Tag: Korean movies

Attempted Warner Bros. Korean Blockbuster Film Flops at the Box Office

Warner Bros. tried to create a Korean blockbuster film and failed miserably:

When Warner Bros. Korea’s “V.I.P.” was criticized by the internet last year over its inappropriate depiction of its female characters, the film company thought things could not get any worse. But its latest release, “Illang: The Wolf Brigade,” proved that it had yet to hit rock bottom.

Featuring high profile actors, including Gang Dong-won, Han Hyo-joo and Jung Woo-sung, joined by the award-winning director Kim Jee-woon, “Illang” is an adaptation of the 1999 Japanese animated film “Jin-Roh,” which is known as a seminal sci-fi movie. With a star-studded cast and a massive production budget that exceeded its first locally-produced hit, “The Age of Shadows” (2016), which sold 7.5 million tickets, Warner Bros. Korea had high hopes for “Illang.”

However, “Illang” sold merely 897,000 tickets and was forced out of theaters in three weeks – a shockingly poor performance for a film that cost 19 billion won ($17.04 million) to make. The film needed to sell six million tickets to break even.  [Joong Ang Ilbo]

So why did this movie fail?  I would start with the stupid plot:

The Korean adaptation relocates the story from post-World War II Japan to South Korea in 2029, a period after the two Koreas have declared a five-year preparation for unification. Fearing rapid growth in Korea following the planned unification, the world’s superpowers impose economic sanctions against the country. The economic difficulties lead to public outrage and result in the emergence of an armed terrorist group named Sect, which opposes the formation of a joint government between South and North Korea. In response, the government launches a special police unit to quell Sect. Feeling threatened by the growing influence of the special police unit, the national intelligence agency plots to bring the unit down.

Got all that?  Is it any wonder the audience ratings for this movie were bad especially when it involves significantly changing the plot of a high respected classic Japanese anime.

Famed Director Kim Ki-duk Accused of Sexually Abusing Actress During Filming

This makes me wonder how long he has been doing this to other actresses?:

A scene from “Moebius”

Influential filmmaker Kim Ki-duk is Korean prosecutors’ latest target after an actress accused him of sexually abusing her while filming several years ago.

The actress, 41, whose name was withheld, but known to have worked in Kim’s film “Moebius” (2013), recently sued him through the Seoul Central Prosecutors’ Office. Prosecutors then launched an investigation, according to reports Thursday.

The actress didn’t sue until recently because she thought her career could be jeopardized. After she quit acting early this year, she told the Federation of Korea Movie Workers’ Union of the incident and sued Kim.

She said Kim slapped her during the filming in March 2013 to “help her get in the mood” and forced her to perform a sex scene in a way that wasn’t in the script. Embarrassed, she quit the role.

The movie’s production staff supported her claim. The union quoted the witnesses as saying Kim slapped the actress “three times” and demanded she grope her co-star’s penis while shooting the scene. She originally believed a replica would be used. She argued with Kim over the scene but eventually gave in.  [Korea Times]

You can read more at the link.

ROK Drop’s List of the Top 20 Best Korean Movies

I have been watching Korean movies for many years and enjoy the storylines that are often very different than what is typically seen in Hollywood movies.  In an effort to help readers who may have not seen many Korean movies, the below list is my attempt to help identify the best ones to watch.  I am sure there are other great movies that I have missed, please share your recommendations in the comments section.

1. The Taebaek Mountains (1994): This film directed by one of Korea’s most famous directors, Im Kwon-taek, skillfully shows how the differing ideologies before and during the Korean War impacted a small Korean village.  This movie was released all the way back in 1994 and it is still the best movie about the Korean War and in the best Korean movie that I have seen yet.

2. Memories of Murder (2003): This movie is based on the true story about how a serial killer murdered young Korean women in the rural city of Hwaseong from 1986-1991.  The movie follows a bumbling lead detective played by the famed Korean actor Song Kang-ho as he teams with an experienced Seoul detective to track down the killer.  This movie is in my opinion the best crime and thriller movie ever released by South Korea.

3. The Man From Nowhere (2010):  An ex-ROK Special Forces member is living a quiet life as a pawn shop owner in Seoul when a child he befriends is kidnapped by gangsters.  The kidnapping unwittingly draws the man played by the popular young actor Won Bin into a conflict with the gangsters in this fast paced movie that is arguably Korea’s best action movie.

4. Castaway On The Mooon (2009): This movie is my favorite Korean comedy.  It is about a suicidal man who decides to become a castaway on Bamseom island in the middle of the Han River that runs through Seoul.  He ultimately ends up falling in love with an agoraphobic woman who is addicted to Cyworld, which is an early Korean version of Facebook.

