Capital Celluloid 2024 — Day 344: Wed Dec 18

No 1: Christmas in August (Hur Jin-ho, 1988): BFI Southbank, NFT2, 6pm

This 35mm presentation is part of the Golden Age of Korean Films season at BFI Southbank. The screening of Christmas in August on Wednesday 4 December 20:55 NFT1 will be introduced by Michael Leader and Jake Cunningham, authors of Film Korea: The Ghibliotheque Guide to the World of Korean Cinema.

Time Out review:
A likeable, understated movie about facing up to death, from a first time director. Jung-Won (Han, Korea's coolest young actor) is a pro photographer with his own shop in a suburb of Seoul; only he and his immediate relatives know that he has just a few months to live. Nothing 'dramatic' happens. He runs into his childhood sweetheart and regrets that her life hasn't worked out better. He goes to a friend's funeral. He makes a point of seeing other old friends. And he develops a slightly abrasive friendship with a young woman traffic warden, which leaves her wanting to know him better and not understanding why he isn't 'there' for her. Hur conjures up quotidian rhythms very plausibly, and draws fine performances from his whole cast. It was the last film shot by the great Yoo Young-Kil, to whose memory it's dedicated.
Tony Rayns

Here (and above) is an extract.


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No2: It's A Wonderful Life (Capra, 1946): Mildmay Club, 7pm


This is a 16mm presentation from the folks at Cine-real.

Chicago Reader review: 
The film Frank Capra was born to make. This 1946 release marked his return to features after four years of turning out propaganda films for the government, and Capra poured his heart and soul into it. James Stewart stars as a small-town nobody, on the brink of suicide, who believes his life is worthless. Guardian angel Henry Travers shows him how wrong he is by letting Stewart see what would have happened had he never been born. Wonderfully drawn and acted by a superb cast (Donna Reed, Beulah Bondi, Thomas Mitchell, Lionel Barrymore, Gloria Grahame) and told with a sense of image and metaphor (the use of water is especially elegant) that appears in no other Capra film. The epiphany of movie sentiment and a transcendent experience.
Dave Kehr


Here (and above) is the trailer.


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