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Cinema has to do with pain and fear


One of the world`s most radical directors, the man behind "The Isle," South Korean Kim Ki-duk, presented his latest drama in Cannes.

ґ"Arirang" is a surreal cinematic experiment which sees the cutting-edge filmmaker turning the camera onto? himself.

"Arirang" is about Kim playing three roles in one "package."

"Through Arirang I climb over one hill in life," Kim revealed. "I understand human beings, thank nature, and accept my life as it is now."

"During the time of beautiful yet cruel, tantalizing yet intense, and sad yet sweet cinematic imagination at work, I didn`t care for my life at all," he explained in a beautiful poetic letter. "While I drew out the tumultuous stories of the world in an even stronger, more painful, more heartbreaking and more heartless ways, all the emotions eventually infected me like a virus. I became the saddest human being in the world, gone over the wall, deluded that I am manipulating the world."

The unconventional film is Kim`s confession about his dreams, emotions and fears.

RT caught up with the director of "Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter? And Spring" at the Russian pavilion at Cannes.

The 51-year-old director said that his cinematic confession is his way of healing.

"The camera is a mirror," he said. "It enables you discover things about yourself."

Kim says he definitely agrees with Alfred Hitchcock`s assertion that the only way to get rid of your fears is to make a film about them.

"Cinema has to do with pain and fear," Kim declared.

Since producing his debut feature in 1996, "Crocodile," Kim has been praised worldwide for his unique style. He often uses graphic visuals and unconventional characters in his signature emotional films.

Isn`t he afraid of exposing himself in "Arirang," however?

"Of course, I was very afraid of exposing myself in the film, but that`s why I did it," kim told RT. "Because that is how I have discovered myself."

The man behind "Samaritan Girl," which won him the Silver Bear at the 54th Berlin Film Festival in 2004, studied art in Paris but later returned to work in his native Korea.

How hard is it for him to make films?

"Every profession is hard," Kim admitted. "Being an actor is hard. Being a writer is hard, being a director can be hard. Sometimes I think it`s very difficult, but it`s not. I can`t say how much. It`s hard to measure."

What motivates the award-winning philosophical director?

"The temperature of nature," he declared.

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Cinema has to do with pain and fear -  Знаменитости Cinema has to do with pain and fear шоу бизнес последние эротические фотографии  эротика лучшие
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