The Early Films of Lee Isaac Chung
Released for the first time ever in North America as a box set, The Early Films of Lee Isaac Chung includes the Oscar-nominated filmmaker's first three award-winning films, before he went on to direct his Academy Award-winning hit, MINARI.
MUNYURANGABO
After stealing a machete from a market in Kigali, Munyurangabo and his friend, Sangwa, leave the city on a journey tied to their pasts. Their friendship, however, is tested when Sangwa’s parents disapprove of Munyurangabo, warning that “Hutus and Tutsis are supposed to be enemies.”
LUCKY LIFE
A group of friends travels to the beach in hopes of encouraging Jason (Kenyon Adams), who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer. Some time later, as Mark (Daniel O’Keefe) and Karen (Megan McKenna) plan to have a child, the beach trip lingers as a haunting memory.
ABIGAIL HARM
Abigail Harm (Amanda Plummer) lives alone on the outskirts of the city. One day, she recalls an old story about a woodcutter who saves the life of a mystical deer and is granted his wish for a companion. Before long, this tale seems to come alive in Abigail’s own lonely world.
ABIGAIL HARM
"Chung is expert at mixing stark drama and a fascinating character study with subtle shades of magical realism. Highly Recommended" - The Sound View.
LUCKY LIFE
"Reminds viewers that their lives are also, in many ways, quite lucky. Recommended" - The Sound View
MUNYURANGABO
"Recommended" - Video Librarian
"Not to be missed for its moving portrait of friendship tested and fractured. Highly Recommended." - Sound View
Cast
- Jeff Rutagengwa
- Eric Ndorunkundiye
- Amanda Plummer
- Tetsuo Kuramochi
- Will Patton
- Daniel O'Keefe
- Megan McKenna
- Kenyon Adams
DVD Features
Bonus features:
Munyurangabo
Audio Commentary by director Lee Isaac Chung, Behind-the-Scenes Footage
Discs: 3
- "One of those miracles that can illuminate the cinema...it is in every frame a beautiful and powerful film -- a masterpiece!"
- "It's an authentically beautiful film."
- "Munyurangabo uses the fine-grained techniques of cinematic neorealism to illuminate the psychological and emotional landscape of a still-traumatized place."
- "Lee Isaac Chung's film exudes a wonderful sense of originality, a daring and organic playfulness rarely found in American indie cinema."
- "Plummer's highly emotive performance ... exudes more emotion in a wistful sideways glance than most actresses do over their entire careers. "
- "Showcasing an exemplary lead performance from the consistently underrated Amanda Plummer, there's an intriguing offbeat rhythm to Chung's film. "
- "[A] meditative, lyrical and yet hauntingly familiar look at the elusive nature of memory among day-to-day experiences. Blending realism with deceptively intelligent visual conceits, Chung conveys his ideas through the passage of time and the subtleties of social engagement. Chung, whose acclaimed 2007 directorial debut “Munyurangabo” dealt with two young friends in the wake of the Rwandan genocide, repeats his uncanny ability to elevate seemingly minor exchanges to a place of deeper significance."
- "Based on the poetry of Gerald Stern, Lucky Life reflects on issues of remembrance, life, and death with a heartfelt lyricism.... Though on the surface a significant departure from his stunning Munyurangabo, Lee Isaac Chung’s sophomore effort is in many respects a kindred spirit to that Rwanda-set drama, sharing with it similar aesthetic assuredness (and specific flourishes) as well as an interest in human responses to present and past calamity."
- "Lucky Life was a poem before it was a movie. Thus it makes perfect sense that the film works more like poetry than prose. And there is life, suspense, terror, mystery, and majesty burning in every scene."
Gallery
Awards & Recognition
Grand Jury Prize
AFI Film Festival
Best First Film
Mexico City Int'l Contemporary Film Festival
Best Narrative Feature
Sarasota Film Festival
Best Narrative Feature
Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival
Special Jury Prize - Best Director
Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival
Jury Award for Best Feature
Tribeca Film Festival
Jury Award
CAAMFest
Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Berlin Int'l Film Festival
Toronto Int'l Film Festival
Int'l Film Festival of Rotterdam
BFI London Film Festival