Survey of Korean Cinema with Hannah Baek_2025 Logo
  • South Korean Cinema: An Unconventional Crash Course with Hannah Baek

    Workshop Registration - 2025
  • Join us on a crash course through South Korean cinema, but don’t expect your typical 101 film history course! We’ll unpack significant themes, stylistic tendencies, and moments in South Korean cinema through an eclectic selection of films from the 1960s to the 2020s. We’ll interrogate exactly what “Korean film” is as we traverse its relationships to history and politics, gender and sex, transnational flows of capital, and more. Each workshop will include a hearty mix of lecture, group discussion, and live film analysis. No previous familiarity with Korean film, language, or history is required to enjoy—everyone will walk away from our series armed with a list of new films to explore and new insights for appreciating them.

    To follow along, take care to watch the main film for each week on your own before coming to class. We’ll also engage with clips from supplementary films, which the most gungho are welcome to watch before class as well. Almost all course films are available to stream for free, and all are available to rent from Scarecrow Video.

    Module 1: Precarity - August 4th, 2025

    What is South Korean cinema? To open our course, we will begin conceptualizing the stylistic tendencies, genres, and concerns that connect South Korean films today. To do so, we will consider three films that center the issue of precarity (political, economic, and social): Park Chan-wook’s box office-smashing Joint Security Area (2000), Bong Joon-ho’s globally historic Parasite (2019), and Jeong Jae-eun’s pathbreaking classic Take Care of My Cat (2001).

    Module 2: History on Film - August 11th, 2025

    The past hundred years on the Korean peninsula are some of the most tumultuous of any place in the world—and cinema has been intertwined with this history since the medium’s arrival in Korea. In week two, we will briefly overview Korean political and film history to explore the following questions: How have Korean history and politics shaped the course of Korean filmmaking, and vice versa? How has filmmaking functioned to remember, rebel against, and reimagine the political world of South Korea? To do so, we will take a look at the post-war masterpiece Aimless Bullet (1961), the cheekily dissident filmmaking of March of Fools (1975), and the groundbreaking documentary Habitual Sadness (1997).

    Module 3: Gender and Sex - August 18th, 2025

    Gender and sex have long been tangled up in Korean filmmaking, both on- and off-screen. From the industry’s historical exclusion of female filmmakers, to the glorification of certain archetypal male characters over passive female characters, to the queer-coded subversion of heteronormativity, to the controversy around films that explore feminism in a #MeToo era… gender and sex are everywhere in South Korean cinema. This week, we will tread deeper into these murky waters to think more expansively about gender and sexuality in South Korean films. To do so, we will watch auteur Kim Ki-young’s psychosexual and supernatural drama Io Island (1977) to explore the dynamics between “men,” “women” and beyond. As well, we will unpack the queer revenge story of Memento Mori (1999), parse the heated discussions around the “#MeToo film” Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 (2019), and sample the exciting subversion of patriarchal filmmaking achieved by Korea’s first feminist film collective, Kaidu Club.

    Module 4: “Asia Extreme” - August 25th, 2025

    All of us are watching this course’s South Korean films in the United States. How did this come to be? In week four, we will investigate how Asian cinema—and Korean films in particular—has come to be marketed, circulated, and consumed abroad under the quasi-genre of “Asia Extreme.” But what else is Korean cinema besides “extreme,” why is it sometimes so extreme, and how does it reckon with extreme themes using tools besides gore and violence? To begin thinking about Korean cinema within and beyond a transnational flow of capital, we will discuss such films as the genre-defying cult hit Save the Green Planet! (2003), the “Asia Extreme” cornerstone Oldboy (2003), and the subtle and clever Microhabitat (2017).

     

    All workshops have a suggested registration fee of $100, however we do offer a sliding scale, pay-what-you-can model for those who need that option.

    _________________________________________

    Click here to read a full description for each workshop.

  • Student Demographic Information (optional)
    As a nonprofit organization committed to inclusivity, demographic information helps us with grantwriting efforts as well as providing diverse programs to serve all communities. However, we understand that this information may be sensitive. All of the following responses are optional, based on your comfort level.

  • prevnext( X )
                Full Series - Limited Discount15% Discount! This really helps us continue to provide these types of classes for the community.
                $350.00
                  
                Sliding Scale - $150We really appreciate all of the support!
                $150.00
                  
                Sliding Scale - $100This is our recommended level. This helps us support the incredible instructors and teaching artists that lead our workshops.
                $100.00
                  
                Sliding Scale - $50Thank you for giving at this level! We want you to be a part of our community and participate in as many events as possible.
                $50.00
                  
                Sliding Scale - $25We understand! We want these programs to be as accessible as possible.
                $25.00
                  
                Sliding Scale - $0If you need it, we get it! This is why we do sliding scale!
                $ Free
                  
                Total
                $0.00

                Credit Card Details
              • Should be Empty: