Moss (film)

Moss (Korean: 이끼; RR: Iggi) is a 2010 South Korean mystery thriller film directed by Kang Woo-suk. It was based on the popular webtoon of the same title by Yoon Tae-ho.

Moss
South Korean film poster
Hangul
Revised RomanizationIggi
McCune–ReischauerIkki
Directed byKang Woo-suk
Produced byJeong Seon-yeong
Written byJung Ji-woo
Based onMoss
by Yoon Tae-ho
StarringPark Hae-il
Jung Jae-young
Yoo Jun-sang
Yoo Sun
Music byJo Yeong-wook
CinematographyKim Seong-bok
Kim Yong-heung
Edited byKo Im-pyo
Production
company
Distributed byCJ Entertainment
Release date
  • July 14, 2010 (2010-07-14)
Running time
163 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Box officeUS$21,925,534[1]

Plot

In a small town in South Korea, a corrupt detective named Cheon is asked by a church minister to arrest an unofficial street preacher, whose influence has been growing, and who has collected large donations. The donors are pressured into saying that they were defrauded, which leads to the preacher's imprisonment and subsequent torture by Cheon in order to extract a confession. To Cheon's surprise, the preacher demonstrates amazing endurance and will-power, leading Cheon to release him and to fund his preaching. Cheon uses their new-found friendship to bolster his own reputation and recruit henchmen. Around this time, a young girl named Lee is raped by three men, and Cheon earns her respect by beating them up.

Around 25 years later, Ryoo, the estranged son of the preacher, is anonymously informed of his father's death and travels to the town, which happens to be the new jurisdiction of his acquaintance Park, a prosecutor. Ryoo encounters an elderly Cheon, whom all the townsfolk seem to venerate and fear. With Cheon are three henchmen, Jeon, Ha, and Kim, and also Lee, who became Cheon's wife. After the funeral, Ryoo stays behind to investigate, as he suspects his father was murdered, and finds several clues such as suspicious real-estate transactions. At this point, Jeon attempts to murder Ryoo, but Ryoo fights back and kills him. Ha attempts to murder Ryoo, who resists by lighting Ha's house on fire. Lee sees this and rescues Ryoo, and minutes later Ha burns to death, having entered the burning house to rescue his valuables.

As it turns out, Cheon has been serially extorting townspeople for their land, which he re-sells, and he has murdered anyone who didn't cooperate. Owing to his political connections, the police never indict him. Additionally, a mass poisoning occurred at a prayer house during this period, leaving dozens dead, and the culprit was never caught. Park, having spoken with Ryoo, builds a case against Cheon over the opposition of his corrupt superiors, and the last henchman Kim agrees to testify. Sadly, Cheon eaves-drops on the conversation and has Kim murdered. Ryoo angrily confronts Cheon, who reveals that Ryoo's father, upon realizing the extent of Cheon's corruption, attempted to murder Cheon in his sleep. Lee, fortunately, agrees to testify and to hand over evidence. She explains that years ago she had opposed a tentative plan to dispose of Ryoo's father, and in retaliation, Cheon's three henchmen had raped her.

As the town is raided by police, Ryoo, Park, and Lee confront Cheon at his house. Cheon is outraged that Lee betrayed him, and what is more, they argue over who did the prayer-house massacre. Cheon claims that Ryoo's father did it, while Lee claims that Cheon did it. In the midst of the raid, Cheon's son attempts to burn the evidence, and accidentally kills himself. As the police try to arrest Cheon, he shoots himself in the head, which brings the case to a close, though Ryoo's father's death goes unexplained. A year later, Ryoo visits his father's grave, and discovers that Lee has become the leader of the town. He suddenly recalls the anonymous phone call, as well as the convenient placement of clues, and realizes, to his horror, that Lee was his father's murderer. Having been tortured by Cheon, and wishing for an escape, Lee poisoned Ryoo's father so that Ryoo would arrive and open an investigation, the one which finally brought about Cheon's defeat.

Cast

  • Park Hae-il as Ryoo Hae-kook
  • Jung Jae-young as Cheon Yong-deok, the village head
  • Yoo Jun-sang as Park Min-wook, a public prosecutor
  • Yoo Sun as Lee Yeong-ji, a village resident
  • Yoo Hae-jin as Kim Deok-cheon, a village head
  • Kim Sang-ho as Jeon Seok-man, a village resident
  • Kim Joon-bae as Ha Seong-kyoo, a village resident
  • Heo Joon-ho as Ryoo Mok-hyeon, Hae-kook's father
  • Kang Shin-il as a district prosecutor
  • Im Seung-dae as Mr. Cheon, a village police officer
  • Jeong Gyoo-soo as a principal
  • Lee Cheol-min

Production

The film was shot in Muju County, North Jeolla Province.[2][3]

International release

The film was picked up for distribution in the UK by Inclusionism Films. The DVD release featured extensive interviews with both the film's director and comic artist Yoon Tae-ho.

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Recipient Result
201018th Chunsa Film Art AwardsBest FilmMossWon
Best DirectorKang Woo-sukWon
Best Supporting ActorYoo Jun-sangWon
Best CinematographyKim Seong-bok, Kim Yong-heungWon
Best LightingKang Dae-heeWon
Best EditingKo Im-pyoWon
Best MusicJo Yeong-wookWon
19th Buil Film AwardsBest ActorJung Jae-youngWon
47th Grand Bell AwardsBest FilmMossNominated
Best DirectorKang Woo-sukWon
Best ActorJung Jae-youngNominated
Best Supporting ActorYoo Hae-jinNominated
Best CinematographyKim Sung-bok, Kim Yong-heungWon
Best Art DirectionJo Sung-won, Lee Tae-hunWon
Best Costume DesignJo Sang-gyeongNominated
Best Sound EffectsOh Se-jin, Kim Suk-wonWon
31st Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest FilmMossNominated
Best DirectorKang Woo-sukWon
Best ActorJung Jae-youngWon
Best Supporting ActorYoo Hae-jinWon
Best Supporting ActorYoo Jun-sangNominated
Best Supporting ActressYoo SunNominated
Best LightingKang Dae-heeWon
Technical Award (Make-up)Jang JinNominated
8th Korean Film AwardsBest Supporting ActorYoo Hae-jinWon
20115th Asian Film AwardsBest Supporting ActorYoo Hae-jinNominated
47th Baeksang Arts AwardsBest FilmMossNominated
Best Director (Film)Kang Woo-sukNominated
gollark: It did break lots, sure, but unless TJ09 manages to have gone against all sanity advice regarding database use, `-` at the start should not be a problem.
gollark: If it did, TJ09 has done it utterly, *utterly* wrong.
gollark: Weird And Arbitrary Rules, #90062.
gollark: Must just be some weird prohibition against starting names with `-`.
gollark: I'm pretty sure it's *not*.

References

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