ââTranslator: MarcTempest
Editor: AgRoseCrystal
Chapter 595
[An interview with Hwang Ji-yoon, the director of the independent film âFireâ (Full text)]
[The independent film âFireâ sets a new record for the highest number of viewers in Korean independent film history!]
[After watching âFireâ, âI started studying history!â]
[Unknown independence activists discovered in the old documents found last week!]
-Itâs amazing that she came up with this idea when she was in middle school. She must have been born to be a director. (Admiration)
=She went through 22 revisions, but still impressive.
-So why was the unknown painter captured and tortured?
=It doesnât say. Itâs up to your imagination. The only thing certain is that he was caught while doing independence activities.
=I feel like he was caught while drawing the national flag.
=I think he was caught while trying to expose the atrocities of the Japanese to the world through his paintings.
=ã ã Whatever happenedã ã Iâm
-I donât usually read spoilers before watching a movie, but I wouldnât have known about it if the flag-raising scene wasnât extended;;;;
=22 I cried my eyes out after watching the movie and reading other peopleâs reviews (especially the ones after Independence Day). Already.
=33 The importance of picketing.
-Thereâs this too (a list of theaters where you can see the flag the best)
=ã ã I went there after seeing thisã
=Me tooã ã
-There are also first and second priority theaters.
=ã ã The number of flags varies depending on the density of street lights.
=First priorityâ¦â¦ the bestã·ã â¦â¦(dying message)
-I havenât studied history at all since the college entrance exam, but I took out my history bookã ã
=22 The part I struggle with the most is the Japanese colonial era, but studying with Fire helps. I feel like they are all my fellow unknown painters, so I can focus.
=I canât study.
=Why???
=I get too immersed and just cry whenever an independence activist appearsã ã
=22 I want to kill all the pro-Japanese collaborators.
=33 I was so immersed from the death of Gojong, the background of Fire, that I was like, âWhy isnât the story of the unknown painter in here? Donât they need to revise this book!?â. á¹
=ã ã Thatâs really too immersedã ã
-There might be a question about independence movements on this yearâs college entrance exam.
=ã¹ã Iâm confident I wonât get it wrong if they ask me to arrange the events from Gojongâs death.
=Teacher Isangseol tooã ã
=Please let there be a question about the sea and the butterfly in Koreanâ¦â¦ I memorized it so I can do the fill-in-the-blanks too.
=22 I can just hand in a blank paper. I wrote it all.
-The old documents are so sadã ã They said they wrapped them carefully with cloth so they wouldnât get wet or damaged, but I canât imagine what they were feeling when they left themã ã
=22 There were also overseas independence activistsã ã
=Thank you all so muchã ã ã
[Cocoa Entertainment uploads videos of the filming of âFireâ on their YouTube channel âJUNâ!]
[The making film (?) of âFireâ uploaded on the YouTube channel âJUNâ]
-Itâs more like a vlog than a making filmã ã ã They filmed a lot at the lodgingã ã ã
=But I like itã ã It feels like watching Seo-junâs daily life.
=22 Itâs like a variety showã ã ã
-Baekgu! Thereâs Baekgu tooã ã
=As expected of the Sigorza breed!! Heâs so handsome;;;
=Right. His fur is shiny and his nose is moist. His owner must take good care of him.
=My dog is the same breed, but heâs chubby. My dog is a pigã
-Dog + snow + Seo-junâ¦â¦ Iâm capturing every 0.001 second.
=22 My finger joints are already worn out.
=33 Iâm using a macro.
=â¦â¦Thatâs why people need technologyâ¦â¦.
-But they didnât upload the video of drawing on the snow? It looks like they have the footage from the full shotã ã ã
=222 Please upload the full shot tooã ã
=But even if they do, I donât think I can get that majestic feeling from my tiny monitor.
=ã¹ã Itâs a scale that you have to see on the theater screen.
=Iâm seriously considering buying a 98-inch TV.
Choi Yoo-seong looked at the new videos uploaded on the YouTube channel [JUN]. But he only glanced at the thumbnails, not daring to play them.
