Senin, 10 Februari 2020

'Parasite': What are the Oscar-winning movie's messages? - Fox News

The 92nd annual Academy Awards wrapped with “Parasite” taking home the big win for best picture. The film from South Korea won a total of four Oscars, and made history as the first non-English language film to take home best picture.

The movie, on its surface, is a dark comic thriller about family, class and capitalism.

The film highlights South Korea’s emergence as a global cultural power, a reflection of decades of focus on building world-class industries in one of the most vibrant democracies in Asia.

OSCARS 2020: CHRIS ROCK, STEVE MARTIN OPEN WITH JABS AT HOLLYWOOD'S BIGGEST STARS, 'PARASITE' MAKES HISTORY

INCOME INEQUALITY

But, the film’s main characters portray South Koreans who have been left behind by the country’s dramatic changes. It’s a biting commentary on deepening inequality and other problems that have many young and poor people describing their lives as a hellish nightmare.

South Korea has one of the largest gaps between rich and poor among developed nations and is struggling mightily to deal with decaying job markets, rocketing house prices and a record-low birth rate as couples put off having babies while struggling with low pay and harsh work conditions.

The film hinted at an uncomfortable truth: While the national successes have been spectacular — from Samsung’s rise as a global economic powerhouse to the explosion of K-pop in Asia and beyond — many South Koreans recognized that there’s been a dark side to that rise.

BACKLASHES AND BLACKLISTS

Only a few years ago, Bong Joon Ho, the film’s auteur who won big Sunday night at the Oscars, was blacklisted by the government, and the characters in his film reflect a society where many feel intense hopelessness.

South Korea’s rapid emergence from the devastation of the 1950-53 Korean War also saw a bloody transition from dictatorship to democracy. Its association with neat smartphones and cars came amid a constant threat from nuclear North Korea. For every international success, there’s also widespread worry that South Korea will forever be overshadowed by regional giants Russia, China and Japan.

BRAD PITT JABS GOP IN OSCARS ACCEPTANCE SPEECH, JOAQUIN PHOENIX TALKS ANIMAL RIGHTS

Although fully Korean in language, humor and tone, Bong’s dark tale of poverty and class struggle resonated across borders because Western democracies also have been experiencing similar social and economic problems, albeit not as “extreme” as in South Korea, according to Chin Jung-kwon, a prominent cultural critic.

“The film shows that South Korea still has a strong message to show the world,” Chin said.

ART OF SUBSTANCE

Art of merit and depth creates political consequences for the country’s artists.

Bong was one of thousands of artists who were blacklisted and denied government funds under the rule of conservative former President Park Geun-hye for their allegedly critical views of her administration. Following protests by millions, Park was ousted from office in March 2017 and is now serving a decades-long prison term for corruption.

Not everyone was happy about how Bong portrayed the characters in “Parasite,” which tells the story of how an unemployed family of four living in a slum basement apartment comically conned its way into the lives of one of Seoul’s wealthiest families, obsessed with empty, shallow Western bourgeois consumerism, before things started to unravel darkly.

“Every society in the world experiences conflicts created by people’s efforts to move up the class ladder, and South Korean films have dealt with this issue for a long time,” veteran filmmaker Lee Jang-ho said. “Maybe Bong’s dark humor and his vivid description of the lives of the South Korean poor, including their ‘half-basement’ living spaces, felt refreshing to American moviegoers.”

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Critic Kim Gyu-hang, however, accused Bong of objectifying poor people and treating their lives like a “sightseeing attraction,” saying that the film makes no real attempt at explaining how the system, politically and financially, locked the characters in a desperately hopeless situation.

“(“Parasite”) provides no deep insight into humans, their anger and how they are a byproduct of the social system that surrounds them,” Kim said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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2020-02-10 22:55:34Z
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Oscars 2020: How 'Parasite' celebrated those big wins - Los Angeles Times

First, they made history. But Oscar-winning director Bong Joon Ho and his “Parasite” cast and crew were still pinching themselves as their whirlwind night of celebration unfolded after the 92nd Academy Awards.

“It feels unreal,” said actor Choi Woo Shik, beaming in the middle of the packed Governors Ball immediately following the Oscars telecast. “92 years...”

He had just taken a selfie with Korean American actor John Cho — at Cho’s request — who’d announced “Parasite’s” nominations himself on live television. The biggest shock of the night, he said, was seeing his on-screen dad Song Kang Ho cry as “Parasite” won best picture.

Later, he said he’d even partake in celebratory karaoke at the Korean-themed party hosted by “Parasite” distributor Neon.

