home          works          about          note     

2016~2024 archive



The Way We Wait

2020, 11min


      


Desperately building against the inevitability of time, a restless young woman is awaiting another upcoming loss. Soon after the director moves into her 22nd house, she gets a phone call that her Grandma, who lives far away, is in a critical condition. Elsewhere, a huge apartment made of sand is being constructed as the tide rolls in, while she belatedly tries to build a relationship with her Gran. As the camera sensitively observes how we wait for the upcoming days, the film embraces the fragility of life, full of uncertainty. 


selected screenings:

- Open City Documentary Festival 2020, London, UK / UK short film award nominee
- DMZ Docs 2020, Goyang, KR / short docs award winner ︎︎︎Programme Note
- Aesthetica Short Film Festival 2020, York, UK
- IDFA 2020, Amsterdam, NL / competition

- Cairo Int'l Film Festival 2020, Cairo, EG / competition
- AFI Docs 2021 by American Film Institute, Washington, D.C, US / competition
- Equinoxio Film Festival 2021, Bogota, CO / competition

*Email for the screener / Watch the full film on True Story


Director, Producer and Editor: JiYoon Park / with YoungJa Kim, TaeYeon Kang / Executive Producer: Emma Davie / Cinematographers: Julian Triandafyllou, JiYoon Park / Sound Designer: Simon Howard / Colour Grading: Julian Triandafyllou / Sand Sculptor: Jack Handscombe / Sound Recording: Simon Howard, JiYoon Park


    

© JiYoon Park. unauthorised copying is prohibited for this film & still images.



  


   

   

    

The film interconnects disparate images—my grandmother’s hospital, her impermanent house, and the process of building a sandcastle that is not even likely to barely survive from the waves of the ocean. This whole process seems to be a desperate attempt to delay the moment of sadness in the near future as much as possible. It is a film about the coming loss, but at the same time, about hope as well. Losses are always with us even in this moment, but here, by properly looking and documenting the process, I wanted to share that life is not in such an emptiness as we think it is. It was an intent to connect the far future and the distant past, overcoming the current context of loss or uncertainty by leaning on that vastness of time. - director’s notes

"The short film ‘The Way We Wait’ uses the traces of space and corporeal disappearance to talk about memory and vital fragility."  (...) "Through narrative and visual conventions, JiYoon Park establishes the possibility of shaping time through the camera despite the inescapable course of nature: the tide that is approaching." (...) "Imagination, dreams, memories and daydreams are key factors for the creation of the image. From the dream story, the filmmaker weaves the images to expose the fragility of time and being." (...) "In a phenomenological narrative of accompaniment and the moment, grandmother and granddaughter support each other; the past no longer matters and the future will flow." (...) - written by Daniela Ruiz Cerquera (Correspondencias Cine) ︎︎︎read the full article (in Spanish)

Hearing upon the news that her grandmother is in a critical condition, the director juxtaposes her grandmother’s footage and the process that a small sand apartment is built on a quiet beach. There may not be any logical relevance between the two images. However, a loose correspondence can be found in building a relationship in a limited time before death and building a sand house that will soon be collapsed. The two images aren’t just what they appear to be but represent an attempt to compensate for the loss in her absence in the future while the completed sand building alludes to the fact the grains of sand will be swept away by the waves. The film attempts to perceive the external from the personal, and the incompleteness of the present from the present reality. - written by Lee Minho(DMZ Docs) 

Shortly after moving into her 22nd house, Ji-Yoon Park receives a call: far away her grandmother is in the hospital, in critical condition. Too late, the director realizes that she should have nurtured her relationship with her grandmother earlier. “I’ve always been chased by time,” the restless young woman says. “I’ve needed to run harder not to be swallowed.” Now, she doesn’t know how to spend time with her grandmother. “So I was left holding the camera.” In parallel with scenes at the hospital, on the seashore an apartment building is being sculpted from sand—in vain, as its destruction is inevitable. The tide is approaching and slowly nibbling at the foundations. This house of sand mirrors events at the hospital. Sensitively observing as she awaits the imminent loss, the filmmaker embraces the fragility of life, with all its uncertainty. “What I grasp today, easily shatters tomorrow.” - written by IDFA 


