In the Absence

In the Absence is a 2018 South Korean–American[1][2] short documentary film about the 2014 sinking of the MV Sewol passenger ferry in South Korea, in which three hundred people mostly school children lost their lives.[3]

In the Absence
Directed bySeung-jun Yi
Production
company
416 Documenting Group
Field of Vision (II)
First Look Media
Korea Communications Agency
Distributed byField of Vision (II)
Running time
28 Minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean

Background

The film was produced by Gary Byung-Seok Kam and directed by Yi Seung-Jun, with Seung-Jun beginning the process of interviewing the victims families on camera in 2017.[4] The documentary is seen as separated from other documentaries about the disaster, due to the fact that it highlights the disaster and not just the events leading up to the event and/or those responsible for the tragedy.[5]

Format

The documentary utilizes audio from first responders and government officials, aerial video from choppers, and cell phone video and multi-media messages from the victims of the ferry sinking to showcase the disaster in real time.[4] The entire documentary is roughly 29-minutes long, and highlights how the disaster could have been avoided and the aftermath of the disaster such as the Candlelight Protests and the impeachment of then President Park Geun-hye.[6]

Awards

The documentary was awarded the 2018 grand jury prize for short competition in DOC NYC, a documentary film festival in the United States.[4]

In the Absence was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject)[7][8] at the 92nd Academy Awards.[9][10][11][12] Before this nomination (and Parasite’s nominations), no South Korean film had ever been nominated for an Oscar.[13]

gollark: You can figure out the basic bits easily using the browser devtools "network" option.
gollark: It's not documented, but there is.
gollark: There is!
gollark: I mean, I'm not massively angry, it's just... odd and vaguely worrying... that what started as a simple meme investment thing is now embroiled in legal whatevers. And it's secretive.
gollark: It *would*, as far as I know, be possible to share the rest of it, excepting possibly the bits interacting with said proprietary code.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.