13th New York Asian Film Festival

Jun 27 - Jul 14, 2014

Photo:

New York Premiere

Cold Eyes

감시자들

"Remember everything,"" Hwang (one of this year's guests, Sol Kyung-gu), the chief of the Special Crimes Unit surveillance squad tells a fresh young recruit (Han Hyo-joo, who has won two Best Actress awards for her performance). That could go for the audience, too. Rocketing by at 500 plot points per second, this is a high-tension thrill ride where one glance away from the action unfolding on screen can leave you flailing in the dust, three plot twists behind. It's a three-way race against time between Hwang, the rumpled middle-aged surveillance guru; James, the no-excuses criminal efficiency expert who's pulling off a string of super-sophisticated heists before he retires; and Ha, the nervous new recruit who's eager to prove she's got what it takes, even if that means she having to take dumb risks. A remake of Johnnie To's Hong Kong hit Eye in the Sky (2007), it became a surprise box-office smash last summer, turning To's taut low-budget thriller into an epic of nonstop suspense. Watch for a cameo by Eye in the Sky star, Simon Yam, right before the credits roll.

Directors: Kim Byung-seo, Cho Ui-seok
Cast: Jin Kyung, Kim Byung-ok, Lee Joon-ho, Han Hyo-joo, Jung Woo-sung, Sol Kyung-gu
Languages: Korean with English subtitles
2013; 118 min.; DCP

SCHEDULE:

Monday July 7, 8:45pm
Film Society of Lincoln Center

Q&A with actor Sol Kyung-gu, who will be presented with the Star Asia Award.

Thursday July 10, 1:00pm
Film Society of Lincoln Center

Star Asia Award
Sol Kyung-gu
설경구

Sol Kyung-gu is an absolute powerhouse of an actor who has a career that spans both serious minded art house and festival fare, as well as more mainstream films. He has consistently embodied some of the most memorable roles in Korean film on the screen for the last 18 years. After graduating from Hanyang University in 1994 he starred in several hit stage shows including Sam Shepard's True West and the Korean adaptation of German rock musical Line 1. First appearing on film in Jang Sun-woo's classic A Petal in 1996, Sol quickly went from small roles to breakout ones in Rainbow Trout and more notably, in Lee Chang-dong's Peppermint Candy in 2000. His career-defining role in that film earned him all the major South Korean cinema prizes from Baeksang Arts Awards, Grand Bell Awards, and the Blue Dragon Film Awards.

Sol began to appear in a mixture of more serious features and genre pictures, and cemented himself as one of the most sought after actors in South Korea. In 2002 alone he starred in Public Enemy (a brutal cop thriller), Jail Breakers (a prison comedy), Oasis (another Lee Chang-dong film that won Sol even more awards), and The Bird Who Stops in the Air (an art house drama). Like some of the best actors, Sol often finds himself gaining and losing weight to embody his roles, and goes from growling animalistic intensity to delicate vulnerability.

This year we're showing two new films that show this dynamic range, Cold Eyes and Hope, as well as the modern classic Public Enemy. The range that Sol shows in these films going from the brutal and driven Kang Chul-joong in Public Enemy, to the calculating Detective Hwang in Cold Eyes, and finally to the devastated father desperately trying to make ends meet and reconnect with his daughter after a brutal assault in Hope, underscores why we are presenting Sol Kyung-gu with the Star Asia Award.