Oscar winner Bong Joon Ho says Mickey 17 demagogue not drawn from present leaders | Hollywood News

South Korean director Bong Joon Ho’s villain in Mickey 17, a demagogic politician played Mark Ruffalo, was based on past dictators, but might seem familiar to viewers because “hory always repeats itself,” the Oscar winner said in Berlin. “He has, in a comical way, all the faces of the bad politicians we’ve experienced,” he told journals via a translator on Saturday at the Berlin Film Festival.
Bong made hory 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. His new sci-fi dark comedy starring Robert Pattinson is being shown in the festival’s Special non-competition section. “I made this character drawing my inspiration from the past, and as hory always repeats itself, it might seem like I’m referring to someone in the present,” Bong said.
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Based on the novel Mickey7 Edward Ashton, the film follows Pattinson as the working-class Mickey Barnes, who unknowingly signs up to make his living repeatedly dying. “Although it’s a story of the future, it seems like a story that could happen in the present or the past,” Bong said.
For young people in the audience, what is now science fiction could one day be a situation they experience, he said.The director added that Mickey 17 is his first love story, and that it was his life goal to make films of all genres, with one possible exception. “I am a bit scared of musicals,” he said.
Mickey 17, which also stars Toni Collette, Naomi Ackie and Steven Yeun, begins its cinema rollout on February 28 in South Korea and other countries from March 5.