With at least a dozen selections currently screening at each festival, Korean cinema figures prominently in the line-ups at Montreal’s 16th Fantasia International Film Festival and New Dehli’s 12th Osian’s-Cinefan Festival of Indian, Asian and Arab Cinema. Fantasia, one of North America’s larger genre film showcases, began July 19th and will run until August 9th. Osian’s-Cinefan, one of the few international venues devoted to Indian and Arab cinema, started on July 27th and will conclude on August 5th.
It was also recently announced that <Doomsday Book>, <Horror Stories>, <Deranged> and <Nameless Gangster> will appear as official selections at this year’s 45th Sitges Film Festival in Spain, which is also a genre-oriented fest. Running through early October, look for more news about Korean offerings at Sitges when their complete program is released.
In contrast to Fantasia, Osian’s-Cinefan’s Korean curation includes more indie fare and festival hits, the only overlapping film being <The King of Pigs>, which will appear in the Filmcraft-Animation section. Four films are currently in competition. In the Asian and Arab Competition, which is the fest’s premiere showcase, is KIM Kyung-mook’s <Stateless Things>. Competing in the First Features section is
<Romance Joe>, from
HONG Sangsoo protege LEE Kwang-kuk. YUN Ki-nam’s
<The Metamorphosis> and SHIN Suwon’s Cannes-winning
<Circle Line> will also compete in the Shorts section. In the fest’s non-competitive Frescoes section,
JEON Kyu-hwan’s
<From Seoul to Varanasi>,
LEE Sang-woo’s
<Fire in Hell> and JI Ha-jean’s <Bloody Fight in Iron-Rock Valley> will screen. Additionally, four shorts will appear out of competition: JEON June-hyuck’s <Interfere>, MOON Hyung-il <The Man Did Not Cry>, JEON Min-seok’s <Desparate Crossing> and KIM Kwang-bin’s <Modern Family>, which just received an award at the recently concluded Asian Film Fest of Dallas.