JIFF Presents Program for 17th Edition
The 17th edition of the
Jeonju International Film Festival will open with Robert Burdreau’s Chet Baker biopic
Born to Be Blue with Ethan Hawke on April 28th. A digitally remastered version of
RYOO Seung-wan’s debut film
Die Bad, which featured in the first edition of JIFF in 2000, will be presented as the closing film of the festival, which will run until May 7th. Likening him to JIFF,
LEE Chung-jik, the festival’s new director, called RYOO a representative director of Korean cinema who has retained his independent spirit.
Under the new slogan ‘Jeonju, the Cinepolis of Spring’, the festival will feature a record number of films and screenings this year. The program will present 211 works, including 49 world premieres. The festival is also introducing a new Documentary Award, to be given to a non-fiction work among the films in the Korean Competition and Korean Cinemascape lineups.
Among the sidebars will be the special focuses ‘Philippe Grandrieux: The Rediscovery of the Cinematic Language’, ‘Shakespeare in Cinema’ and ‘Modern Chilean Cinema: A New Territory in Latin America’.
As previously reported, the Jeonju Cinema Projects (known before as the Jeonju Digital Projects) this year will be
KIM Soo-hyun’s black comedy
Great Patrioteers,
CHO Jae-min’s high school drama
A Stray Goat, the first feature work from the
MYUNG FILMS INSTITUTE, and Lukas Valenta Rinner’s Argentinian swingers’ club drama
The Decent.
Among the other notable films screening at JIFF this spring will be Alex Van Warderdam's Schneider vs. Bax, Paul Thomas Anderson’s mid-length documentary Junun, Thomas Vinterberg’s The Commune, Corneliu Porumboiu’s The Treasure, Anders Thomas Jensen’s Men & Chicken, Gaspar Noe’s Love and the Johnny TO-produced anthology Trivisa.