An Empty Dream (1965) Poster

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7/10
Essential viewing for fans of Korean movies.
nathanpollard-34-59130721 October 2014
An Empty Dream (Chunmong, 1965) is a Korean remake of a Japanese Pinko film released the previous year. In the hands of master director, Yoo Hyeon Mok, he deviates from the originals soft core titillation and instead presents a dizzying surreal flight of fantasy. A man and a woman who are strangers receiving dental treatment at the same clinic are put under anesthesia at the same time. Hints of strangeness have already been glimpsed on screen but once unconscious, all reality is abandoned and we witness the playing out of a strange love triangle between the strangers and the dentist. The dentist, who is reminiscent of the devil, continually torments the couple and attempts to steal the woman away. A strange film with eschewing the common realist film making Mok was popular for making and which was popular at the time. The film takes a blend of French surrealism, Russian montage and German expressionism and adds a distinctly Korean edge to the proceedings.

This is not a film of narrative excellence but one of blissful, visual stimulation. The film had not been seen for years due to rumours at the time of the lead actress, Park Su Jeong, being filmed naked although none of the supposed footage made it into the final cut.

A bold, sensual, stunning experimental film; extremely unique in South Korean film.
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6/10
load of surrealism film
dreist24 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I got to see The Empty Dream, to be precise it is the second after the first vision (which took place two months ago) I understand there is little This Korean film of the 60s is considered an art-house films, mainly focuses on the surreal genre. For me personally surrealism is my kind "NOT preferred" I had difficulty to understand and to follow him, stubborn as I said earlier to regard a 'once again but alas I did not understand too almost nothing. Nothing ... the film makes inroads in my heart In the Korean Film Archive on a ranking of the top 100 Korean Classic it is ranked first, and even if the film in question is indigestible unfortunately I do not doubt that this is a work of the highest cinematic value that maybe could be appreciated more to fans of the genre. I prefer the film only the first part that is when the protagonist enters the dental practice and the last part, that is when the protagonist awakes from ' "nightmare." Excuse the irony but it was a way of waking myself
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