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But many more tears of joy and celebration were in store for the South Koreans on Sunday night, where they were the toast of Hollywood as they walked into party after party together, greeted as heroes.

Partyers danced, drank Champagne and dined on sushi, crab legs, boba parfait and caviar-topped tater tots at the official post-Oscars bash.

As Cho went on to chat up more members of the “Parasite” cast including actress Chang Hyae Jin, across the Governors Ball partygoers were buzzing over the film’s huge wins.

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“I voted for ‘Parasite’!” said Amazon Studios head Ted Hope, not specifying in which category. He complimented the strong year for cinema and breakthrough voices including Lulu Wang’s Spirit Award-winning “The Farewell” and French helmer Ladj Ly, whose “Les Miserables” was Amazon’s nominee for the international feature Oscar.

Miky Lee, vice chairwoman of Korean media giant CJ Group and the executive producer of “Parasite” who dazzled audiences inside and outside the Dolby Theatre with her acceptance speech, took a moment to chat. “It’s a historic moment,” she said. “I don’t know what it means for Hollywood but I definitely know what it means for us. This opens up doors for Korean moviemakers.”

After midnight the “Parasite” cast and crew had made their way across town to the buzziest party of the night: Neon’s own sprawling bash at Soho House, where faux peaches hung from trees and Lee held court in front of a stage.

92nd Annual Academy Awards - Backstage

The cast of “Parasite” celebrates its best picture victory at the Academy Awards on Sunday.

(A.M.P.A.S. via Getty Images)

Just before 1 a.m., Bong arrived and shared a special moment with “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” director CĂ©line Sciamma, whose acclaimed film also premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last year and was released by Neon.

Inside a sea of people, Sciamma and Bong embraced. He grinned and placed his Oscar in her hands to hold. “Incredible!” she said. “This is like the future. You made this. You made it for us all.

He beamed at her: “Tonight, we drink.”

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And then Bong took the stage. Korean pop group A.C.E. had already opened for him earlier in the evening, performing as revelers packed two Soho House floors and several bars and dance floors waiting to glimpse the “Parasite” helmer.

Neon co-founder Tom Quinn introduced Bong to the stage and the entire party cheered and swarmed toward the front. “It’s still unbelievable,” said Bong, raising one of his three Academy Awards in the air.

Everyone’s favorite interpreter, Sharon Choi, stepped up to translate for him. Still clutching his Oscar in one hand and a microphone in the other, he stopped her with a smile.

“Tonight, Sharon — it’s OK,” said Bong, relieving Choi of the translating duties that made her an unexpected awards favorite all season. “Just drink!”

Joining him onstage, Lee shouted out “die-hard K-pop lover” Quincy Jones in the front row. Elsewhere, Roger Corman, filmmaker Mary Lambert, Neon co-founder Tim League and Korean star Lee Honey made the eclectic scene.

Quinn, whose relationship with Bong began when he released his 2006 hit “The Host,” declared: “This is a win for all of us tonight.”

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Earlier he pondered what it took for upstart Neon to take “Parasite” all the way to its historic Oscars triumph. “Twenty years of knowing that Korean film has been overlooked as the best cinema in the world,” he replied.

Throughout the evening guests enjoyed cocktails that would send Lee Jung Eun’s housekeeper character running, including peach gimlets and spicy peach margaritas. The party favors: take-home “Parasite” soaps in the shape of Scholar’s Rocks. So metaphorical.

Esconced in a corner VIP section, Park So Dam, Lee Sun Kyun and Choi led a crowd in singing “Happy Birthday” to “Parasite” co-star Cho Yeo Jeong, who celebrated her birthday at the stroke of midnight.

Alas, karaoke plans were abandoned in favor of continued revelry, although the “Parasite” crew may have partaken after leaving around 1:30 a.m. A Koreatown after-after-party was rumored to be their destination.

Before capping his historic night, Bong reflected on the showstopping moment during the telecast when, accepting the Oscar for best director, he quoted fellow nominee Martin Scorsese, leading to an impromptu standing ovation for the “Irishman” helmer.

Like many of Bong’s hits from this awards season it was an unplanned, off-the-cuff speech that became, movingly and eloquently, a celebration of others. He had no idea where his fellow nominees were sitting as he called them by their names.

Overcome with emotion with his Oscar statuette in hand, he’d simply scanned the crowd from the stage. “I made eye contact with Martin Scorsese,” said Bong. “I was so moved.”

