Film Review: ‘A Taxi Driver’ 
 
 
 
 
An entertaining journey into a tragic and violent chapter of Korean modern history.
Revisiting the 1980 Gwangju Massacre, a landmark historical event in South Korea’s march towards democracy, director Jang Hoon brings a sappy, feel-good touch to a tragic subject by focusing on the bond between a German reporter (Thomas Kretschmann) and the taxi driver (Song Kang-ho) who helped him get the news out to the world.
Jang, who’s established himself as a hit-maker with features like “Secret Reunion” (also starring Song) and “The Front Line,” again worked B.O. miracles, earning the third highest domestic opening score of all time with “A Taxi Driver.” While the film clearly taps into the national zeitgeist, buoyed by a sweeping show of people’s power that ousted the president, international audiences should also appreciate the actors’ feisty turns. (It opened in the U.S. on Aug. 11.)
“A Taxi Driver” is the first major production to tackle the Gwangju Uprising head-on since the 2007 blockbuster “May 18.” Having less pretensions to epic grandeur than that film, it instead gains credibility from being based on a true story, and closing footage of the German reporter returning to the democratized country in 2003 certainly adds historical heft.
The script by Uhm Yoo-na and Jo Seul-ye has drastically simplified the political context that triggered the uprising, but this in turn helps foreign viewers grasp the plot more easily than denser, more intellectual probings of the subject in such films as Im Sang-soo’s “The Old Garden” or Lee Chang-dong’s “Peppermint Candy.” Opening titles explain how the 1979 assassination of dictator Park Chung-hee sparked hopes of democracy among the younger generation, though the power vacuum was soon filled by Gen. Chun Doo-hwan, who declared martial law in a 1980 coup. In Gwangju, protest quickly spilled out of universities and engulfed the southwestern city.
Despite the government’s attempts at keeping foreign press in the dark, Juergen Hinspeter (Kretschmann), correspondent for a German broadcast channel, gets wind of the unrest brewing in South Korea. From his base in Tokyo, he flies to Seoul where his contact helps him book a taxi to drive him south to the beleaguered city. When the protagonist (Song) whose real name is never revealed in the film, overhears that a foreigner is forking out about $900 for the fare, the cash-strapped single father cunningly steals the job from the intended driver.
They arrive on May 19, a day after the uprising broke out, to find the city completely sealed off by the army, although the two still manage to bluff their way pass blockades. Initially, they come across a group of students whose youthful innocence is expressed by the way they sing and dance like revelers at a Woodstock concert, but eventually wind up at a hospital where the casualties provide raw evidence of the bloody crackdown.
The protagonist becomes embroiled in a squabble with local taxi drivers, who scoff at his mercenary attitude. Jang makes good-humored fun of biases between Seoul citizens and natives of the Jeolla district, where the film takes place, but later demonstrates how humanist values transcend regional differences. Although the driver initially displays cowardice in the face of conflict, his personal struggle is rendered agonizing enough by Song to give full force to a climactic U-turn.
Apart from re-creating one incident in which paratroopers tried to wipe out a whole crowd in front of a broadcast station, the film eschews the kind of bombastic, effects-heavy setpieces that characterized “May 18.” Instead, it depicts the regime’s brutal repression implicitly through its blatant attack on press freedom and shameless distortion of the truth. This in turn accentuates Hinzpeter’s role in raising international awareness for their crimes.
According to historical records, on May 20, hundreds of taxis mobilized themselves in a parade to support marching citizens and rescue the injured. Hailed as “drivers of democracy,” many lost their lives. Since only a few taxis are deployed in any given scene, the film hasn’t re-created an adequate sense of the scope of their heroism. However, the power of solidarity is conveyed in a late car-chase sequence that’s choreographed to rousing effect. (The film looks polished overall, its mood buoyed by a playful, jazzy score.)
Although the film’s portrayal of its main characters has recognizable precedents, the two lead actors calibrate their mutual respect and co-dependency to engaging effect, as the escalating violence and peril heighten their sense of personal mission. Echoing the role of American correspondent Sydney Schanberg in “The Killing Fields,” Hinzpeter arrives in Korea as an opportunistic newshound rather than a champion of justice. Kretschmann plays him initially with an unlikable cold efficiency, treating his driver and other Koreans as mere tools or fodder for his article. Impressively, there are no overnight changes in his persona. Rather, the actor maintains a certain stiff composure even as his passion and affection for the democracy fighters visibly grows. The final parting is genuinely touching as the two men now relate to each other as equals.
Audiences familiar with Korean cinema will instantly recognize a resemblance between the character of the taxi driver and Song’s role in “The Attorney,” in which he transforms from a mercenary tax solicitor to an altruistic human-rights lawyer. And yet Song makes a subtle distinction between the two characters, as his comic charm betrays the tough-talking character’s soft heart, as when he keeps letting passengers in need short-change him.
Article Source: http://variety.com/2017/film/reviews/a-taxi-driver-review-taeksi-woonjunsa-1202529383/
Image Source: https://orig03.deviantart.net/dc53/f/2017/182/7/0/a_taxi_driver__korean__movie_folder_icon_by_zenoasis-dber5r6.png
VOCABULARY WORDS:
1. Tragic (adj.) ~ causing or characterized by extreme distress or sorrow
2. Sappy (adj.) ~ excessively sentimental mawkish
3. Oust (v.) ~ drive out or expel (someone) from a position or place
4. Feisty (adj.) ~ (of a person, typically one who is relatively small or weak) lively, determined, and courageous
5. Pretension (n.) ~ a claim or the assertion of a claim to something
6. Grandeur (n.) ~ splendor and impressiveness, especially of appearance or style
7. Cunning (adj.) ~ having or showing skill in achieving one's ends by deceit or evasion
8. Engulf (v.) ~ (of a natural force) sweep over (something) so as to surround or cover it completely
9. Fork (v./ informal) ~ to pay, used with over, out, or up
10. Embroil (v.) ~ involve (someone) deeply in an argument, conflict, or difficult situation
11. Squabble (n.) ~ a noisy quarrel about something petty or trivial
12. Transcend (v.) ~ be or go beyond the range or limits of (something abstract, typically a conceptual field or division)
13. Climactic (adj.) ~ (of an action, event, or scene) exciting or thrilling and acting as a climax to a series of events
14. Eschew (v.) ~ deliberately avoid using abstain from
15. Accentuate (v.) ~ make more noticeable or prominent
16. Fodder (n.) ~ people considered as readily available and of little value
17. Altruistic (adj.) ~ showing a disinterested and selfless concern for the well-being of others unselfish
18. Subtle (adj.) ~ (especially of a change or distinction) so delicate or precise as to be difficult to analyze or describe
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION:
1. Have you seen the movie 'A Taxi Driver'? What do you think of the film?
2. Who are the main characters of the movie? How did they change throughout the film?
3. What are the differences between the historical event the movie was based on and the movie itself? Give some examples.