Save the Green Planet director Jang Joon-hwan mobilizes dozens of familiar faces, including The Chaser and The Yellow Sea stars Kim Yun-seok and Ha Jung-woo, for a weighty and powerful dramatization of the birth of Korean democracy. Following a slew of other politically-minded films, the sprawling protest drama 1987: When the Day Comes caps off what has been a tumultuous year for Korea that began with millions on the streets and resulted in the scandalous downfall of a polarizing head of state.
Showing posts with label kim yun-seok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kim yun-seok. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Review: 1987: WHEN THE DAY COMES Offers Timely and Powerful History Lesson
Save the Green Planet director Jang Joon-hwan mobilizes dozens of familiar faces, including The Chaser and The Yellow Sea stars Kim Yun-seok and Ha Jung-woo, for a weighty and powerful dramatization of the birth of Korean democracy. Following a slew of other politically-minded films, the sprawling protest drama 1987: When the Day Comes caps off what has been a tumultuous year for Korea that began with millions on the streets and resulted in the scandalous downfall of a polarizing head of state.
Friday, December 1, 2017
Review: THE FORTRESS, Sublime Political Allegory Closes Its Doors to the Uninitiated
One of the most impressive casts of the year lines up in the austere and languid period siege drama The Fortress. Led by Lee Byung-hun, Kim Yun-seok and Park Hae-il, performances are strong all around in this magnificently shot and movingly scored but admittedly unhurried meditation on the nature of duty and hierarchy in Korean society. Heavy on political metaphors, this powerful film has found favor with local critics but may prove difficult for the uninitiated.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Review: C'EST SI BON Trades Rich 60s Music Setting for Dull Romance
By Pierce Conran
A terrific period setting is squandered in the disappointing C'est si bon, a twee and lethargic romance masquerading as a dynamic folk music biopic. Programmed as one of this year's two major Lunar New Year holiday releases (the other being period action-comedy sequel Detective K: Secret of the Lost Island), Kim Hyun-seok's sixth film seeks to expand on the director's proven credentials in the rom-com field (Cyrano Agency, 2010) by enticing older viewers with music and period detail designed to evoked their youth.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Busan 2014 Review: Bleak and Gripping, HAEMOO Prizes Character over Spectacle
Part of MKC's coverage of the 19th Busan International Film Festival
To date, the summer of 2014 has seen the majority of mainstream Korean films fall into either of two categories: the noir thriller or the period blockbuster. While a handful of terrific genre pieces, namely A Hard Day and Confession, have succeeded in spite of this inertia, it's been high time for something a little different. Along comes Haemoo, a character-driven blockbuster set on a boat that is based on a play which is itself drawn from a real life incident.
Monday, August 18, 2014
Review: Kim Yun-seok on Form in SOUTH BOUND
By Pierce Conran
Normally, when a Korean film's characters decamp to the countryside, we can expect terrible things to happen. But Yim Soon-rye's new film offers a refreshing take on this standard formula. While bad things also befall the characters in South Bound, there's a welcome levity to the proceedings.
A family man decides to move his family to an island when life under the finger of the government becomes too much for him. He smashes CCTV cameras in his neighborhood, refuses to have his fingers printed at the police station (during one of his many visits), and thumbs his nose at politicians. Along with his wife and his two youngest children, he moves to a small island off the southern coast to begin a new life in a dilapidated hut, free from the shackles of oppression.
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Review: Bleak And Gripping, HAEMOO Prizes Character Over Spectacle
To date, the summer of 2014 has seen the majority of mainstream Korean films fall into either of two categories: the noir thriller or the period blockbuster. While a handful of terrific genre pieces, namely A Hard Day and Confession, have succeeded in spite of this inertia, it's been high time for something a little different. Along comes Haemoo, a character-driven blockbuster set on a boat that is based on a play which is itself drawn from a real life incident.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
News: Jeon Do-yeon And Kim Yoon-seok In Talks for New Lee Yoon-ki Film
By Rex Baylon
For those Korean film fans that have an affinity for quiet settings and slightly damaged female characters, the films of Lee Yoon-ki have acted as cinematic catnip. Having made a reputation for himself in the film festival circuit for Rohmerian style dramas featuring female protagonists muted by some tragic event in the past the director has been off the radar since 2011 after the release of his fourth feature, Come Rain Come Shine. There have been various rumors about forthcoming projects and though none have added up to much news has surfaced that award-winning actress Jeon Do-yeon (Secret Sunshine, 2007; Happy End, 1999) and superstar Kim Yoon-seok (Thieves, 2012; The Chaser, 2008) are in talks to star in Lee’s fifth feature, titled A Man and a Woman.
Produced by b.o.m Film with an agreement by CJ Entertainment
to distribute the finished picture, the new project would
reunite Lee with Jeon after their 2008 collaboration My Dear Enemy, which played at several festivals around the world and
became a critical darling. The only thing confirmed
about the script is that the film will focus on the passionate relationship of middle-aged lovers. Of course, all this pondering on the plot will be moot if
the two actors can’t reach an agreement with Lee and the producers.
Though Jeon and Kim have shown strong interest in working with Lee on this project both actors already have full schedules this year with Jeon Do-yeon appearing with Lee Byung-heon in the period drama Memories of the Sword and Kim Yoon-seok pulling double duty on Sea Fog and the upcoming Tazza sequel.