5. Lady Vengeance (2005): This film directed by the famed Park Won-chook is part of his vengeance trilogy that includes another one of my favorite movies, Old Boy.  Famed actress Lee Young-ae known for her sweet drama roles takes on a completely different character as a woman consumed with revenge after being jailed for 13-years for a murder she did not commit.  I actually liked this film better than Old Boy, but both are fantastic movies.

6. Old Boy (2003): This thriller may be the most well known Korean movie with western audiences and for good reason due to its many plot turns that keeps people guessing.  The movie directed by the famed Park Chan-wook, features a man being kidnapped and imprisoned in a hotel room cell for 15 years before being mysteriously released.  After being released the man tries to figure out who imprisoned him and why?  With all the plot turns, this is a movie that needs to be watched twice to really appreciate everything going on.

7. Seopyeonje (1993): This old movie is another classic film directed by Im Kwon-taek. The movie follows the lives of a family of traditional folk music singers known as “pansori” as they try to make a living in the modern world. The movie is beautifully filmed and heartbreaking to see the suffering that one woman goes through to become a great pansori singer.

8. Shiri (1999): This older action flick is arguably the first movie that caught the eye of western audiences.  This was because Shiri was filmed with a Hollywood like budget and action style that western audience were familiar with.  This fast paced movie is about an investigator trying to hunt down a female North Korean sleeper agent within South Korea.  The hunt leads to exposing a massive terrorism plot that the investigator tries to stop.

9. My Sassy Girl (2001): This is one of the funniest South Korean comedies I have seen.  It is about a boy who meets a drunken girl at a subway platform.  The two eventually begin dating, but the girl’s bizarre behavior proves to be very challenging at keeping the relationship together.

10. JSA: Joint Security Agency (2000): Three of South Korea’s most well known movie stars, Lee Young-ae, Song Kang-ho, and Lee Byung-hun star in this tensioned filled movie about a Swiss military investigator sent to Panmunjom to investigate the killing of two North Korean soldiers by a ROK Army private stationed on Korea’s Demilitarized Zone.

11. Marathon(2005):  South Korean movies are well known for being tear jerkers and this movie is one of the best.  The movie is about the real life story of Bae Hyeong-jin, an autistic boy who’s odd behavior growing up was very challenging for his mother who never gave up on him.  Bae would ultimately find solace in running.  He became a good enough runner that his mom pushed him to meet the goal of running a marathon in under 3 hours.

12. Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring (2003): This movie is one of the most beautifully filmed Korean movies I have seen.  The movie is about a Buddhist monk that lives in a monastery that floats on a lake.  The film shows the seasons of life that the monk lived through from childhood to old age to reach the point in life where he found himself floating on a lake.

13. Tae Guk Gi – The Brotherhood of War (2004): This war movie is known as Korea’s “Saving Private Ryan”. Much of the filming techniques used in the movie are similar to Spielberg’s style. However, the plots of the two movies are very different since Taeguki follows the story of how two brothers end up fighting against each other during the Korean War.

14 Attack the Gas Station (1999): This older Korean comedy is about gang of unemployed young punks who out of boredom decide to rob a gas station and hold its owner and employees hostage after finding little money to steal.  The inept punks decide they can make more money by selling people gas instead. As the thugs sell gas they meet many different types of customers, some good and some bad, but their ineptness running a gas station soon gets them into more trouble and a lot of laughs along the way.

15. Silmido (2003): Probably the most incredible thing about this Korean action film is that the events depicted in it actually happened.  The movie depicts how a commando unit of ex-cons were brutally trained to infiltrate North Korea and kill Kim Il-sung.  However, before they can be sent to execute their mission peace talks between the two countries begin and the commandoes are left imprisoned on Silmido island.  Tired of being imprisoned they decide to escape their island prison and launch a battle through the streets of Seoul in 1971.

16. Northern Limit Line (2015): This movie shows the tragic events leading up to and during the 2nd Battle of Yeonpyeong where six ROK sailors were killed and 18 more wounded by an North Korean ambush across the maritime border between the two countries known as the Northern Limit Line. The movie does not get into the post-incident politics of this ambush which were nearly as disgraceful as the attack itself.

17. Chunhyang (2000): This is yet another Im Kwon-taek film on my list. This movie is based on an old Korean folk tale from 18th century Korea about a girl named Chunhyang who secretly marries the son of a regional governor. Her husband leaves for Seoul with his dad and the new governor wants Chunhyang for himself. She refuses his advances and is imprisoned and flogged by the governor. The movie is told through the traditional pansori folk music technique which really adds to the drama of the movie.

