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And the award goes to ...

September 10, 2012

The South Korean movie 'Pieta' has won the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival. Director of the film, Kim Ki-duk, says his film is a criticism of extreme capitalism.

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South Korean filmmaker Kim Ki-duk
Image: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

South Korean film director Kim Ki-duk became the first Korean to win the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival on Sunday, September 09, for his film "Pieta."

"Pieta," which is Kim's 18th film, tells the story of a heartless debt collector, who preys on worn-out workshops in a district in Seoul that is being redeveloped. He is forced to examine his values when a woman claiming to be his mother walks into his life. The character undergoes an emotional struggle for redemption involving and has an unhealthy relationship with the woman.

Kim said "Pieta" was a movie that denounced "extreme capitalism," adding that the third protagonist in his film was money.

'A new start'

"It's been three years since I've done a feature film and for me this is a new start," Kim told the media.

The eccentric South Korean director delighted the audience at the award ceremony by singing the Korean folk song "Arirang" on stage while thanking the jury. Kim said: “This is a song that we Koreans sing when we are sad, when we feel alone, when we feel desperate, but also when we're happy."

From left, South Korean film director Kim Ki-duk, actress Cho Min-soo and actor Lee Jung-jin
'Pieta' is praised for its intensityImage: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/GettyImages

Hollywood producer and director Michael Mann, who presided over this year's jury at the festival, was full of praise for "Pieta," which he said "seduced you viscerally."

South Koreans delighted

Kim's films, often viewed as too violent and idiosyncratic for common moviegoers, have mostly flopped at box offices. But South Korean moviemakers and filmgoers were delighted over his success at the Venice Film Festival.

"Today I'd like to sincerely congratulate Kim, who has … been an outsider particularly at home," Shim Jae-myung, a South Korean film producer tweeted on Sunday.

"Kim's winning of the Golden Lion ... is the biggest news in the history of South Korean cinema," Kim Dong-ho, the founding director of the Busan International Film Festival, told the media.

Movie director Lee Hyeon-seung said he felt both "proud and shameful for Kim Ki-duk's winning (of the prize) because there was nothing the local movie industry has actually done for him," Lee tweeted.

shs/sb (AFP, Reuters)