Over the past decade, South Korean cinema has had a renaissance in the Western world. It began even before Bong Joon-ho took home many Oscars for Parasite, as the works of directors like Park Chan-wook, Hong Sang-soo, and Lee Chang-dong were gaining recognition globally through the international film festival circuits. Known for neo-noir elements and a lingering sense of tragedy that encompasses many plotlines, as well as both lighthearted and heavier Korean dramas for streaming platforms like Netflix, Korean entertainment has made its mark. But what about LGBTQ+ cinema in the country?

Park Chan-wook’s The Handmaiden was the biggest release out of Korea in 2016 and that comes with good reasons. LGBTQ+ representation has remained sparse in the mainstream Korean narratives, but filmmakers have been tackling queer subjects since the 1960s, even amid deep censorship and regulation. While it may not have been openly acknowledged by creators, fans, and plotlines, it was still observed and present in movies and television. Nowadays, it is more accepted, hence why filmmakers like Park can secure funding and distribution with these topics. These are some of the best LGBTQ+ movies to come out of South Korea so far.

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6 Moonlit Winter

     Little Big Pictures  

Kim Hee-ae stars in 2019’s Moonlit Winter. As a single mother, she lives alone with her daughter when the daughter discovers a big secret about her mother: she had a female first love that lives in Japan. Compared to the daughter, the mother is fairly closed off and never discussed this openly, so it comes as a big surprise. The two ultimately decide to take a trip in the winter to Otaru, a small Japanese town on the coast, where the past and present will slowly begin to collide. Romantic, serene, and beautiful all at the same time, Moonlit Winter finds beauty in the little details to create a story that leaves quite the impression.

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

5 Man on High Heels

     Jangcha & Co.  

Jang Jin’s Man on High Heels did not make much of a splash when it was originally released in 2014, although it features South Korea’s biggest actors. The movie’s lead actor Cha Seung-won alone should have been enough to draw in audiences, as well as its subject matter. This noir film features Cha as Yoon Ji-wook, a homicide detective with a streak of catching any criminal, no matter how violent they are, and bringing them to justice. Yoon, despite being a stereotypical role model for masculinity in society, harbors a big secret: he identifies as a woman and seeks to live as such. That’s what eventually leads him to decide to get the surgery to live out his dreams, but the world of crime wants to interfere and suck him back in before he can do so.

4 The King and the Clown

     Cineworld  

Kam Woo-sung, Lee Joon-gi, and Jung Jin-young starred in 2005’s The King and the Clown, which was the most popular release in South Korea that year and the country’s nomination for an Oscar. Adapted from a stage play written in 2000, the movie is set during the Joseon-era reign of King Yeonsan. Kam and Lee portray two street clowns who, after recently relocating to Seoul, end up being arrested for treason after insulting the king. Somehow, they gain the king’s favor after amusing him, but an internal war between the king’s concubine and one of the clowns begins after the unstable king’s gaze romantically shifts towards the clown.

3 Our Love Story

     Korean Academy of Film Arts  

Released in 2016, Our Love Story is often overshadowed by the bigger release of the year: The Handmaiden. Lee Sang-hee and Ryu Sun-young star as a fine arts student and bartender who meet by chance one day. Yoon-ju, the fine arts student who thought she was straight due to her past relationships, finds herself smitten with the bartender, thus beginning a wholesome spiral where she questions her sexuality and the two further their relationship. Our Love Story feels real, like a story that one would find talking to a friend, which makes it refreshing to watch as it positively portrays lesbians.

2 Two Weddings and a Funeral

     Generation Blue Films  

Two Weddings and a Funeral was done by one of South Korea’s few openly gay directors: Kim Jho Kwang-soo. Released in 2012, this modest film did not reach mainstream success when it came out in theaters, but was successful for a queer film in Korea due to the number of tickets it sold — an impressive amount for a film about gay characters at the time. This romantic comedy follows two doctors at a hospital, one of whom is gay and the other a lesbian. They make a pact to get married so that they can reap the benefits of society while pursuing their sexualities on the side, but when one of their parents starts to get a little too nosy with the newlyweds, this ploy can potentially fall apart just as quickly as it was made.

1 The Handmaiden

     Moho Film  

Park Chan-wook’s The Handmaiden made splashes worldwide when it was released in 2016, winning a BAFTA and becoming a favorite film for many. Kim Tae-ri and Kim Min-hee star as a maid and an heiress who become tangled romantically when the maid enters the household for the first time. Set in the era during which Korea was colonized by Japan, there’s an even deeper element of forbidden romance added with that nuanced detail, making the viewer root for them even more. The Handmaiden is gory, full of twists, and exciting to watch, although it becomes obvious at times that it was a male director and writer who created it.