Camel(s) (2002)
DVDRip | MKV | 640x352 | XviD @ 1900 Kbps | 91 min | 1,33 Gb
Audio: Korean (한국어) AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English (idx/sub)
Genre: Drama
DVDRip | MKV | 640x352 | XviD @ 1900 Kbps | 91 min | 1,33 Gb
Audio: Korean (한국어) AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English (idx/sub)
Genre: Drama
Director: Ki-Yong Park (as Ki-yong Park)
Writer: Ki-Yong Park (as Ki-yong Park)
Stars: Dae-yeon Lee, Myung-shin Park
One married man. One single woman. Both are in their 40’s. They sleep together on the day they first meet. "Camel(s)" is a one-night story of a middle-aged couple who visited a small port village named 'Wol-got' in the west coast. Unlike the classical love story, "Camel(s)" offers you a different taste of how a love affair can grow between two complete strangers in a black-and-white tone. The man (Lee Dae-yeon), as a chauffeur, brings the woman (Park Myung-shin) to 'Wol-got', a used-to-be village but now a small town full of motels, sashimi and karaoke bars. Having no idea of who each other is, the two middle-aged people sit in the corner of a sashimi bar and start chatting. They have dinner together. They sing karaoke together. They head for a motel together and finally they sleep together?
Hemingway said that for all good stories, only a small fraction of the issue is visible, like an iceberg, with the bulk of its real substance submerged beneath the surface. Such is the case with Park Ki-yong's truly excellent film Camel(s). Shot in digital black and white and transferred to 35mm, it tells the story of an isolated (one presumes) tryst between a middle-aged man and woman, in a tawdry seaside town (alas they never make it to the more idealized island they had planned on visiting). Details are deliberately scarce. We learn that both are married with middle-class jobs-he's an undertaker and she's a pharmacist-and that they met after the man filled a prescription for chronic headaches. Beyond this, they seem to have little history. The man is surprised when the woman knows his name (she recalls it from his insurance card) and it isn't until they're en route in his friend's borrowed car that the man learns the woman's name at all. Both principals give superbly understated performances, conveying the weariness, sorrow and neediness that are the apparent catalysts for their rendez-vous. Like camels, both the man and the woman seem to share a dromedary's capacity for suffering in silence (it's said that a camel's eyes are always wet). Most interesting in this film are the ways the lovers avoid real conversation-as if to forestall any potential entanglement-and the nuance with which Park Ki-yong depicts all the necessary but uncomfortable rituals that precede and supercede the couple's needy lovemaking. Ki-yong simplifies everything, yet portrays a startling complexity of submerged motive. Camel(s) is not for all tastes, but if one can endure this film's near-glacial pace, with long, static takes and minimal dialogue, the film makes for rewarding viewing, with a wealth of profundity and insight into the two camels of the title.
(click to enlarge)
Note: Uploaded 2 files: one of them with single audiotrack (1,33 Gb) and second one additionally with Korean commentary track (1,47 Gb).
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