision to Leave' (2022).

The director has been invited to the Cannes competition section four times and has been honoured with the Grand Prix, Prix du Jury, and Prix de la mise en scène, making him the first Korean director to achieve all three distinctions, reported Variety.

The 30th Busan International Film Festival will run from September 17 to September 26.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Korean cinema continues to raise the bar! As an Indian film lover, I wish our festivals would also get such prestigious openings. The pairing of Lee Byung-hun and Son Yejin is 🔥 Hope it releases soon on Netflix India!
R
Rohit P
While I appreciate Korean films, I wish Indian media would give equal coverage to our own regional cinema festivals. We have brilliant filmmakers like Mani Ratnam, Vetrimaaran who deserve this kind of global spotlight too.
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Sarah B
The theme of job loss and family struggle is so universal. In India, we see this daily with layoffs in tech sector. Hope this film portrays the emotional journey authentically. Park's films always have such depth - Oldboy changed how I see cinema forever!
V
Vikram M
After Parasite and Squid Game, Korean content is on another level! This sounds like another masterpiece in making. Indian filmmakers should take notes - we need more original stories about real struggles instead of remakes and masala films.
K
Kavya N
Son Yejin is my favorite Korean actress since Crash Landing on You! 😍 The pairing with Lee Byung-hun is unexpected but exciting. Hope it gets a theatrical release in India - would love to watch this on big screen with subtitles!

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