Before he fell victim to the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, and a tragic personality of sorts due to the circumstances of his death, Kim Ki-duk had already become a controversial figure in Korean cinema. The thing in question were not his films, but his on-set behavior that included physical and even sexual violence towards the actresses, by himself or by his collaborators, so he was basically cancelled from his own country's cinema and spent the rest of his life in different Asian and European parts of the former Soviet Union, where he also filmed his two final movies. “Call of God” is a Kyrgyz-Estonian-Lithuanian co-production.
It is questionable if “Call of God”, that premiered at last year's Venice and we caught at Belgrade Fest, could be called his proper movie, since it was not finished by him, but by his Estonian colleagues led by Artur Veeber. However, Kim completed the photography...
It is questionable if “Call of God”, that premiered at last year's Venice and we caught at Belgrade Fest, could be called his proper movie, since it was not finished by him, but by his Estonian colleagues led by Artur Veeber. However, Kim completed the photography...
- 2023-03-16
- par Marko Stojiljković
- AsianMoviePulse
IMDb.com, Inc. n'assume aucune responsabilité quant au contenu ou à l'exactitude des articles de presse, des tweets ou des billets de blogue susmentionnés. Ce contenu est publié uniquement dans le but de divertir nos utilisateurs. Les articles de presse, les tweets et les billets de blogue ne représentent pas les opinions d'IMDb et nous ne pouvons pas garantir que les informations qu'ils contiennent sont entièrement factuelles. Veuillez consulter la source responsable de l’article en question pour signaler toute préoccupation que vous pourriez avoir concernant son contenu ou son exactitude.