MoNSooN

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Video: DoAn Forest

Music: “MoNSooN.” – a song from the alnum MeMoRieS FRoM THe FuTuRe. by mÌиdT૦UcHbE▲Ts.

made in September 2012

About this video:
I found myself fascinated by this bucket standing alone on this rooftop across the alley under the window of my Seoul apartment. There was something deeply satisfying about seeing this full bucket overflowing. The circle of the rim seemed to be a portal. The surface of the water seemed to speak a truth of the universe.
A few days previously, I’d downloaded a recent album by a beat-maker extraordinaire named MiNdToUcH. Without looking at song titles, the track “MoNSooN.” caught my attention. I saw the three ‘o’s of monsoon and thought of the circular rim of the bucket. (This almost became a very typographic-focussed video.)
The song, with its three distinct sections, called out for a completely different treatment in each section. The first part feels meditative and balanced; the middle floats; and the end comes unhinged. Im the video, I wanted to keep a sense of continuity in space; I also wanted to not make myself be limited by own footage, or, in other words, to let the song guide me into territory my own video footage wouldn’t necessarily reach. So, I began with my own cinema, my own bucket (well, technically, my neighbor’s bucket), then I looked in through the window upon the cinema of another, and finally let the cinema be invaded.
I want to give credit to some of the inspirations. First, the MiNdToUcH track; this is definitely a video that would not exist in this shape or form if it weren’t for the track. The music suggested the scenes, rather than being pinned to scenes already set. For the second part, I wanted something sexy and rainy; and, fortunately, a Korean film I’d seen fifteen years previously at the 1997 Vancouver International Film Festival came to mind: Motel Cactus, photographed by Christopher Doyle. I love how this entire film stayed in the same motel room, giving the viewer the time to also get to know the space itself. For the final part, I sampled scenes from the video game Call of Duty Black Ops, using the Kowloon map. As a non-video gamer, what led me to this? Well, just a month before at the 2012 Seoul Exis Film Festival, I saw a film by video artist Ip Yuk Yiu called “Another Day of Depression in Kowloon.” In this film, he took ambient scenes from this same game, turning it into a thoughtful, meditative exploration of space; rather than scenes of war, it was just spacey, still-camera scenes of rain filling the cracked textures of the virtual Kowloon. Seeing this film, my eyes were opened to the idea that video games could be a rich source of cinema (and, yes, I am aware that YouTube is filled with Machinima clips, so I know I’m late to this idea). Here, I didn’t actually sample the Ip Yuk Yiu film, because I wanted something more stalkerish, frenetic, and suspenseful. By the way, I went crazy with the filters in Final Cut Pro X to reinvent the look of the game.
There’s one more thing I want to mention about the first part; when the video cuts away from the roof and the bucket and shows the floating texts, “The earth reflects heavens,” this is footage of a temporary art installation that was at Sun Yat-Sen Gardens in Vancouver in Fall 2011. I filmed it on a rainy day, but it wasn’t just the rainy connection I wanted to make; to me, the wisdom the words was the wisdom of the bucket. The artist’s website is here: http://www.yoonhyungmin.com/heaven-and-earth/

… also check out a video I made two years, documenting a MiNdToUcH recording session in January 2011: http://www.doanforest.com/2011/01/mindtouch-minor-intrusion-sesson/ (or here’s the YouTube Link)

Seoul Wizard Sunset

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Sunset in Seoul, five or six days ago … been brushed by a typhoon since then … living at the moment in Cheonho-dong, Seoul, walking distance from where this panorama photo was taken …

Calm at the North Korean border

The day before departing Korea, a friend drove us up to the top of the Gimpo region, near the North Korean border. Along most parts of the border, the heavily fortified green space of the DMZ, or demilitarized zone, separates the North and South. In this part, soon after the merging of the Imjin and Han Rivers, and not far from the Yellow Sea, the river essentially takes over the function of the DMZ. The river is made inaccessible by a barbed fence and frequent guard towers. In the hills beyond, military transport roads can be seen.
It has been more than half a century since the Korean war divided the nation. Life goes on here near the border, and I wonder if it’s even on the mind of the people I see here, or if they’ve just gotten used to the idea that they live near a wall. Meanwhile, the birds and the bugs travel freely back and forth.

Autumn Letter

This film presents autumn scenes filmed around Seoul in November 2007, particularly on the walking trails of Namsan Mountain in central Seoul. A lot of the footage comes from the day I spent hanging around with my friend Matt – he was shooting photos, and I was doing video. It seems like I’m less shy about shooting people if I’m with someone. This video also represents my first film with the HD camera (Canon HV-120) that I bought from my friend Billy just a day or two previous. I love being productive with new technology right after I get it.
The music is an old Korean song by Kim Min-Gi called “Kaeul Pyunji” (“Autumn Letter”) (in Korean: 김민기 – 가을 편지).

Woman of the Sea

Footage of Jeju Island, its waterfalls, waves, and diving woman set to the music of Jet Echo’s “Nizium.” (myspace.com/jetecho)
Most of the footage was recorded in June 2001 on a rainy day with my old Digital-8 camera. I just didn’t have any idea what to do with the footage, until I somehow thought it would go nice with this song.

New Years Eve in Seoul

This is a document of my New Year’s Eve in Seoul, 2006. One month later, I would be leaving Korea to return to Canada. The new year’s festivities took place on Jongno road in central Seoul. There were just 1000s upon 1000s of people there, and no regard for safety with firecrackers and fireworks going off in all directions. Nearby is the Cheonggyecheon stream, so early in this video, there’s some scenes from there. My friend Matt Lamers was there, and he took some photos and video, too, a few of which I included here.