- Korean Film News
- BIFAN Turns 30: Fan Bingbing, Isabelle Huppert Lead Starriest Lineup Yet as Festival Pushes Into AI
- by KoBiz / Jul 15, 2026
Actress Fan Bingbing attends a press conference for the 30th Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival (BIFAN), held July 3 at the Hyundai Department Store Jungdong branch in Bucheon, Gyeonggi Province.(provided by Kookmin Ilbo)
The Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival (BIFAN) opened its 30th edition on July 2 with its most star-studded international guest list to date. Chinese superstar Fan Bingbing, French screen legend Isabelle Huppert, and veteran action director Yuen Woo-ping all attended the opening ceremony and a press conference the following day. Running through July 12 under executive director Shin Chul, this year's festival screens 321 films from 50 countries. The opening film, Yuen Woo-ping's "Blades of the Guardians," carried the weight befitting a 30th-anniversary curtain-raiser: the wuxia epic stars Wu Jing in the lead role, with martial arts icon Jet Li making a much-anticipated special appearance marking his first return to the screen in 14 years.
All three guests have deep ties to Korean cinema. Fan Bingbing has appeared in the Jang Dong-gun vehicle "My Way" (2011) and the drama "Insider" (2022), and is currently filming "Green Night" with actress Lee Ju-young. "I'm so envious of the Korean film industry," she said at the press conference. "There's such a rich range of material — stories that tackle real social issues or complicated human relationships — and Korean producers feel professional and genuine." Huppert, who has starred in three films by director Hong Sang-soo and appeared on a Korean stage production in 2024, said, "France has always loved Korean cinema. I'm ready to work with Korean directors, or anywhere in Asia, at any time." Yuen Woo-ping recalled a collaboration with Lee Byung-hun that fell through more than 30 years ago, adding that he hopes to work with Korean filmmakers in the future.
This year's Signature section presents 19 new works by genre masters and global stars, including Asian premieres of two Cannes 2026 selections: Kiyoshi Kurosawa's "The Samurai and the Prisoner" and Quentin Dupieux's "Full Phil." The 30th-anniversary retrospective "Asian Genre Films 99," a three-year initiative, opens this year with 10 of 33 selected Korean genre titles from the past three decades. At the opening ceremony, actress Josie Ho and Fan Bingbing received the Fantastic Icon Award and Global Icon Award respectively, while Huppert was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award. Huppert also appeared in the festival's lineup as Countess Elizabeth Báthory in German director Ulrike Ottinger's vampire comedy "The Blood Countess."
BIFAN is also positioning itself for what organizers call a shift from AI to "AX" (AI Transformation), expanding its AI film awards, scouting titles for paid platform release, and launching an internship program for AI talent. "With the world's leading AI partners joining forces this year, we've built a foundation that connects every stage of AI filmmaking — talent development, job placement, competitions, and distribution — into a single value chain," Shin Chul said. "We want AI creators to move beyond one-off prize money and gain real support to establish themselves as directors or producers."
Significance and Outlook
This year's anniversary lineup shows BIFAN has grown beyond a domestic genre showcase into a recurring stop for the world's biggest genre stars and auteurs. Both Fan Bingbing and Huppert described their ties to Korean cinema as a "special relationship" — language that points to sustained exchange rather than one-off visits. The Asian premieres of Cannes selections, in particular, suggest BIFAN is positioning itself as a bridge between the European genre film market and Asian audiences.
At the same time, BIFAN's AI push is unusually concrete compared with other international festivals. Rather than simply screening AI-made work, the festival is attempting to build out a full value chain spanning talent development, distribution, and monetization — a step beyond the experimental stage where most festivals remain. Whether this translates into real sustainability for AI creators, and whether the visiting stars' stated interest in collaboration turns into actual co-production deals, are the points worth watching over the next few years.
Sources
• Kookmin Ilbo, "Legends Yuen Woo-ping, Fan Bingbing and Isabelle Huppert: 'Open to Working with Korea'", 2026.07.05
• Seoul Shinmun, "From Fan Bingbing to Isabelle Huppert: BIFAN's Global Genre Festival Reopens", 2026.07.06
• Segye Ilbo, "'France and Korean Cinema Have a Special Relationship,' Says Huppert", 2026.07.05
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