Chunhyang: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.Chunhyang 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.Chunhyang, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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[[File:Chunhyang_film_poster.jpg|frame|[[Star Crossed Lovers]]... Be glad for [[Values Dissonance]].]]
{{quote box| [[Star Crossed Lovers]]... Be glad for [[Values Dissonance]].}}


''Chunhyang'' is a movie directed by famous Korean filmmaker Im Kwon-taek (whose following movie was ''[[Drunk On Women and Poetry]]'') and released in 2000. It is based on a ''pansori'', a type of traditional Korean performance that involves a storyteller reciting and singing a narrative to the sound of a drum. The movie depicts both the pansori itself being performed, and the story being told.
''Chunhyang'' is a movie directed by famous Korean filmmaker Im Kwon-taek (whose following movie was ''[[Drunk On Women and Poetry]]'') and released in 2000. It is based on a ''pansori'', a type of traditional Korean performance that involves a storyteller reciting and singing a narrative to the sound of a drum. The movie depicts both the pansori itself being performed, and the story being told.

Revision as of 21:58, 27 November 2013

Star Crossed Lovers... Be glad for Values Dissonance.

Chunhyang is a movie directed by famous Korean filmmaker Im Kwon-taek (whose following movie was Drunk On Women and Poetry) and released in 2000. It is based on a pansori, a type of traditional Korean performance that involves a storyteller reciting and singing a narrative to the sound of a drum. The movie depicts both the pansori itself being performed, and the story being told.

Mongryong, the son of a newly installed provincial governor, sees the beautiful Chunhyang, the daughter of a former courtesan, and falls in love with her. He arranges to meet her, and to reassure her about the sincerity of his sentiments, agrees to marry her in a secret ceremony. After a period of blissful if clandestine connubial life, Mongryong must leave for Seoul in order to join the ranks of the civil service.

During his absence, a new governor is nominated and claims Chunhyang as a concubine. She refuses, even when jailed and tortured, and is sentenced to be executed. Mongryong, who has in the meantime become a censor in the royal administration, returns in the guise of a beggar, orders the arrest of the governor and sets everything right.


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