A Frozen Flower
A Frozen Flower is a 2008 South Korean erotic historical film. It is
directed by Yoo Ha and stars Jo In-sung, Joo Jin-mo and Song Ji-hyo.The historical
film is set during Goryeo Dynasty and is loosely based on the reign of Gongmin of
Goryeo (1330–1374), but it does not strictly comply with historical facts.The
controversial story is about the characters' violation of royal family protocol
and their pursuit of love.
It was released in South Korea on 30
December 2008 and was the 6th most attended film of 2008 with 3,772,976 tickets
sold.
Plot
The King
(Joo
Jin-mo) of Goryeo is married to a Yuan Dynasty princess (Song
Ji-hyo), but they do
not have any children. There is constant pressure on the King both from the
Yuan emperor and his own counselors to produce a crown prince and ensure the
continuity of the royal dynasty. The King's palace guard is composed of thirty
six young soldiers, led by military commander Hong-rim (Jo In-sung), who is also the King's lover. The
King finally decides to charge Hong-rim with a strange commission: penetrate the Queen to impregnate her.
Hong-rim and the Queen are uncomfortable accepting the royal order, but they
finally comply. However, their relationship does not stop at procreation, but an intense romance soon
blossoms between the two, and in this strong intimate
relationship there
is no place for the King.
The two
passionate lovers surpass their "official mission" and continue to
meet each other at midnight in the library in secret. The King begins to
suspect Hong-rim's infidelity and soon gains evidence through his junior
commander. To punish them and to also gauge the depth of Hong-rim's affection
for the Queen, the King calls the two together to his chamber. The king tells
them that he has decided that the Queen will continue to try and beget an heir,
but only with another subordinate. The King remains firm in his decision,
despite entreaties from both the Queen and Hong-rim.
In
despair, the Queen attempts to kill herself by slitting her wrists, but fails.
In a last-ditch effort to change the King's mind, Hong-rim asks the Queen to
stay away from him, and goes to the King to offer his own life in exchange for
forgiveness. The King pardons him, believing Hong-rim's claim that his
involvement with the Queen was purely lust. He decides to overlook everything
that had happened, and instead orders Hong-rim to go away for a while to clear
his mind and settle his emotions.
The
night before Hong-rim's departure, the Queen's personal maid secretly informs
him that the Queen wishes to meet him one last time. She also bears news that
the Queen has finally conceived a child. Hong-rim sneaks out from the King's
bedside to meet the Queen in the library. They end up having passionate sex in
the library, but the King realizes what is happening and catches them in
flagrante delicto.
When the two lovers attempt to save each other by begging the King to kill them
and not the other, the King realizes how strong their romantic love for each other is. In a jealous
rage, he has Hong-rim castrated and sent to prison.
The
Queen now realizes that the King will eliminate everyone who knows their
secret, so she sends her maid to warn Hong-rim's loyal subordinates, and they
manage to free Hong-rim from prison and flee the city with him.
Upon
learning of the escape, the King demands to know Hong-rim's whereabouts from
the Queen, but she refuses to answer. In response, he kills her maid. The King
is then informed that the Queen is pregnant, and as the Queen had predicted, he
then orders the execution of everyone who knows that he is not the child's
father. Only his junior commander, who took over from Hong-rim, is spared.
Some
time later, and having recovered from his wound, Hong-rim realizes that the
Queen is still in the palace and not on the run, as his subordinates were
ordered to tell him. Furious, he starts out for the city on horseback, despite
their protests, but then he stops in his journey, realizing how futile it would
be. However, on returning to the refuge, he finds that his men have been
tracked down and captured.
At the
palace, the King tortures the subordinates to discover the whereabouts of
Hong-rim, but they remain silent, so the King has them executed and their heads
put up on posts on the palace gates, along with that of the Queen's maid. Her
head bears the Queen's necklace, in order to trick Hong-rim into believing the
queen is dead and forcing him to return to exact revenge. When Hong-rim returns
to the city, he indeed becomes enraged by this sight and determines to kill the
King. Disguising himself as a soldier, he enters the palace grounds during the
celebrations for the soldier who came back from war and hides out, awaiting his
chance to reach the King and kill him.
Meanwhile,
as the King returns to his private quarters, he encounters the Queen, but he
snubs her, and orders his junior commander to escort her back to her room. As
the commander is about to leave the Queen's chamber, she warns him that the
King will surely have him killed as soon as the baby is born; she then says
that if the commander assassinates the King, and her father takes over the
throne, she will guarantee that his life will be spared. The junior commander then
calls a meeting of his most trusted subordinates and reveals the truth about
the King, the Queen and Hong-rim. However, before they can carry out the
Queen's plan, Hong-rim goes into action.
