Domesticating Gangsters? Home/work conflicts in South Korean family drama gangster film

Plaice, Mark R orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-1030-7917 (2020) Domesticating Gangsters? Home/work conflicts in South Korean family drama gangster film. East Asian Journal of Popular Culture, 6 (2). pp. 275-292. ISSN 2051-7084

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1386/eapc_00030_1

Abstract

Gangster films are largely an urban genre set in the mean streets of metropolitan ganglands. A significant proportion of South Korean gangster films depart from this spatial convention, however, setting their central family or romance plots in the domestic space of the apartment. This paper addresses the question of why we find gangsters in domestic space in South Korean cinema and examines what the domestic setting ‘does’ to the gangster film. The Show Must Go On (2008), is discussed in detail to exemplify the ways questions of masculinity, gendered family role performance, and class anxieties are crystallized around domestic space. What emerges in this spatial shift is a new subgenre, the ‘family drama gangster film’. This form combines elements of the traditional gangster narrative with family melodrama, producing tension between the conflicting obligations of the gangster towards gang and family. The paper concludes that the family drama gangster film emerged as a response to a conjunction of socio-economic and film industry factors and became a vehicle through which conflict between competing ideologies of Korean familism are negotiated, mostly resolving in favour of affective familism.


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