1996, the best year in movie history, pt. 90: Green fish
Tagging Green Fish (1997) as a “gangster” flick is like calling Badlands a “spree killer” flick: it ignores the poetry. Beautiful little scenes are interspersed with violent ones. The little scenes carry the movie.
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Ilsan, which lies within commuting distance of Seoul, was once farmland. Now, high-rises stand next to the fields. Mak-dong’s family still lives in a hut. The patriarch has died. Mak-dong’s oldest brother is mentally disabled; another brother, a policeman, is a drunkard; another barely gets by, delivering eggs; their sister does sex work; their mother cleans houses.
Mak-dong has just completed his military service. Riding the train home, he confronts ruffians who are molesting a stylish young woman. The ruffians beat him. He loses his belongings; the woman retrieves them and tries to contact him. He tracks her to Seoul, where he lands himself in another fight, this time with the gangsters whose boss the young woman, Mi-ae, is mistress to. The boss, “Older Brother,” brings Mak-dong into the gang.
Mak-dong’s talent is for taking beatings. His first assignment is to bait a councilman into beating him up after karaoke. The councilman thus acquires a debt to “Older Brother.” Such is the labor to which Mak-dong is put.
I’ll support the family, Mak-dong tells his brothers. He works for their sake – and for Mi-ae’s.
And, paradoxically, he is motivated by genuine loyalty to his exploiter, “Older Brother.” Not just by need or fear.
You might think such loyalty a misguided, idiosyncratic compulsion. But “Older Brother” shows a similar loyalty to the older head of a rival gang. Although these two men are adversaries, they both uphold the seniority code.
Mak-dong’s fellow junior gangsters are ineffectual louts. The parallel with Mak-dong’s biological family is unmissable: the gangsters also are called “brothers.” Mak-dong does better work than his fellows – as “Older Brother” recognizes. Yet he remains at the bottom of the pecking order. Only the boss’s intercession saves Mak-dong from suffering more abuse than he does. The gang is hardly a meritocracy.
And Mi-ae? Behave how she will – obediently, or throwing tantrums – she’ll always be the “kept” woman. That’s her fixed place.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
As a genre specimen, Green Fish exhibits the common tropes: police corruption; assassinations; the “kept” woman’s daliance with a subordinate member of the gang.
But these are just pegs from which to suspend the individual scenes. And these, often, are glorious.
(1) Mak-dong’s early encounter with the ruffians on the train has a surprising, satisfying logic of reversal and counter-reversal.
(2) Mi-ae lets go of a scarf, which flutters from her train window and lands on Mak-dong’s face.
(3) Restaurant patrons discuss whether to order the dog soup or the chicken soup. They agree on the chicken and then join the cooks in chasing the condemned bird around the yard.
(4) The egg vendor is pulled over, bribes the police, is cheated, and chases the police in turn.
(A persistent theme is contempt for official authority. All of the police are corrupt or weak. Mak-dong’s policeman brother prefers to describe himself as a public servant; thrown out of a restaurant, he makes no appeal to his badge. Mak-dong, as a soldier, receives no respect from civilians. Is this because every man must take his turn in the armed forces? Or must every man take a turn because soldiering is disdained?)
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
I was hooked from the opening credits, which are set against lovely old photographs of Mak-dong and his family in the countryside.
An early scene (below): Mak-dong the ex-soldier comes home. See how indifferently he walks past another fight. (Fights seem very common.) You can get a sense of the movie’s soapish/noirish music. The mood is of a defeat.
Which, for many rural citizens, was what Korea’s new industrial prosperity was.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Ilsan, which lies within commuting distance of Seoul, was once farmland. Now, high-rises stand next to the fields. Mak-dong’s family still lives in a hut. The patriarch has died. Mak-dong’s oldest brother is mentally disabled; another brother, a policeman, is a drunkard; another barely gets by, delivering eggs; their sister does sex work; their mother cleans houses.
Mak-dong has just completed his military service. Riding the train home, he confronts ruffians who are molesting a stylish young woman. The ruffians beat him. He loses his belongings; the woman retrieves them and tries to contact him. He tracks her to Seoul, where he lands himself in another fight, this time with the gangsters whose boss the young woman, Mi-ae, is mistress to. The boss, “Older Brother,” brings Mak-dong into the gang.
Mak-dong’s talent is for taking beatings. His first assignment is to bait a councilman into beating him up after karaoke. The councilman thus acquires a debt to “Older Brother.” Such is the labor to which Mak-dong is put.
I’ll support the family, Mak-dong tells his brothers. He works for their sake – and for Mi-ae’s.
And, paradoxically, he is motivated by genuine loyalty to his exploiter, “Older Brother.” Not just by need or fear.
You might think such loyalty a misguided, idiosyncratic compulsion. But “Older Brother” shows a similar loyalty to the older head of a rival gang. Although these two men are adversaries, they both uphold the seniority code.
Mak-dong’s fellow junior gangsters are ineffectual louts. The parallel with Mak-dong’s biological family is unmissable: the gangsters also are called “brothers.” Mak-dong does better work than his fellows – as “Older Brother” recognizes. Yet he remains at the bottom of the pecking order. Only the boss’s intercession saves Mak-dong from suffering more abuse than he does. The gang is hardly a meritocracy.
And Mi-ae? Behave how she will – obediently, or throwing tantrums – she’ll always be the “kept” woman. That’s her fixed place.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
As a genre specimen, Green Fish exhibits the common tropes: police corruption; assassinations; the “kept” woman’s daliance with a subordinate member of the gang.
But these are just pegs from which to suspend the individual scenes. And these, often, are glorious.
(1) Mak-dong’s early encounter with the ruffians on the train has a surprising, satisfying logic of reversal and counter-reversal.
(2) Mi-ae lets go of a scarf, which flutters from her train window and lands on Mak-dong’s face.
(3) Restaurant patrons discuss whether to order the dog soup or the chicken soup. They agree on the chicken and then join the cooks in chasing the condemned bird around the yard.
(4) The egg vendor is pulled over, bribes the police, is cheated, and chases the police in turn.
(A persistent theme is contempt for official authority. All of the police are corrupt or weak. Mak-dong’s policeman brother prefers to describe himself as a public servant; thrown out of a restaurant, he makes no appeal to his badge. Mak-dong, as a soldier, receives no respect from civilians. Is this because every man must take his turn in the armed forces? Or must every man take a turn because soldiering is disdained?)
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
I was hooked from the opening credits, which are set against lovely old photographs of Mak-dong and his family in the countryside.
An early scene (below): Mak-dong the ex-soldier comes home. See how indifferently he walks past another fight. (Fights seem very common.) You can get a sense of the movie’s soapish/noirish music. The mood is of a defeat.
Which, for many rural citizens, was what Korea’s new industrial prosperity was.