

K-Family Affairs
Feminist mom ♥ Bureaucrat dad = ?
In her first feature-length documentary, filmmaker Nam Arum turns her camera on her parents, two members of South Korea’s 386 Generation. The political activism of this generation came to a head in June 1987 with major protests that forced the authoritarian government to hold universal suffrage elections and implement key democratic reforms. Over 35 years later, the filmmaker reflects on the state of this democracy through a warm-hearted family portrait set against the backdrop of the country’s recent history. Using a personal and intimate cinematic style, Arum examines her father's adherence to conventionality as a high-ranking civil servant and her mother's fervent enthusiasm as a feminist activist. In the midst of these two contrasting dynamics, Arum seeks to discover her own role and how she can contribute to social change.
You may like

President′s 7 Hours

The Talent Show

Yellow Ribbon

Life Goes On

Intention

SEWOL: Years in the Wind

The Truth Shall Not Sink with Sewol

The Day, December 3, 2024 'Fabricated Insurrection, Hidden Truth'

Ghost Ship

After Diving Bell

10 Years After the Sinking, Zero-Sum

Forgetting and Remembering 2 : reflection

In the Absence

Reset

Cruel State

Forgetting and Remembering

Relay Race

Three Sides to Every Story

Upside Down

We remember: Trauma

The Class of ‘92

Naqoyqatsi

Avatar: The Deep Dive - A Special Edition of 20/20

Love, Marilyn