Beep
Kim Kyung-man, 2014
South Korea
genre: experimental documentary
10m | streaming
Beep is a short experimental documentary; actually, I would probably classify it as an essay film. Beep compiles South Korean anti-communist government films from the 1960s and 70s and adds a found soundtrack of a nonfiction account of a boy martyr who purportedly because he resisted North Korean soldiers. It’s easy to use such material ironically, as fodder for camp, but I am impressed by how Beep is purposive with its historical material. Rather than using the found footage to signal an “then” to contrast with “now,” it wants to trace a lineage of South Korean jingoism and propaganda that, I believe the film to imply, never fully went away. I’m not always a fan of Foucauldian genealogy, but this is genealogy in the best sense.