Red Scarf (film)

Red Scarf (Korean: 빨간 마후라; RR: Balgan Mahura), also known as Red Muffler and Operation Air Raid-Red Muffler, is a 1964 South Korean aviation war film set during the Korean War.[1] Headlined by stars Shin Young-kyun, Choi Eun-hee, Choi Moo-ryong[1] some of the best known South Korean actors of their time, Red Scarf is among the most iconic of prolific director Shin Sang-ok's work,[1] and was well received outside of South Korea. The film was made with the cooperation of the Republic of Korea Air Force (ROKAF) and is particularly well remembered for its aerial sequences; especially the final showdown between RoKAF F-86 Sabres and Korean People's Air Force MiG-15s. It inspired the 2012 action film R2B: Return to Base.[2]

Red Scarf
Hangul
Revised RomanizationBalgan Mahura
Directed byShin Sang-ok
Produced byShin Tae-seon
Screenplay byKim Kang-yoon
Story byHan Wun-sa
StarringShin Young-kyun
Choi Eun-hee
Choi Moo-ryong
Music byHwang Mun-pyeong
CinematographyKim Jong-rae
Jeong Hae-jun (aerial sequences)
Edited byYang Seong-ran
Production
company
Shin Films
Release date
  • March 27, 1964 (1964-03-27) (South Korea)
  • 1964 (1964) (Taiwan)
  • September 15, 1965 (1965-09-15) (Hong Kong)
  • April 9, 1966 (1966-04-09) (Japan)
Running time
100 min
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean

Plot

In 1952, during the Korean War, many South Korean fighter pilots were killed. Of those that remain is one of the bravest and best, Major Na Gwan-jung. In the air he is cool and level headed, and directly and swiftly dispatches the enemy with a minimum of complication. On the ground he spends his time drinking with his comrades, the vagaries of life and death in wartime has led to the pilots adopting a live for the moment approach to life.

Ji-seon is the wife of a fallen pilot, widowed very soon after becoming married, unable to support herself the only option left to her is to become a bargirl. Na Gwan-jung saves her from this fate, helps provide for her, and falls in love with her. However, as she is the widow of a close comrade Gwan-jung cannot bring himself to act on his love; instead he acts as matchmaker introducing her to Bae Dae-bong, a cocky hotshot pilot, newly transferred to his unit.

Na Gwan-jung's unit is tasked with the destruction of a vitally strategic bridge, during which Bae Dae-bong's plane is shot down. Not wanting Ji-seon to lose another loved one, Gwan-jung risks all to keep the downed pilot safe until he can be recovered. The South Korean pilots are victorious and complete their mission, however with thoughts other than taking down the enemy fighter pilots spoiling his focus, Na Gwan-jung is unable to fly and fight in his usual cool, detached and dispassionate way and is killed in action.

The unit returns to base and Na Gwan-jung's will is read out, and in accordance with it his effects, including the red scarf which all the pilots wear, are divided amongst his comrades. Na Gwan-jung's mother arrives to visit her son with a delivery of beer, only to find that he has died in action. In keeping with her son's character she shares out the beers she brought for him amongst his comrades. Ji-seon soon too arrives and on learning of Gwan-jung's death, clutches his red scarf and cries inconsolably.

Cast

South Korean ace fighter pilot
Young widow, wife of a comrade of Gwan-jung
South Korean fighter pilot, new hotshot assigned to unit
South Korean fighter pilot, late husband of Ji-seon
  • Yun In-ja

Awards

11th Asia-Pacific Film Festival (1964)
Best director - Shin Sang-ok
Best leading actor -Shin Young-kyun
Best film editing - Yang Seong-ran
2nd Blue Dragon Film Awards (1964)
Best supporting actor - Choi Moo-ryong
Best screenplay - Kim Kang-yoon
Best cinematography (color) - Kim Jong-rae
Award for technical excellence (editing) - Yang Seong-ran
4th Grand Bell Awards (1965)
Best supporting actress - Yun In-ja
Best cinematography - Kim Jong-rae

Background

The film was made with the full support of the Republic of Korea Air Force and production costs were partly subsidised by the South Korean military government in line with its film policy of supporting anticommunist propaganda films.[3]

The Red Scarf of the title is not the red neckerchief associated with the communist pioneer movement, but a scarf introduced as a device to aid visual location of downed South Korean airmen, it has since become and remains one of the symbols of the Republic of Korea Air Force.[4]

Reception

Red Scarf was particularly well received outside of South Korea and was the first South Korean film to receive a nationwide distribution in Japan. In Taiwan it proved popular from the school playground upwards, children played at and wanted to grow up to be aviators, the theme song could be heard in every back alley and the red scarf became a fashion item.[5] The film has been described as a precursor of the Korean Wave in Taiwan.

In Taiwan and Chinese speaking areas it was known as 紅巾特攻隊, literally Red Scarf Special Operations Unit.

Remake

In 2011 work began on loose remake of the film as a last project for Korean entertainer Rain prior to the start of his mandatory military service. Red Scarf was used as a working title and in preproduction, the film was released in 2012 as R2B: Return to Base. In the remake the point of view character is the new hotshot pilot transferred to the unit. Like its predecessor Return to Base was made with the full support of the RoKAF, and like its predecessor its final message is that the RoKAF stands vigilant and ready to defend South Korea from the North.

gollark: I tried looking into it but really I can only trace it to, seemingly, a firefox HTTP/2 bug.
gollark: Comments are functional. Incdec is broken in Firefox for unfathomable reasons.
gollark: Also, do you have a *not*bugreport, or just a bugreport prefixed with an !?
gollark: Which ones?
gollark: It turns out baidicoot accidentally had `WIDTH` instead of `HEIGHT` in one place.

See also

  • The Bridges at Toko-ri

References

  1. Heskins, Andrew (16 December 2015). "The Red Scarf". Eastern Kicks. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  2. "Director Kim Dong-Won's Soar Into the Sun Launches a New Teaser Poster". BeyondHollywood.com. 16 June 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  3. Lee, Hyagnjin (2000). Contemporary Korean Cinema: Culture, Identity and Politics. Manchester University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-0719060083. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  4. Kim, Hyo-jin (3 February 2015). "Former Air Force chief of staff dies at 91". The Korea Times. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLgm6XCF2a4

Notes

  • This article is based on the Chinese language version of this article.
  • This article uses where possible the established romanizations of cast and crew member's names, where these have been impossible to find (and for the character names), the names used are revised romanizations of the names given in the Chinese Wikipedia article read as Hanja.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.