âWhat are you doing?â
Natalie handed him a coffee and asked. Choi Yoo-seong took the coffee and said with a gloomy expression.
âIâm debating whether to watch Junâs videos or not.â
â? Why donât you just watch them?â
Natalie tilted her head and Choi Yoo-seong made a sad face.
âIâm avoiding everything related to Fire to avoid spoilersâ¦â
âAh.â
Natalie laughed.
âWhy is the overseas release in Octoberâ¦! Iâm going crazy!!â
From August 15th, the release date of [Fire], to the current October, Choi Yoo-seong had been avoiding all the spoiler-filled posts. He drank the cold coffee in one gulp, feeling frustrated.
âPhew, Iâve been avoiding the Korean internet since September when everyone else saw it.â
âThat must be hard.â
Natalie said and Choi Yoo-seong nodded repeatedly.
It was a day that he couldnât go through without tears.
He realized how influential Seo-jun was, not only to ordinary people, but also to the marketing of companies. Parodies, ads, Korea was buzzing with [Fire] and patriotic marketing.
âI tried so hard, but I think I found out some things.â
He said with disappointment, not wanting to know.
âCheer up, youâll see the movie tomorrow.â
Natalie smiled and patted Choi Yoo-seongâs shoulder.
***
The next day.
Choi Yoo-seong, Natalie, and their friends Megan and Lawton headed to the theater.
Megan and Lawton were LA music school friends who had watched [Rebellion] together before. They graduated from LA music school and worked in different places, but they met again when they worked together this time.
âIs there no app for Fire? Like there was for Rebellion.â
Lawton asked while looking at the poster. Choi Yoo-seong carefully picked up a poster without any wrinkles and shook his head.
âRebellion was a commercial film, but Fire is an independent film, so unfortunately there isnât. Iâll explain it to you later. Thereâs an interpretation material that someone made.â
âOh, I see⦠Thatâs why there are fewer theaters showing it.â
Megan said and Natalie looked around.
âBut there are a lot of people. Koreans seem to be the most.â
As she said, the theater was crowded with people, especially Koreans.
â/Oh. Yoo-seong!/â
â/Boss?/â
As if all the Koreans in the area had gathered, the owner of the restaurant that Choi Yoo-seong sometimes visited was there too. He seemed to have come to watch [Fire] with his family.
â/Did you come to watch the movie?/â
â/Yeah. Our daughter said we had to see it./â
The couple who had twin children that looked like kindergarteners in their arms greeted Choi Yoo-seong with a nod. They had exchanged a few words with Choi Yoo-seong before, so he nodded back and waved his hand at the cute twins who were waving at him.
â/See you later./â
â/Okay./â
The restaurant owner moved his steps toward his family. Among the family members who were chatting and laughing with him, there was an old man who looked like the ownerâs father.
Suddenly, he remembered what the owner had told him about inheriting the restaurant.
âYoo-seong! The movie is starting!â
âI know! Iâm coming!â
As Choi Yoo-seong was about to turn around, he saw something white like a cloth between the bags that the couple was holding.
***
The movie was over.
Choi Yoo-seong, who came out of the theater, was wiping away the tears that were flowing down his face.
The Gwangmu Declaration of Independence⦠The independence movement⦠He couldnât imagine it. No, he had a little bit of expectation when Korea was buzzing with patriotic marketing and history studies, but he didnât expect it to come out like this.
The quality and the content were unbelievable for a college studentâs work.
ââ¦Ah.â
Choi Yoo-seong, who was sobbing and admiring [Fire] and thinking that he had to watch it again, lifted his head and looked at his friends.
He was able to enjoy [Fire] with such emotions because he was Korean, but he was worried about how his foreign friends who knew nothing about the Japanese colonial era or the independence movement would have seen it.
It was different from [The Royal Physician] or [Rebellion].
[The Royal Physician] or [Rebellion] were understandable as long as they followed the flow of the story, but [Fire] had a lot of hidden information.
