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IMDb > Hwajangshil eodieyo? (2002)

Hwajangshil eodieyo? (2002) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
5.2/10   197 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 9% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Fruit Chan (writer)
Kee-To Lam (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for Public Toilet on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
29 November 2002 (South Korea) more
Genre:
Awards:
3 wins & 4 nominations more
User Reviews:
A Fecal Epic more (5 total)

Cast

  (in credits order)
Tsuyoshi Abe ... Dong Dong
Ma Zhe ... Tony
Hyuk Jang ... Kim
In-seong Jo ... Cho
Yang-hie Kim ... Ocean Girl
Jo Kuk ... Jo
Sam Lee ... Sam
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Directed by
Fruit Chan 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Fruit Chan  writer
Kee-To Lam  writer (as To Kee)

Produced by
Fruit Chan .... producer
Kenny Chan .... line producer
Wai-Keung Chan .... associate producer
Sungkyu Cho .... producer
Taesung Jung .... executive producer
Chulsoo Kim .... associate producer
Carrie Wong .... producer
Doris Yang .... executive producer
 
Original Music by
Sung-woo Jo 
 
Cinematography by
Henry Chung 
Wah-Chuen Lam 
Man-wan Wong 
 
Film Editing by
Sam-Fat Tin 
 
Production Design by
Ben Luk 
 
Production Management
Radium Cheung .... unit production manager
 
Sound Department
Phyllis Cheng .... sound
 

Production CompaniesDistributors
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Public Toilet (International: English title)
Ren min gong che (Hong Kong: Mandarin title)
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Runtime:
Canada:102 min (Toronto International Film Festival)
Language:
Colour:
Certification:
Company:

FAQ

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8 out of 9 people found the following review useful.
A Fecal Epic, 11 March 2005
9/10
Author: honeybearrecords from United States

Dong Dong is the God of Toilets. He was born in a toilet, he lives near a toilet and he understands life through toilets. The public toilet is a way of understanding world cultures whether it's his friends (Chinese, Japanese, Italian, Somali) or around the world. The public toilet is unique to its surroundings, which, as a common and natural function, is ultimately above judgment. Disdain and even disgust at other culture's public toilets can even be jingoistic.

"Public Toilet" is a film by Fruit Chan who has taken his internal camera and externalized it, audience be damned. The idea of the public toilet is the thread that goes from surface to subtext to depth and back. He's not interested in making a linear film and in the end has created something of a lo-fi epic. Using Digital Video with little or no concern to aesthetic quality or standard practices, he has made something beautiful and not just because of it's projected realism. The footage is ugly as hell at times and the repetition of dirty footage becomes a style of it's own. Ultimately, it becomes appealing in the way that Super 8 home movies have become beautiful. Chan is years ahead of his time.

Shot on location at the Great Wall, Hong Kong, Beijing, Korea, Rome, India, the variety of images are blunt and fluctuate in the filth of DV. But this helps to tell the story. Hey, it's a film called "Public Toilet". Were you expecting Merchant / Ivory? Spanning three continents, the film follows the lives of three different groups. The first is Dong Dong and his pals. His grandma is in a coma. His friend, Tony's little brother is also in the hospital with no cure. The two set off in different directions to find cures. The trip leads them across three continents and finds only existential solutions. Tony travels in India where he finds two brothers who speak Cantonese. They're going to India for the first time to help their dying father and to bathe in the Ganji. Dong Dong goes to Korea where he seeks a number of solutions.

This tangentially connects him with another story of a young Korean man who finds a woman living in his outdoor porta-toilet. Taking her to a doctor, he finds she has no bones. She claims to be a creature of the sea and therefore is like him and alien at the same time. For this, he thinks she is from the North. His best friend is also ill and takes off on a trip to find his own cure. Knowing he only has about ten years to live, he says a final good-bye to his friend not wanting to put that off for a decade.

Dong Dong travels to New York to find his cure. In Times Square he is almost oblivious speaking on his cell phone and standing in a tunnel of snow that connects him to the snow in China outside of the public toilet. While there, he meets a Chinese hit-man on his last job. He's quitting at the request of his girlfriend. She is at the Great Wall looking for a healer to help her ill mother.

Another story involves Dong Dong's friend who has returned to Italy but that story seems to have been cut short because of the tragic death of actor Pietero Dilleti.

Terminal illness is a theme that Fruit Chan has visited before and it represents Hong Kong and China's future. Not based around Hong Kong, in this film it takes the form of new China searching out its identity and future. Pusan is false histories. Manhattan is violent death for cash. India is the possibility of rebirth. But none dominate and the answer isn't provided or even supposed by the filmmaker.

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