Mist

Angae
Kim Soo-yong

An atmospheric work that remains a high point of the decade, Kim Soo-yong’s film concerns a middle-class office worker in Seoul who returns to his hometown, where a deluge of memories blurring past and present captures the restlessness and disappointment of an entire generation of dreamers.

DIRECTOR
Kim Soo-yong
YEAR
1967
COUNTRY
South Korea
RUNTIME
78 minutes
LANGUAGE
Korean with English subtitles
ORIGINAL TITLE
Angae

An atmospheric work by an immensely talented filmmaker, Mist has taken its place as one of the high points of 1960s South Korean cinema. Based on a famous 1964 modernist novel by Kim Seung-ok titled Journey to Mujin, Kim Soo-yong’s film tells the story of a middle-class office worker in Seoul who takes a trip to his rural hometown. As he revisits the place of his youth, familiar locations and people trigger flashbacks of his troubled past. At the same time, he meets a young schoolteacher who yearns to escape from the confines of her everyday life. Powered by magnetic performances from Shin Sung-il (the most prolific actor in Korean film history) and Yoon Jeong-hee (who years later would play the lead in Lee Chang-dong’s Poetry), Mist offers experimental blurring of past and present that captures the restlessness and disappointment of an entire generation of dreamers. Restored in 2011 by the Korean Film Archive.

For $30, receive one ticket to this film and a select menu item at Café Paradiso, located in FLC’s Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center. Learn more about our Dinner + Movie combo here.

Mist
Mist
Mist

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