The Gwangmu Declaration of Independence, the nine years, the meaning of the flower.
It was a movie that was hard to watch perfectly without the basic historical knowledge that there was a Japanese colonial era, there were independence activists, there were agents chasing them, and they succeeded after many failures.
âNatalie. How was it?â
At Choi Yoo-seongâs cautious question, Natalie wiped away her tears and told him her impression.
âIt was touching. It was a story from the Japanese colonial era, right?â
âYeah. Thatâs right.â
âI was sad when I saw the photos and videos, but I understood better when I saw it as a movie. I felt like I knew how hard the people worked and what they felt.â
Natalie, who studied Korean history as a fan of Seo-jun, seemed to have understood it quite well.
âWhat about you?â
Megan and Lawton, who had slightly reddened eyes, also said it was touching. Choi Yoo-seong asked them curiously.
âDid you study Korean history too?â
âNo, not that, but⦠Independence is an event that every country has had at least once. The US has Independence Day too. I didnât understand everything, but I got the gist of it.â
âAhâ¦â
Choi Yoo-seongâs eyes widened at Lawtonâs words. Megan smiled and opened her mouth.
âMe too. I didnât understand everything, but I felt like I knew what the young master wanted. There are many situations where he struggles between his duty and what he wants in other works too. And Junâs acting was amazing, so I was convinced by my heart as I watched.â
Thatâs right.
It wasnât that they had to know Korean history to understand the movie. They understood [Fire] in their own way, although it was lacking, with their own knowledge and experiences.
âThatâs good too.â
As a fan of Seo-jun, Choi Yoo-seong, who was nervous that this work would get bad reviews overseas, sighed with relief.
âBut who sent the letter that said he died in the beginning?â
âWhat does the hill mean?â
Lawton and Megan, who enjoyed [Fire], were curious about every piece of information and asked Choi Yoo-seong. Choi Yoo-seong thought he had to look at Moviegoers' review with his friends, when
â/Grandpa! This!/â
â/Ta-da!/â
A young voice was heard. Koreans and foreigners looked that way.
As if they had been waiting outside, the twins who saw the old man and the owner couple coming out of the theater spread the flag as big as their bodies like flying squirrels. The white cloth that was in the coupleâs bag was a flag.
Choi Yoo-seong was choked up at the sight of the flag being spread. The other Koreans were the same. And so was the old man who was called grandpa.
He must have cried all the time while watching the movie, his wet and wrinkled face shed tears again. The owner quickly handed a tissue to the old man, but the tears with a lot of meaning did not stop easily.
âCome to think of itâ¦â
He remembered what the restaurant owner had told him a while ago.
His grandfatherâs father was an independence activist in the US.
âReally?!ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âWe just found out recently. They said his name was in the document they found.â
For a very long time, the independence activist who was buried so deep that even his children didnât know was revealed to the world.
The old man, who had only resented his father who had left his wife and young children behind without knowing what he had done, must have cried a lot.
Like an unknown painter.
An unknown independence activist.
He was here, in this faraway foreign land.
The old man moved his steps slowly, as if he had lost his strength, but without losing his goal. And he hugged his great-grandchildren who were standing with the flag in this foreign land.
His father,
The unknown painter,
The unknown independence activists,
The reason they worked hard was for these young ones.
â¦No.
It was for me.
The old man recalled the sturdy hand that stroked his young head. On top of that, the wound of the young master who appeared in [Fire] overlapped. The young master who was frustrated by the failure of the independence movement, the young master who was sad that he couldnât paint for his duty.
He wanted to ask.
âFather, werenât you hurt, wasnât it hard. And⦠what did you really want to do.â
The great-grandchildren, who followed their great-grandfatherâs tears, also hugged the old man tightly, sobbing. The son and daughter-in-law and the granddaughter and son-in-law also looked at the old man with worried eyes.
Somehow, he felt like he heard a voice that he thought he had forgotten.
âI wanted to go back to my country, my hometown, and live happily with my wife and young children, the voice that he missed so much answered.â