Times staff writer Deborah Vankin and Times film critic Justin Chang contributed to this report.

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2020-02-10 20:16:00Z
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Politically charged Oscars hit all-time low rating, plummet almost 6 million viewers from 2019 - Fox News

ABC's politically charged Oscar telecast averaged 23.6 million viewers on Sunday night, the smallest audience ever, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

THR noted that total was “well below the 29.56 million and 7.7 for last year's awards,” and down 20 percent in year-to-year viewers. The Oscars managed a 5.3 rating in the key demographic of adults age 18-49, down 31 percent from last year’s 7.7 demo rating.

The lengthy, host-less broadcast fell almost 2 million viewers short of the previous all-time low, when the Oscars averaged 26.54 million viewers back in 2018.

BRAD PITT JABS GOP IN OSCARS ACCEPTANCE SPEECH, JOAQUIN PHOENIX TALKS ANIMAL RIGHTS

“If you need to find some sort of silver lining, the 92nd Academy Awards were still television’s most-watched entertainment special since the 91st Oscars. Of course, that was also totally expected,” TheWrap ratings guru Tony Maglio wrote.

The Oscars featured several winners injecting politics into the Academy Awards, starting with the telecast's first famous victor, Brad Pitt, who took a shot at Republican senators who voted against calling witnesses at President Trump’s impeachment trial.

“They told me I only have 45 seconds up here, which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week,” Pitt said. “I’m thinking maybe Quentin [Tarantino] does a movie about it. In the end, the adults do the right thing.”

Pitt was not the only actor to politicize his comments as Joaquin Phoenix used his lengthy, emotional best actor acceptance speech to discuss, among other things, the state of humanity, and the plight of cows.

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"We feel entitled to artificially inseminate a cow," Phoenix said. "And when she gives birth, we steal her baby even though her cries of anguish are unmistakable and then we take her milk that’s intended for her calf and we put it in our coffee and our cereal."

Even socialist revolutionary Karl Marx was mentioned in a speech by Julia Reichert, the co-director of the Barack and Michelle Obama-produced best feature-length documentary winner "American Factory."

Fox News’ Tyler McCarthy contributed to this report.

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2020-02-10 20:06:10Z
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The Future of Bong Joon Ho: Here’s What the Oscar Winner Is Doing Next - IndieWire

Parasite” writer-director Bong Joon Ho collected four Oscars at the 92nd Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best International Feature Film. These history-making wins were the first for South Korea at the Oscars, and “Parasite” is an Oscars game-changer as the first foreign-language film to win Best Picture in the ceremony’s 92-year history. While Bong has been one of South Korea’s most prolific auteurs for nearly two decades (see “Memories of Murder,” “The Host,” and “Mother”), “Parasite” has turned the 50-year-old filmmaker into a global superstar. Many moviegoers around the world likely wonder where Bong’s career will go next after his historic Oscar wins, and the most immediate answer is television.

Beginning in May, TNT will world premiere its television adaptation of Bong’s 2013 science-fiction action film “Snowpiercer.” Bong serves as an executive producer of the series, which stars “Hamilton” and “Blindspotting” breakout Daveed Diggs opposite Jennifer Connelly. “Snowpiercer” is set in a dystopian future where all of civilization lives on a moving train that is divided by economic class. The rich live in luxury at the front of the train, while the poor struggle in the overcrowded and impoverished back. Diggs plays a member of the lower class who leads a rebellion against the rich. “Snowpiercer” premieres May 31 on TNT.

More excitingly, Bong is also developing a television adaptation of “Parasite” for HBO. The premium cable network confirmed in January that it would be making a television series based on “Parasite” with Bong serving as a producer alongside Adam McKay. The latter, a fellow Oscar winner for writing “The Big Short,” is also a producer of HBO’s “Succession.” Bong has been vocal about not being able to fit every idea he wanted for “Parasite” into a two-hour theatrical release, so the filmmaker is using a TV adaptation to function as the six-hour movie he originally envisioned.

“There were so many stories that I thought of that could happen in between the sequences you see in the film, and some background stories for each character,” Bong said of expanding “Parasite” into a television series. “I really wanted to explore those ideas freely with a five-or six-hour film. You know, with Bergman’s ‘Fanny and Alexander,’ there’s a theatrical version and there’s a TV version. So with the TV series for ‘Parasite,’ I think we’ll be able to create a high-quality, expanded film.”