   
 

Once Upon a Time 

2020, 5min 


   

A film poem in which human consciousness intertwines with the element of water. It visualises the eternal clash between the urge to look back and the awareness of space and time ahead. - written by Ji.hlava IDFF  

selected screenings:

- Ji.hlava International Doc Film Festival 2020,  Jihlava, CZ / competition
- Alchemy Film & Arts Festival 2021,  Hawick, UK 
- Pragovka Gallery 2021, Prague, CZ / exhibition screening
- Lago Film Fest 2021, Revine Lago, IT / competition ︎︎︎Programme Note  
- NOWNESS Experiments 2023, watch the full film / online publishing
- TAPE Collective 2023, with UCL Film Soc’s Fest London, UK ︎︎︎Programme Note


In Once Upon a Time, Ji-Yoon Park juxtaposes a video sequence of serene flowing waters with the filmmaker’s own struggle to revisit her past via running onscreen text. Park’s film deals with self-image, resisting a closed life narrative by negating a reductive assessment of one’s history. The ambiguities of reliving memory while longing to move towards a reconciliation foster multiple temporalities of healing. - written by Marius Hrdy(Alchemy Film & Arts Festival)

The words and sentences fragmentarily interfere; the sounds incessantly surge and disappear in a moment; the images keep moving. - director’s notes


   

   

  

    

   
© JiYoon Park. unauthorised copying is prohibited for this film & still images.


     

Like You Know It All  

2021, 11min


      

Kwang-Ja Lee, a counsellor at ‘Lifeline Korea’ has been listening to anonymous people’s stories for 45 years. Image and sound react to it and creates new reflective space that seems to be the bottom of one’s heart.  ︎︎︎ watch the excerpt 

selected screenings:
- Ji.hlava International Doc Film Festival 2021, Jihlava, CZ / competition

- EBS Int'l Doc Festival 2021, Goyang and EBS TV, KR ︎︎︎작품 보기
- San Diego Asian Film Festival 2021, San Diego, US / competition

- Seoul Ind Women’s Film Festival 2021, Seoul, KR / competition
- Jeju Hondie Film Festival 2021, Jeju, KR / competition


Director, Producer, Cinematographer and Editor: JiYoon Park / with KwangJa Lee / Sound and Music: Ellie Beale 


   

   

    


      
© JiYoon Park. unauthorised copying is prohibited for this film & still images.

A conversation with a suicide hotline worker in South Korea plays over footage of everyday life. Text, image, and voiceover combine to produce a stunning and moving portrait of the often thankless work of care. - written by San Diego Asian Film Festival


A very effective and moving exploration of the role of a telephone counsellor. Good use of abstract imagery which allows full engagement with the subject matter. - a comment from the doc alliance platform


There are no human faces throughout the film. Instead, there are places and movements that help audiences imagine the story of the interview better. It was all part of making intangible things observable. - director’s note


  

Out of Place

2023, 5min


     

‘Out of Place’ revolves around a fictional concept of escaping the earth. Surviving both as Korean and Asian women, we try to escape with a novel voyage from this Earth to another planet. When the bizarre statistics on us gather on this new planet, the voices from the ones who breathe here with one another form echoes, which continue as a round.

screened as part of the Korean Cultural Centre’s Open Call exhibition ≪Ordinary World≫
- Korean Cultural Centre Germany 2023, Berlin, Germany 
- Korean Cultural Centre UK 2024, London, UK 
- Korean Cultural Centre France 2024, Paris, France 


    

   

    


      
© JiYoon Park. unauthorised copying is prohibited for this film & still images.

‘Out of Place’(2023) deals with the action of ‘seeing’ itself through optical instruments and asks what truly is to perceive the women’s lived experiences. - director’s notes 


     

 © 박지윤 JiYoon Park. all rights reserved