Busan Film Fest Festival takes off amid COVID-19 pandemic

Busan Film Fest Festival takes off amid COVID-19 pandemic
South Korean director Bong Joon-ho sends a congratulatory video message to the Busan International Film Festival (BIFF), which opened Oct. 21, 2020, in a scaled-down format due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in this photo captured from the BIFF YouTube channel. No silver screen stars or filmmakers from overseas are attending the 10-day festival, with 192 invited films only to be screened offline in five theaters at the Busan Cinema Center under strict social distancing guidelines. Photo courtesy of YONHAP News Agency.

SEOUL, Oct 21 (NNN-BERNAMA) — This year’s Busan International Film Festival (BIFF) kicked off Wednesday in a reduced format amid the novel coronavirus pandemic, Yonhap News Agency reported.

The festival will run through Oct 30 at the Busan Cinema Centre in the southern port city of Busan, some 453 kilometres southeast of Seoul, featuring 192 films from 68 countries.

The 25th edition was pushed back for two weeks and scaled back sharply in terms of the number of films to be screened and its affiliated events due to the protracted COVID-19 epidemic and strengthened social distancing guidelines.

The opening ceremony with international silver screen stars and filmmakers walking down the red carpet was cancelled, as well as the closing ceremony.

Other on-stage greetings like the “Open Talk” fan meetings and other guest meeting events were all put off or shifted online.

In theaters, all tickets must be booked in advance and online, with only 25 per cent of their normal seating capacity allowed.

Audiences also need to comply with hygiene rules, such as two-metre distancing and wearing a mask, and go through mandatory personal information checks before entering the hall.

The festival’s opener is “Septet: The Story of Hong Kong.”

An omnibus film by seven renowned directors — Sammo Hung, Ann Hui, Patrick Tam, Yuen Wo Ping, Johnnie To, Ringo Lam, and Hark Tsu — it tells the history of Hong Kong through their unique artistic visions from the mid-20th century.

The film, one of the official selections of this year’s Cannes Film Festival, will have its world premiere at BIFF.

The Japanese animated film “Josee, the Tiger and the Fish,” directed by Tamaru Kotaro, will close the festival. A remake of the 2003 film with the same title is about an ailing girl who opens her mind to the outer world as she learns what love is.

Among the 192 invitees are films that have been screened or awarded at major international film festivals including Cannes, Berlin and Venice.

“Minari,” by Korean-American director Lee Isaac Chung, which won a prize at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, was chosen, as were 23 Cannes-selected films, including Yeon Sang-ho’s “Peninsula” and Naomi Kawase’s “True Mothers.”

— NNN-BERNAMA

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