Bong even teased to The Wrap one of the expanded details that would be included in his “Parasite” series, saying, “When the original housekeeper Mun Gwang (Lee Jung Eun) comes back in the late night, something happened to her face. Even her husband asked about it, but she never answered. I know why she had the bruises on her face. I have a story for that, and aside from that, why does she know the existence of this bunker? What relationship does she have with that architect to know of this bunker? So I have all these hidden stories that I have stored.”

For now Bong is attached only as a producer on the “Parasite” television series and has not announced any plans to direct the project himself. It also has not been confirmed whether or not HBO’s “Parasite” will be a foreign-language series set in South Korea like the movie or an English-language version set in America or elsewhere.

As for Bong’s film career, the director has not announced a follow-up movie to “Parasite” but has made it clear he has a few ideas kicking around. Bong told press backstage at the Oscars following his Best Picture win, “I have to work, it’s my job. So I’ve been working for the past 20 years, and regardless what happened at Cannes and Oscars, I had been working on two projects before then, I’m continuing to work on them, nothing has changed because of these awards. One is in Korean and one is in English.”

Not much is known about the two film projects Bong is planning. The director told Variety last year that both films “are not big films” and he compared them to the scope of “Parasite” and “Mother.” Bong explained, “The Korean film is located in Seoul and has unique elements of horror and action. It’s difficult to define the genre of my films. The English project is a drama film based on a true event that happened in 2016. Of course I won’t know until I finish the script, but it has to be set half in the U.K. and half in the U.S.”

That’s about all Bong has revealed for now about his next two projects. The director also shared during his lengthy “Parasite” press tour some of the passion projects he wants to direct, one of which is “a moody noir in the vein of Orson Welles’ ‘Touch of Evil,’ set along the U.S. border with Mexico” (via Vanity Fair). Bong has cited “Touch of Evil” as one of the greatest films ever made. Bong also said he dreams of making a big action movie in the vein of the Steve McQueen-starring “The Great Escape.”

“I remember having cold sweats all over my body while watching it,” Bong told Vanity Fair about the film. “It’s a story about someone escaping the prison camps during World War II, but there’s a strange sense of romance in that film, and I would love to do something like that.”

One thing Bong won’t be doing after his Oscar wins is directing a Marvel movie. It’s likely Bong will be getting an influx of offers to direct an American studio film, but he’s not a big fan of superhero cinema. Bong dislikes characters that wear tight spandex, telling Variety last year it makes him uncomfortable and that he “can’t stand” the too-tight costumes. The director also doesn’t view himself as the kind of filmmaker to helm a Marvel movie.

“I don’t think Marvel would ever want a director like me,” Bong said on “The Big Ticket” podcast. “I don’t expect any offers from them anytime soon. Of their movies, I did enjoy the films by James Gunn and James Mangold’s ‘Logan,’ and I think there are great directors who can handle great projects like that. The film industry seems complicated, but I think it’s quite simple for directors. It’s just best to do what you’re good at. And so I don’t really think Marvel and I are suitable for each other. That’s something I just intuitively feel.”

Bong told IndieWire at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival that whatever the future holds for him he is confident it’s something original. The director said he has gotten Hollywood offers before, most notably after the success of “The Host,” but he has no interest in directing franchise fare or sequels. Bong said he wants to keep modeling his career after Quentin Tarantino by prioritizing his original ideas and making original cinema. One thing is definite: After collecting four Academy Awards, Bong is staying busy and cinema and television will be all the better for it.

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2020-02-10 17:54:00Z
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Watch Bong Joon-ho's Best Moments of the Night | Oscars 2020 - Entertainment Tonight

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2020-02-10 17:02:12Z
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Comedian fires back at Hollywood after Brad Pitt's jab at Republicans during Oscars speech - Fox News

Comedian Michael Loftus said he had to give Brad Pitt credit for delivering a solid punch line at the expense of Republicans at the Oscars, but Loftus had his own jab for Hollywood.

"They told me that I only have 45 seconds up here," said Pitt as he accepted his award for best-supporting actor on Sunday night, "which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week."

"The Brad Pitt thing was kinda funny. It's a good line," conceded Loftus on "Fox and Friends" on Monday, "But it's also 45 seconds longer than anyone in Hollywood gave Trump a chance."

"Even before Trump was elected they were like, 'Oh, we hate him and he's guilty,'" he joked. "They've been going since jump street."

Loftus is also the host of Fox Nation's new show, "The Freedom to Laugh: Loftus Comedy Special."

"It's so rare that people who think like-minded politically, we can get together, people who lean to the right. And we laugh," Loftus told the "Fox and Friends" co-hosts.

