Short films Yim Pil-sung began directing
short films in 1997, with
Souvenir as his first.
Brushing (1998), about an overweight teenage boy who is left home alone with his senile grandfather, was invited to the
Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival.
Mobile (starring
Park Hae-il,
Yoon Jin-seo, and
Yoon Je-moon) was included in the 2003
omnibus Show Me.
Antarctic Journal In 2005, he made his
feature film debut with
Antarctic Journal, a tale of six South Korean explorers on an expedition to reach one of the remotest points in the
South Pole, until mysterious deaths begin to occur as the human psyche preys on itself amidst the icy, barren landscape. The big-budget film starred
Song Kang-ho and
Yoo Ji-tae, and was shot in
New Zealand. It won the Best Feature Film award in the Orient Express-Casa Asia section of the 38th
Sitges Film Festival. Yim then played a small
supporting role in
Bong Joon-ho's monster movie
The Host (2006), as a
white-collar worker who betrays his college friend. He had agreed to appear in the film in exchange for Bong co-writing the screenplay to
Antarctic Journal.
Hansel and Gretel With his second directorial feature, Yim established himself as a
genre filmmaker whose works explore the depths of
horror and
fantasy. Inspired by the
titular fairy tale, in
Hansel and Gretel (2007) a young man (
Chun Jung-myung) gets lost in a forest and stumbles into a house inhabited by three strange children (
Shim Eun-kyung,
Eun Ji-won and
Jin Ji-hee) who refuse to let him leave. It received a Special Mention at the 12th
Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival in 2008 and won two awards at the 29th
Fantasporto in 2009, the Special Jury Prize in the Fantasy competition and Best Film in the Orient Express sidebar. Despite praise for their striking visuals and surprising narrative twists, both of Yim's films were unsuccessful at the box office, which led to him having difficulty finding financing for his succeeding projects.
Doomsday Book In 2007, Yim and
Kim Jee-woon (as co-directors) began filming the
sci-fi omnibus
Doomsday Book. But financing problems halted production; it resumed in 2010, and the film was released in 2012. Yim wrote and directed two of the film's three segments. Both
black comedies, the first segment
A Brave New World is about a
zombie invasion caused by contaminated meat (starring
Ryoo Seung-bum), while the third segment
Happy Birthday is about a family hiding in an underground shelter as an
8-Ball-shaped asteroid wipes out mankind (starring Jin Ji-hee).
Doomsday Book won the top prize at the 16th
Fantasia Festival, the Cheval Noir Award for Best Film. Yim had next planned to direct a
suspense drama about a married American expat who falls for a Korean
femme fatale. Titled
Flower of Evil, it entered pre-production in 2009 but was eventually shelved.
Weekend Prince, a comedy about three men in their thirties who get roaring drunk one weekend (which had Park Hae-il and
Song Sae-byeok attached), similarly did not come to fruition. In 2010, twelve Korean directors and
cinematographers shot short films using the
iPhone 4 for the iPhone 4 Film Festival (later renamed the Olleh Smartphone Film Festival). Yim's short
Super Nerds: No Pain No Gain is a comedy about two die-hard
iPhone fans and their journey to find someone who can attach a
protective film to their newly purchased iPhones without causing air bubbles to form (in the
Korean title
Super Deokhu, "deokhu" originates from the Japanese word "
otaku"). Yim then starred in two
mockumentary-style films in 2013. In
E J-yong's
Behind the Camera, an absentee filmmaker attempts to direct a film remotely via
Skype. Then in
Bong Man-dae's comedy
Playboy Bong, Yim played a director shooting an
erotic-horror film in
Bali who gets replaced when the film's producer is disappointed in the sex scenes.
Scarlet Innocence Seven years after
Hansel and Gretel, Yim returned with his third feature in 2014.
Scarlet Innocence is a modern-day retelling of the classic Korean folktale
Simcheongga; in the original, a virtuous girl named Shim Chung sacrifices herself so that her father's sight may be restored. But in Yim's
film noir, a university professor gradually succumbing to blindness moves to a rural town and begins an obsessive affair with a young woman 17 years his junior (played by
Jung Woo-sung and
Esom, respectively).
Scarlet Innocence made its world premiere at the
2014 Toronto International Film Festival. ==Filmography==