35mm

A Swordsman in the Twilight

Hwanghonui Geomgaek
Chung Chang-wha

Director Chung Chang-wha (The King Boxer) tells a revenge tale set in the Joseon Dynasty period and in the process creates a distinctly Korean-style sword-fighting action film.

DIRECTOR
Chung Chang-wha
YEAR
1967
COUNTRY
South Korea
RUNTIME
80 minutes
LANGUAGE
Korean with English subtitles
FORMAT
35mm
ORIGINAL TITLE
Hwanghonui Geomgaek

Enjoy two films for the price of one at select double features! Valid on September 14 with a ticket to this film & Special Agent X-7Discount automatically applied when adding both tickets to your cart; double features excluded from 3+ Film Package.

Before he started working for the Shaw Brothers Studio and kicked off the martial arts movie craze in the West with The King Boxer, Chung Chang-wha built the foundations for action and genre filmmaking in South Korea. Set during the Joseon Dynasty period, A Swordsman in the Twilight introduces us to a lone bamboo-hat-wearing swordsman (Nam Koong-won) who appears in a lawless village. And while what follows may be a standard revenge story, Chung employs long shots to film action sequences that—in contrast to the more acrobatic and energetic style of Hong Kong wuxia—consist primarily of graceful and restrained movements of swordsmen in hanbok facing off against each other. Action is framed against the backdrops of Korean landscapes and palace architecture, the meetings of the swords ever brief, and ultimately deadly. Confidently directed and tightly edited, this film is a rare example of a distinctly Korean-style sword-fighting film that only Chung could have made. 35mm print courtesy of the Korean Film Archive.

A Swordsman in the Twilight

A Swordsman in the Twilight

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