The conviction that all Americans, regardless of ideology, should be entitled to a good joke is central to Loftus' comedy.

His special opens with a quote from former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, pointing out the hypocrisy of those who claim to support free speech but only for themselves.

"Some people's idea of free speech is that they are free to say what they like, but if anyone says anything back that is an outrage," the passage reads.

In "The Freedom to Laugh: Loftus Comedy Special," no one is safe — not even former presidents.

"Everybody forgets — at the end of the Clinton administration, he was bombing the snot out of everybody," said Loftus, referring to airstrikes that President Clinton ordered against Saddam Hussein in Iraq and the Yugoslav government in Kosovo.

"Everybody remembers the Bill Clinton when he first came in, when he was relaxed and laid back. And then we found out why," said Loftus, as the crowd roared with laughter.

In another riff, Loftus went off on the Democrats' apparent 2020 campaign strategy.

"I don't know how the Democrats are going to win anything," joked Loftus. "The whole platform that they're running on now is like, 'We got to stop Trump. We got to stop him.'"

"What are they trying to stop?" he asked.

"Wages are going up. Manufacturing jobs are going up. Unemployment's at record lows," he continued. "Everybody's working. Small businesses are taking off. Everything's going great."

"I've never seen so much weeping and gnashing of teeth," he said, imitating President Trump's critics. "'This isn't who we are. This is about the Constitution. We have to stop him. This isn't who we are.'"

"I'm like, 'That's exactly who we are'... We're hillbillies. We fight dirty. We fight to win. We build stuff. And we don't rely on the government. We do cool stuff," he concluded.

To watch all of "The Freedom to Laugh: Loftus Comedy Special" go to Fox Nation and sign up today.

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Fox Nation programs are viewable on-demand and from your mobile device app, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Go to Fox Nation to start a free trial and watch the extensive library from Tomi Lahren, Pete Hegseth, Abby Hornacek, Laura Ingraham, Ainsley Earhardt, Greg Gutfeld, Judge Andrew Napolitano and many more Fox News personalities.

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2020-02-10 17:38:04Z
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Tom Hanks led that 'Parasite' encore rally at Oscars 2020 - New York Post

Tom Hanks showed once again how to be a good neighbor.

The 63-year-old “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” star and consummate Hollywood good guy came to the rescue of “Parasite” co-producer Miky Lee at the 2020 Oscars on Sunday night. Lee was cut off and not able to give an acceptance speech after the Oscars juggernaut won for Best Picture.

After the movie won the last award of the night, co-producer Kwak Sin-ae spoke for 45 seconds, noting the historic nature of the South Korean film snagging both Best Picture and Best International Film at the Oscars.

She tied up her speech by thanking the Academy.

And as Lee approached the microphone for her turn to speak, the lights dimmed and the spotlight returned to presenter Jane Fonda, who was tasked with wrapping up the 92nd annual awards show.

The audience sighed with disappointment, and Hanks, who was sitting in the front row, led the charge to allow the producer to speak.

Tom Hanks led the audience in a rally to bring the team behind "Parasite" back on stage at the 2020 Oscars.
Tom Hanks leads the audience in a rally to bring the team behind “Parasite” back on stage at the 2020 Oscars.ABC

He began waving his hands and yelling “UP! UP! UP!” as other stars, including Charlize Theron and Hanks’ wife, Rita Wilson, joined the rallying call.

After a few seconds, the lights came back on and Lee was able to have her turn at the microphone.

The movie’s director, Bong Joon Ho, who had already accepted three awards — Best Original Screenplay, Best International Film and Best Director — had opted not to speak again, allowing his colleagues to have their moment in the sun.

Lee went on to thank Bong and the Korean fans who supported the film’s meteoric rise.

“I really like to thank director Bong,” Lee added. “Thank you for being you. And I like everything about him: his smile, his crazy hair, the way he talks, the way he walks and especially the way he directs. And, what I really like about him is his sense of humor and the fact is he can be really making fun of himself and he never takes himself seriously.”

She continued: “I’d like to thank everybody who’s been supporting ‘Parasite,’ and who’s been working with ‘Parasite’ and who’s been loving ‘Parasite.’ ”

Executive producers Min Heoi Heo and Miky Lee accept the Best Picture award for "Parasite" during the 92nd Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on February 09, 2020.
Executive producers Min Heoi Heo and Miky Lee accept the Best Picture award for “Parasite” during the 92nd Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Feb. 9, 2020.Getty Images

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2020-02-10 16:47:00Z
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