Ignoring
the palace guards, who plead with him to leave before he is captured and
killed, he fights his way to the King's quarters, cutting down all who oppose
him. Reaching the King's chamber, Hong-rim confronts the King and demands that
he fight him. An intense duel ensues, during which Hong-rim slashes through the
King's favorite painting, which depicts him and Hong-rim hunting together. As
the desperate duel continues, the junior commander and his men arrive (their
intentions not entirely clear), but the King orders them not to intervene, and
the junior commander holds them back and awaits the outcome of the fight. At
the climax of the duel, the King manages to break Hong-rim's sword, and stabs
him in the shoulder. While Hong-rim is pinned by his sword, the King asks him a
last question: whether or not Hong-rim had ever felt love for him. Hong-rim
replies, "No". Hearing this, the King is shocked, giving Hong-rim
time to throw himself forward on the blade and kill the King with the remaining
half of his own sword.
As the
King dies, Hong-rim staggers to his feet pulls the King's sword from his
shoulder and charges at the guards, but he is fatally stabbed by the junior
commander. Moments later, the Queen arrives at the scene with the guards at her
heels, who try to hold her back. Horrified, she tearfully calls out for
Hong-rim. As she is taken away by the guards, Hong-rim realizes that the King
had not killed her after all. He turns his head from her and dies facing the
king, his eyes filled with realization of his test. The junior commander then
declares that the King has been killed by an assassin, and he orders his men to
quickly remove the bodies, and to tell no one of what has transpired.
The
final scenes of the film show a flashback to when the King showed young
Hong-rim the view of the city and asked if Hong-rim wished to live with him, to
which the young Hong-rim replied "Yes." The film ends on a montage of
the King and Hong-rim happily hunting together, referring back to a dream the
King once had, as depicted in the King's painting.
·
Jo In-sung as
Hong-rim
·
Joo Jin-mo as
King
·
Song Ji-hyo as
Queen
·
Shim Ji-ho as
Seung-gi
·
Lim Ju-hwan as
Han-baek
·
Yeo Wook-hwan as Im-bo
·
Song Joong-ki as
No-tak
·
Jang Ji-won as Bo-deok
·
Kim Choon-gi as Eunuch Hwang
·
Lee Jong-goo as Tae-sa
·
Jo Jin Woong as Lord Tae Ahn
·
Kwon Tae-won as Jo Il-moon
·
Do Young-goo as Gi Won-hong
·
Ko In-beom as Yeon Ki-mok
·
No Min-woo as
Min-woo
·
Do Ye-seong as Choi Kwan
·
Yeo Jin-goo as
young Hong-rim
·
Lee Poong-woon as young King
·
Seo Young-joo as
young Han-baek
According to historical records, after the death of
his Mongolian-born queen, Noguk, King Gongmin descended
into a life of homosexual debauchery, hiring a team of handsome male bodyguards
of noble birth to serve in the palace in 1372. When one of the bodyguards made
King Gongmin's second wife pregnant, Gongmin tried to kill him to quell the
scandal, but was killed by the bodyguard's friends instead. But some historians
disagree with this account, insisting that Gongmin was slandered in an attempt
to justify the founding of the Joseon Dynasty, and that the
youths were just bodyguards.
A Frozen Flower takes its title from a song of that
era which described the sexual relationships between Hong-rim and the Queen. It
is the fifth feature film by director Yoo Ha, who wanted to
make a change from his previous works by doing a historical film, saying,
"I always felt uncomfortable with the genre but I felt I should try to
overcome those feelings. It is also a new challenge for me to focus on a
melodrama." He also stated that the film was "a love story
between men."
Jo In-sung was on board from the beginning of the
project, and turned down other acting roles to make A Frozen
Flower his last work before enlisting for military service. He chose to appear in the film
without knowing the exact details, having faith in the director following their
earlier collaboration in 2005 on A Dirty
Carnival. Jo began training for the role in August 2007, learning
martial arts, fencing, horse riding and geomungo..The
casting of Joo Jin-mo as the king was announced in December 2007.
The budget for A Frozen Flower was $10 million, and the film went into production on 16
April 2008. It was the first film to shoot at the newly built Jeonju Cinema
Studio.
The rights of the film were sold to Japan, Germany,
Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg before it was completed, and also a
further seven countries at the European Film
Market.
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