Joshua Minsoo Kim

Joshua Minsoo Kim Patron

Favorite films

  • Speedy Boys
  • bright and dark
  • Dream Island Girl
  • Painting Lights

Recent activity

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  • Transport

    ★★★★

  • Evil Does Not Exist

    ★★

  • I Saw the TV Glow

    ★★★

  • El Aleph

    ★★★

Pinned reviews

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  • TEN YEARS LATER

    TEN YEARS LATER

    ★★★

    My hope is always that if I have an audience of 30 people, they see 30 different films. I ask the audience to participate with the film and you can only participate through your own self, through your own beliefs.

    —James Benning

    I met up with James Benning when he was in Chicago a couple months ago and talked with him about growing up in Milwaukee, his experiences with organizing, pedagogical strategies, and numerous films from throughout his career including…

  • Minamata Mandala

    Minamata Mandala

    ★★★

    Until now, I’ve always felt I really, really had to offer a clear-cut explanation for a film so that the audience could have no mistake in understanding the issue. I felt I had to give them impactful scenes and a detailed explanation until it became too much. Now I feel like as long as you offer some basic important information, the rest you can edit quite a bit. As long as you have some essential information in it you can…

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  • Transport

    Transport

    ★★★★

    Better than I remember. Stands as one of the best dance films of its time, and for it to have a soundtrack that’s nothing more than a largely unwavering, high-pitched tone is perfect: simultaneously visceral and mundane.

  • Evil Does Not Exist

    Evil Does Not Exist

    ★★

    Unfathomable to me that people prefer this and Drive My Car to Happy Hour or Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy. His films are just too pretty now, and this one in particular is completely unsure if it wants to aim for tone poem atmospherics or patiently unfolding scenes with exposition. It’s upsetting to me that the first fifteen minutes are so gorgeous and striking because so much of the runtime is otherwise bogged down by scenes like the one at…

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  • Glass Onion

    Glass Onion

    ★★

    Has a painful hour-long setup with poorly timed jokes, and then a second hour of “reveals” that are wholly the result of withholding information. There’s no real surprise when a mystery operates in this way, nor is there any opportunity to find satisfaction in noticing and following specific clues. So really we’re just led through everything one step at a time, with flashbacks shaking up the structure to provide a shallow sense of complexity. No one’s acting is noteworthy, and…

  • The African Desperate

    The African Desperate

    ★★★

    I don't think I've seen a film with such on-point millennial representation that my primary reaction was secondhand embarrassment, albeit in a good way. The Impact-font memes, the way this particular age group talks about race (and talks about how people talk about race), the unironic crypto art bro, and so much of the soundtrack, which ranges from Objekt's "Porcupine" to Jai Paul's "Jasmine" (that these aren't timely songs ensures their inclusions aren't trendy; they're just reminders of how generation-specific…