South Korean Film Awards & the Oscar Race
Tuesday, August 5, 2025 at 4:30PM
NATHANIEL R in Asian cinema, Best International Feature, Harbin, Hyun Bin, Love in the Big City, No Other Choice, Oscars (25), Park Chan-wook, South Korea, The Old Woman With the Knife

by Nathaniel R

THE UGLY... one of 19 films competing to become the Oscar submission

Since we've just starting hearing about Oscar submission decisions from the 100+ countries that Oscar invites to participate each year, let's talk about a country that wisely invested in their own arts, with both deregulation and regulation tactics (reducing government censorship whilst protecting home-grown cinema from Hollywood dominance via screen quotas) for the past couple of decades. The results have been impressive and South Korean entertainment is big in multiple countries now, including the US. While their cinema has been popular and lauded for some time, the American Oscars haven’t quite come around, with the sole exception of Bong Joon-Ho's Parasite (2019). It helped that Parasite had a) absolutely exquisite timing of festivals-to-theater-to-awards pipeline and b) was easy to spot as an instant classic / masterpiece. The former is hard (though not impossible) to manage and the latter is exceedingly rare! 

We suspect that Oscar’s resistance to South Korean cinema has to do with the Academy's general genre-aversion...

While it's true that Oscar voters have been loosening up in terms of genre for going on two decades now, it's incremental progress so historically “B” genres (sci-fi, fantasy, action, thrillers, horror) which accounts for a good deal of the most popular South Korean movies, still require a much higher level of execution for Oscar's embrace than, say, a historical drama or war film might.  It's worth noting that all three of the Korean films that were competitive with Oscar (Burning, Decision to Leave -- made the finals, Parasite was nominated) were within the thriller genre. Like many other Asian countries, you don’t see much of a bias against B genres in Korea's homegrown awards. I’ll admit upfront that South Korea’s own awards circus is a bit hard to decipher. They have (or had) roughly four awards events for movies: the Baeksang Arts Awards (May), the Buil Awards (September), and The Blue Dragon Awards (November). The fourth, the Grand Bell Awards (also in November), were not held last year ending their reign as the longest continuously running Korean film awards. It’s a pity as they were the ones most often referred to as ‘the Korean Oscars’.  (In addition to those homeland prizes, South Korean films are also eligible for the Asian Film Awards held in March, and the Asia Pacific Screen Awards which are traditionally in November.)

That's a whole lotta prizes and differing timetables! We don’t have the nominees yet for any of the upcoming events except for the Buil Awards but we know that the Korean Film Council, a state supported organization, will choose between the following 19 films for the Korean Oscar submission... 

LOVE IN THE BIG CITY

THE OLD WOMAN AND THE KNIFE

The nominations for The Blue Dragon Awards are likely to include some of these films but the Oscar decision will already made before those nominations are released. International cinephiles are surely rooting for No Other Choice, sight unseen, due to Park chan-wook fandom. But if it’s a weaker effort from that popular auteur, there might be room for one of the other films here to rise up, especially Harbin, Love in the Big City, or Yadang: The Snitch if their popularity translates to perceived Oscar appeal.

If you've seen any of these pictures, do tell!

While we’re waiting to see these pictures, why not share our favourite South Korean pictures? 

Nathaniel's dozen favourite Korean films (at this writing)... Asterisks indicate that they were the South Korean Oscar submission in their years…

BURNING

  1. Parasite* (2019, Bong Joon ho) 

  2. The Handmaiden (2016, Park chan-wook)

  3. Spring summer fall winter and spring* (2003, Kim Ki-duk)

  4. Poetry (2010, Lee Chang-dong)

  5. Mother* (2009, Bong Joon ho)

  6. Memories of Murder (2003, Bong Joon ho)

  7. Burning* (2018, Lee Chang-dong)

  8. Thirst (2009, Park chan-wook)

  9. Train to Busan (2016, Yeong Sang-ho)

  10. The Host (2006, Bong Joon-ho)

    THE HOUSEMAID

  11. The Housemaid (2010, Im Sang-soo)

  12. Decision to Leave* (2022, Park chan-wook)

Here are some titles that I haven't yet seen that people speak highly of and/or that I'm really curious about: The Housemaid (1960), Obaltan (1961), Mandala (1981), The Surrogate Woman (1987), Joint Security Area (2000), Oasis (2002), Sympathy for Mr Vengance (2002), 3-Iron (2004), King and the Clown* (2006), No Regret (2006), A Frozen Flower (2008), Pieta* (2012), Juvenile Offender* (2013), The Throne* (2015), Sleep (2023), Exhuma (2024). Have any recommendations for us? 

 

 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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