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Chong (film)

Chong is a 2000 Japanese medium-length film (54 min) directed by Lee Sang-il. It premiered in 2000 at the Pia Festival in Tokyo, but was only released on April 21, 2001 for Pia production. A comedy drama, it depicts the life of a high school student attending a Korean school in Japan, especially focusing on the school baseball team.

It was produced in 1999 as a graduation piece at the Japan Film School and won four awards including the Grand Prix at the Pia Film Festival (PFF) 2000. It is Lee Sang-il's directorial debut, before his first feature film two years later. It is also the debut work of cinematographer Shin Hayasaka.

Cast

  • Yang Dae-song (; ) - Masato Hidekazu
  • Cho Hyun-Ki (; ) - Ryuji Yamamoto
  • Yoon Na-mi (; ) - Shiho Takemoto
  • Lee Chong-bok (; ) - Naohiro Ariyama
  • Dae-song's father - Tsutomu Yuzawa
  • Dae-song's mother - Kintohime
  • Yang Song-mi (; ) - Yuka Shimizu
  • Suzuki - Hiroshi Nishikawa
  • Principal - Reiichi Ogiso
  • Baseball club manager - Takaya Fujiwara
  • Female teacher - Wu Xing-hime
  • Male teacher - Ike Yoshihide
  • Convenience store clerk - Kazuhiko Koshikawa
  • Ms. Saito - Asami Saito
  • Omiya Ana - Ikuyo Kimura
  • Pupil in the class - Kazuaki Kubo
  • Pupil in the class - Koji Moyama
  • Pupil in the class - Naomichi Koike
  • Delinquent of the underpass - Ryota Tokunaga
  • Delinquent in the underpass - Sadaharu Yashiro

Title

The title character, 青, means blue in Japanese (read "ao"), and reads "chong" (which also means blue) in Korean. The sign was chosen as the title because, in Japan, the word Chong is a derogatory term for Koreans in the country. The film is therefore sometimes referred to as Ao - Chong or Blue - Chong.

Awards

  • 22nd Pia Film Festival (2000): Grand Prix
  • Planning Award (TBS Award)
  • Entertainment Award (Rentrack Japan Award)
  • Music Award (TOKYO FM Award)

Screenings

DVD

A DVD version was released by Geneon on April 7, 2006.

Reception

The film "skillfully manages to approach the difficult subject of the Korean minority in Japan through a charming and very involving story about a man between two nationalities", according to Nippon Connection.

Chong was also said to be a "groundbreaking (production) in the way (it) expressed (its) the self-approach of Korean-Japanese or zainichi Koreans with rich humour. This subject matter, which in the past could only be expressed in a dark and serious way, was here skillfully expressed in a light-hearted and funny way".

The film alludes to elements in the life of the director.

References