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Six Korean Films Selected for Competition at Udine Far East Film Festival
Memory, History, Choice: The Narrative Depth European Audiences Are Choosing
Six Korean films are among the 52 titles from 12
countries selected for the competition lineup of the 28th Udine Far East Film
Festival (Far East Film Festival), running April 24 to May 2 in Udine, Italy.
The Korean entries include The King's Warden — a period drama that has
surpassed 16 million domestic admissions to rank third all-time at the Korean
box office — the Jeju April 3 Uprising drama My Name, and the documentary The
Seoul Guardians, which captures the frantic scene of South Korea's martial law declaration
in December 2024.
What is particularly striking about this lineup is the thematic thread
running through three of the six selected films. All three draw on pivotal
moments in Korean history and translate them into narratives capable of
resonating with broad audiences.
The King's Warden reconfigures the weighty history of King Danjong's
dethronement and exile into a story that balances deep emotional resonance with
popular appeal. My Name, which arrives in Udine following its premiere at the
Berlin International Film Festival, approaches the history of state violence
surrounding the Jeju April 3 Uprising through a mother-and-son narrative of
identity and belonging. The Berlinale described it as "a sophisticated
identity drama," while Udine programmers called it "a story told with
balanced tone that can move audiences worldwide." The achievement of The
Seoul Guardians — an MBC-produced documentary — also merits special attention:
it is the first documentary in the festival's 28-year history to be selected
for the competition section. Festival president Sabrina Baracetti introduced
the film as "a movie everyone in the world must see."
The implications of this lineup are clear: European festivals' sense of
Korean cinema's value is growing increasingly specific. Past Udine selections
such as The Owl and The Man Standing Next were likewise rooted in modern and
contemporary Korean history. Across this arc, Korean cinema appears to have
repeatedly demonstrated to European markets a distinct capacity for what might
be called the "narrative reconstruction of historical memory" — the
ability to translate weighty subject matter into the grammar of popular cinema.
That skill is emerging as a defining competitive strength.
Beyond the three films above, Number One (dir. Kim Tae-yong), Once We
Were Us (dir. Kim Do-young), and The World of Love (dir. Yoon Ga-eun) also join
the competition lineup.
Sources
• Kookmin Ilbo, "'My Name,' 'The Seoul Guardians' Among Six
Films Heading to Udine Far East Film Festival Competition," 2026.04.03
• Hankook Ilbo, "'My Name' Invited to Udine Film Festival
Following Berlin; Joins 'The King's Warden' in Competition," 2026.04.03
• The Korea Times, "'My Name' confronts trauma of Jeju April 3 Uprising," 2026.04.03