Oscar winner Bong Joon Ho returns to big screen with 'Mickey 17'
![Oscar winner Bong Joon Ho returns to big screen with 'Mickey 17' Oscar winner Bong Joon Ho returns to big screen with 'Mickey 17'](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/144993/conversions/Mickey-7-og_image.webp)
Director Bong Joon-ho attends the world premiere of the film "Mickey 17" at Leicester Square in London, Britain, February 13, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso
South Korean director
Bong Joon Ho premiered his highly anticipated sci-fi dark comedy, "Mickey
17", in London on Thursday, his first movie since the Oscar-winning
"Parasite".
Based on the novel
"Mickey7" by Edward Ashton, the film stars Robert Pattinson as Mickey
Barnes, a former pastry chef who finds himself in the unusual predicament of
having to die for a living. As a so-called "expendable" on a mission
to colonise a distant planet, Mickey is required to die and come back to life,
each time as a new version of himself.
"The film asks
the question of we are all humans but how do we live a more human life,"
Bong told Reuters via a translator.
"This guy is
someone who is too nice for his own good, just unfortunate things happen to him
and in the film he somehow manages to find his own journey of reclaiming his
selfhood and I think in that process a lot of people who also have quite extreme
jobs might find comfort in Mickey's journey."
Bong made history at
the 2020 Oscars when "Parasite," a dark social satire about the gap
between rich and poor in modern Seoul, became the first non-English language
film to win the Best Picture award, the movie industry's highest honour. It won
a total of four Oscars, including best director and original screenplay for
Bong.
Asked what pressure he
felt in making his next film, Bong said: "I was already in my 50s (when) I
won the Oscars and I tend not to get excited as a person. I just maintained my
calm and did the same thing and it was the same for this film."
In the film, Mickey's
suicidal missions include being exposed to a deadly virus and a colony of
part-insect, part-mammal creatures.
"Sci-fi scripts
normally ... follow a certain pattern and with this, I was like 'What is
happening?' every page," Pattinson said. "Bong has such a unique take
on reality and story-telling, it just felt very exciting."
"Mickey 17",
which also stars Toni Collette, Naomi Ackie, Mark Ruffalo and Steven Yeun,
begins its cinema rollout on February 28 in South Korea, and other countries
from March 5.
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