FILM REVIEW
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Jennifer K Mahal
Modern-day Korea is a country divided, with north and south separated
by a demilitarized zone, the DMZ. What happens when an unlikely
friendship between soldiers stretches across that zone is the subject of
“Joint Security Area,” a film by Chan Wook Park.
The film starts with a shootout, under investigation by neutral Swiss
authorities. The leader of the investigative team, Major Sophie Jang (Lee
Young Ae), finds herself stymied by the official reports, which neither
side seems to be able to get beyond. All she knows is that a South Korean
soldier opened fire in a North Korean outpost a few yards across the
border, killing several people. Getting to the truth takes her into
dangerous territory.
The film is told in flashes back and forward. We learn of the the
friendship that unexpectedly grows among four men stationed on opposite
sides of the DMZ and how that comes to change one fateful night in
between scenes of the investigation.
In some ways, the investigation story line seems an unnecessary prop,
especially when contrasted against the power of the men’s story. But it
does not detract too much from this tale of how politics and war can
cause unhealable rifts.
In Korean with English subtitles, “Joint Security Area” is a story
that will be hard to forget after the credits have faded.
* “Joint Security Area” will play at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Lido Theater,
3459 Via Lido, Newport Beach.
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