18. Silenced (2011): This is another movie based on real life events when students at the Gwangju Inhwa School for the hearing-impaired were victims of repeated sexual assaults by the faculty.  The film depicts how the Korean court process victimized the abused children all over again.  A disturbing movie made even more disturbing by the fact it really did happen.

19. Mother (2009): This movie is about how a Korean mother fights to prove that her mentally challenged son is innocent of murdering a young girl. The movie is very well acted and like many Korean movies of this genre it has a plot twist at the end.

20. The Chaser (2008): This thriller is loosely based on the real life Korean serial killer Yoo Young-chul.  The movie follows how an ex-detective turned pimp tries to track down the person who has last seen his missing prostitutes.  If anyone is wondering a group of pimps in real life really did track down the serial killer since the cops put little effort into the case.  Note that this movie is extremely violent and bloody so it may not be for everyone.

Choi Soon-shil Inspired Movie Begins Production

For anyone that has been waiting to see a Choi Soon-shil inspired movie hit the big the screen well here it is:

Choi Soon-sil and Jeong-Kyung-soon

The massive presidential scandal involving Choi Soon-sil, the central figure who allegedly abused former Korean President Park Geun-hye’s authority to amass wealth, will be made into a comedy movie.

“Gate” will be directed by Shin Jae-ho, a comedy-movie director. It will star renowned Korean actress Jeong Kyung-soon as “Aeree,” a character allegedly based on Choi, Park’s longtime friend.

Shin told The Korea Times: “I picked up the idea of the movie from the scandal, but I will not specify Aeree as Choi Soon-sil. Also, the movie’s main story is not about Aeree , but a small family living in a suburb.”

Shin dismissed the idea that the impeached former president was taken into account in the plot, saying there is a character in the movie “who talks to Aeree but she is not based on any real person.”  [Korea Times]

You can read more at the link.

South Korean Journalists Name “The Wailing” the Best Korean Film of 2016

It must have been a bad year for Korean films because I watched The Wailing on Netflix and was not all that impressed with it.  Not very scary and pretty predictable:

“The Wailing,” a supernatural thriller, was named best film of 2016 by an association of South Korean film journalists Wednesday.

Na Hong-jin was chosen best director for the tense drama which features a tranquil rural village embroiled in mysterious serial murders after the arrival of a stranger.

The movie, whose original Korean title is “Goksung,” stars Kwak Do-won, Chun Woo-hee and Hwang Jung-min. Since its premiere at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, it has been invited to even more international film festivals. In South Korea, it attracted 6.8 million viewers.  [Yonhap]

Anyone else see The Wailing and think it was the top movie of 2016?

“Tunnel” Tops Korean Box Office for Fourth Straight Week

Has any ROK Heads seen this movie yet and can testify how good it really is?:

Korean disaster flick “Tunnel” has claimed the top spot at the box office for the fourth weekend in a row, data showed Monday.

According to the official box office tally from the Korean Film Council (KOFIC), a state agency for promoting homegrown films, the movie added 344,332 to its domestic total of 6,942,566 over Sept. 2-4.

Starring Ha Jung-woo, Bae Doona and Oh Dal-su, the film has topped the daily box office chart for 26 straight days, the longest period for any film that opened this year.

It surpassed the 6 million mark on Aug. 27, the 18th day of running, becoming the sixth film that reached the milestone this year in the country. The film is soon expected to hit the 7 million barrier.

Directed by Kim Seong-hun, the film portrays the desperate struggle of a car salesman who accidentally gets trapped inside a collapsed tunnel on his way home from work. His wife and the rescue team captain make every effort to save him but are confronted with politicians and people who do not want a development plan to be delayed to rescue a single person who may have already died.   [Yonhap]

You can read more at the link.

Nude Movie Scene Causes Korean Director To Be Charged With Sexual Violence Crime

Here is a strange story of a Korean movie director who broke a promise to an actress to not release a topless scene in the movie and now is facing a sexual violence crime for not keeping that promise:

Kwak Hyun-hwa, left, and Lee Soo-sung

Prosecutors have indicted film director Lee Soo-sung for allegedly releasing a “director’s cut” of an adult movie without agreeing with the actress who was nude in it.

The Seoul Central District Court has charged Lee with infringing the sexual violence crime punishment laws and making a false charge in his counter-accusation against Kwak Hyun-hwa, the actress.

Kwak, who starred in Lee’s movie “House With a Good View” in 2012, did not want to be part of any nude scene. Lee persuaded her that he would consider cutting out such scenes when editing the film and insisted she go topless, to which she agreed. [Korea Times]

You can read the rest at the link.