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Memento Mori (film)

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(Redirected from Whispering Corridors 2)
Memento Mori
Theatrical poster
Hangul
Hanja
女高怪談 두번째 이야기
Revised RomanizationYeogogoedam dubeonjjae iyagi
McCune–ReischauerYŏgogoedam tubŏntchae iyagi
Directed by
Written by
  • Kim Tae-yong
  • Min Kyu-dong
Produced byLee Chun-yeon
Starring
CinematographyKim Yun-su
Edited byKim Sang-bum
Music byJo Seong-woo
Distributed byCinema Service
Release date
  • December 24, 1999 (1999-12-24)
Running time
98 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean

Memento Mori (Korean여고괴담 두번째 이야기; also known as Whispering Corridors 2: Memento Mori) is a 1999 South Korean horror film, and the second installment of the Whispering Corridors film series. It is a sequel to 1998's Whispering Corridors, and is also set in an all-girls high school, but the films are otherwise unrelated. Memento Mori was one of the first Korean commercial films to depict lesbian characters. However, prevailing Korean attitudes constrained its potential to be widely viewed, even more so as the controversial themes targeted the teen demographic.[1][2]

Synopsis

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The film revolves around the relationship between two high school students, Yoo Shi-eun (Lee Young-jin) and Min Hyo-shin (Park Ye-jin). As the two girls become romantically involved, their taboo relationship causes them to be marginalized by the other students. Unable to cope with the social pressures of having a lover of the same sex, Shi-Eun tries to distance herself from the increasingly dependent Hyo-shin. Hyo-shin reacts poorly to Shi-eun's changed attitude, viewing it as both a betrayal and rejection. Hyo-shin consequently commits suicide by jumping off of the school roof. It is also heavily implied that she was pregnant at the time of death, the father being literature teacher Mr. Goh (Hyo-shin had confessed to Shi-eun that she had sex with Mr. Goh) .

The plot unfurls in a nonlinear fashion, often from the perspective of fellow student Soh Min-ah (Kim Min-sun). Min-ah grows increasingly invested in Shi-eun and Hyo-shin when she finds a diary kept between the two alienated girls. This diary allows her disturbing insights to the nature of the relationship and pulls her deeper into a strange chain of events around the school. After Hyo-shin's death, supernatural occurrences start to terrorize all of the students that condemned the relationship. It is later revealed that Hyo-shin's spirit is malevolently haunting the school through the remnants she left behind in the diary.

Cast

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LGBT representation and horror cinema

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There is no comparable South Korean equivalent to the scope of the Western queer film movement.[3] Despite the increasing visibility of the Korean LGBT movement in the 1990s, when Memento Mori was made, queer films of the time frequently concealed LGBT content behind the guise of other genres, such as horror or romance. The elements of horror featured in Memento Mori, which include telepathy and possession, function as a method of creating distance between the audience's reality and the fantasy of the horror movie, and the characters therein.[4]

The representation of queer characters within a horror context is further aided by Korea's LGBT history. Despite being tolerated throughout most of Korean history, Neo-Confucianism, which came into prominence during the Chosŏn dynasty, eliminated acceptance towards same-sex behavior and “effectively made homosexuality invisible, ghostly.” Despite the societal implication of queer people as inherently ghostly, the film does not treat its LGBT characters as the archetypal monsters, representative of societal taboos, as in the Western horror tradition. Rather, Memento Mori’s queer characters are the heroes the story is centered around, and the ghostly terror is directed at the film’s homophobic characters.[3]

In creating a uniquely Korean canon of the horror genre, Korean horror films have not imported Western-style monsters or slashers; they instead center on a ghost, most often a female ghost. Within the tradition of Korean horror cinema, the female spirit exists to get revenge on their murderers. The ghosts of early horror films typically have “lived a life of repression in a patriarchal family,”[5] and it is within the context of these heterosexual relationships that most traditional Korean horror film ghosts seek their revenge. However, the horror cycle starting with Whispering Corridors shifts the focal relationship from familial relationships to friendships, particularly those between school aged girls.[6]

The more contemporary version of the Korean ghost story, featuring the ghost of a schoolgirl, is ideal representation for girls, who are taught to internalize their problems. The current education system in South Korea is frequently gender segregated in both middle school and high school, emphasizing distinctive gender norms and attempting to curb sexuality.[6] Lingering Confucian influences play a large role in gender segregated schools, which in turn lead to normalized “homosocial bodily contact” and significant relationships between students of the same gender.[3] This normalized intimacy between schoolgirls makes the jump from the homosocial to the queer relationship of Hyo-shin and Shi-eun plausible to the audience. However, this context of highly interdependent, exclusive female friendships, which become necessary for survival in the highly competitive environment of Korean high schools,[6] may soften the LGBT themes in Memento Mori as a result of such close relationships being accepted as a “rite of passage”.[4]

Release

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Memento Mori was released in South Korea on December 24, 1999.[7] In the Philippines, the film was released on January 14, 2004.[8]

References

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  • Kalat, David (2007). J-Horror: The Definitive Guide to The Ring, The Grudge and Beyond. Vertical Inc. ISBN 978-1-932234-08-4.

References

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  1. ^ "여름 특집! 여고괴담, 학교에서는 무슨 일이 있었나". magazine.movie.daum.net
  2. ^ "‘여고괴담’부터 ‘소녀괴담’까지, 학원 공포물 변천사". tenasia.hankyung.com
  3. ^ a b c Grossman, Andrew; Lee, Jooran (2005). "Memento Mori and Other Ghostly Sexualities". In Shin, Chi-Yun; Stringer, Julian (eds.). New Korean Cinema. New York University Press. pp. 180–192.
  4. ^ a b Kim, Pil Ho; Singer, C. Colin (2011). "Three Periods of Korean Queer Cinema: Invisible, Camouflage, and Blockbuster". Acta Koreana. 14 (1): 117–136. doi:10.18399/acta.2011.14.1.005.
  5. ^ Chung, Sung-ill (2007). "Four Variation on Korean Genre Film: Tears, Screams, Violence and Laughter". In Kim, Mee hyun (ed.). Korean Cinema from Origins to Renaissance. CommBooks. pp. 1–14.
  6. ^ a b c Choi, Jinhee (2009). "A Cinema of Girlhood: Sonyeo Sensibility and the Decorative Impulse in the Korean Horror Cinema". In Choi, Jinhee; Wada-Marciano, Mitsuyo (eds.). Horror to the Extreme: Changing Boundaries in Asian Cinema. Hong Kong University Press. pp. 39–56.
  7. ^ Kalat 2007, p. 2007.
  8. ^ "YUNG ESKWELAHAN MO BA MAY MULTO? Alamin ngayon, Enero 14". Philippine Daily Inquirer. The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc. January 14, 2004. p. A30. Retrieved September 12, 2022. Based on a shocking true story that happened inside a haunted school for girls in Korea.
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