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‘Sad reality’ of why Joint Security Area, Korean hit film, strikes a chord 25 years on

Park Chan-wook’s 2000 film Joint Security Area told a controversial story of friendship between North and South Korean soldiers

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Squid Game actor Lee Byung-hun at a screening of Park Chan-wook’s 2000 film Joint Security Area, in which he appeared, in Seoul, South Korea, on February 4, 2025. Photo: AFP

Twenty-five years ago, director Park Chan-wook risked prison to make a film about friendship between North and South Korean soldiers, striking box office gold and beginning his actors’ ascent to global stardom.

Relations between the two Koreas have since plunged, with Pyongyang renouncing its long-held goal of unification and last week destroying a venue that traditionally hosted reunions of families separated by decades of division.

Park’s smash hit Joint Security Area still strikes a chord a quarter of a century later.

“It is a sad reality that this movie’s themes still resonate with the younger generation,” he said in Seoul this month.

“I hope that by the 50th anniversary, we will be able to discuss it as just a story from the past.”

The film is widely regarded as a masterpiece of South Korean cinema and its cast members have gone on to wider success, including Squid Game actor Lee Byung-hun and Song Kang-ho, whose films include the Oscar-winning Parasite.
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