Reviews and features on Korean film appear regularly on Modern Korean Cinema. For film news, external reviews, and box office analysis, take a look at the Korean Box Office Update, Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Korean Reviews, which appear weekly on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings (Korean Standard Time).
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Review: Jang Joon-hwan Returns With Dark Thriller HWAYI: A MONSTER BOY
By Pierce Conran
Korean cinema has become known for its thrillers, and though the genre is one that is popular around the world, there is one particular take on the genre that Korea has excelled at: let's call it the emotional thriller. By blending thriller and action elements with melodrama, a cultural mainstay, the emotional thriller is something we come across time and again in Korean films. Characters in these films are often scarred by their pasts, which are invariably colored by events from Korea's dark contemporary history. Coinciding with narrative elements, these backstories invariably play a central role and prime the gears for enormous emotional releases in the final act.
Friday, April 26, 2013
UDINE 2013: The Thieves (도둑들, 2012)
Part of MKC's coverage of the 15th Udine Far East Film Festival.
The most anticipated Korean film of the year, with its dazzling cast and international locations, opened late last month and has since become the biggest domestic box office behemoth in years. The Thieves, Choi Dong-hoon’s fourth feature, following The Big Swindle (2004), Tazza: The High Rollers (2006), and Woochi: The Taoist Wizard (2009), is his most ambitious yet. It is a vibrant and complex heist movie with one of the most high profile casts ever assembled for a local production.
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
New Korean Films: One Against All (2013 Week 6)
(by Fabien Schneider)
Small week for Korean film releases, since there is only one new film that will land in theaters. But it's not slouch as this is another movie widely anticipated by the public, and it will bravely attempt to overthrow the established order in the box office. I can easily understand why no other distributor has dared to release a film at the moment, as the market is now completely saturated by three Korean films, that together attracted three million viewers last weekend. Thus the film Fool has been postponed until next week to afford him a better chance.
Small week for Korean film releases, since there is only one new film that will land in theaters. But it's not slouch as this is another movie widely anticipated by the public, and it will bravely attempt to overthrow the established order in the box office. I can easily understand why no other distributor has dared to release a film at the moment, as the market is now completely saturated by three Korean films, that together attracted three million viewers last weekend. Thus the film Fool has been postponed until next week to afford him a better chance.
Southbound (남쪽 으로 튀어)
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
KCN: Weinstein Co. Picks up Snowpiercer, Interviews Galore and Much More (11/08-11/14, 2012)
Lots of news this week, some of its relating to the London Korean Film Festival and its spectacular closing. Save the Green Planet director Jang Joon-hwan finally returns with a new project, Berlin makes a big Korea selection, Pieta wins awards and many interviews to boot, most notably from Paul Quinn whose been a very busy bee over at Hangul Celluloid!
Enjoy!
KOREAN CINEMA NEWS
Kim Yun-seok to Star in New Jang Joon-hwan Film
Korea's most bankable star Kim Yun-seok is set to star in the sophomore feature by Jang Joon-hwan whose sensational debut Save the Green Planet (2003) rocked the international film stage upon its release. It'll be a decade separating his two films by the time this is released and while people have been wondering why he has stepped away for so long, though he he did directed a short in 2010's Camilia omnibus and is well-known as actress Moon So-ri's husband, there is not doubt that many are thrilled to see his return to the big screen.
Monday, August 20, 2012
The Thieves (도둑들, Dodookdeul) 2012
The most anticipated Korean film of the year, with its dazzling cast and international locations, opened late last month and has since become the biggest domestic box office behemoth in years. The Thieves, Choi Dong-hoon’s fourth feature, following The Big Swindle (2004), Tazza: The High Rollers (2006), and Woochi: The Taoist Wizard (2009), is his most ambitious yet. It is a vibrant and complex heist movie with one of the most high profile casts ever assembled for a local production.
Popeye and his crew leave Korea to get in on some action in Macao. He brings Pepsi, who has just been paroled, along for the ride. The mastermind behind the big scheme is Macao Park, Popeye’s former partner and Pepsi’s old lover. The plan is to steal the Tear of the Sun, a valuable diamond in transit in one of the city’s casinos. With Popeye’s crew, a Hong Kong team, Park and a few more vested interests, can the plan go off without a hitch?
Friday, May 25, 2012
Punch (완득이, Wandeuki) 2011
On the surface Lee Han’s new feature may not seem like much as it treads well-worn territory such of the coming-of-age drama and the sports film. Even as it unspools it doesn’t seem to break any new ground as we are introduced to a very familiar plot and a fairly typical coterie of characters. What sets it apart is the skill in its staging. Though a standard narrative, it is so well executed that it beckons you into its story with a gesture that, like from an old friend, is both welcoming and comforting. Once you’re nestled into Punch’s world, which hardly takes a moment, subtle and sometimes surprising elements flutter into the film and the outwardly simplistic characters slowly become more fleshed out. Though it takes some time to realize that you are watching a film that is much more complex than its easygoing exterior lets on. Lee, who has previously made a name for himself with a series of well-crafted romance films such as Lover’s Concerto (2002), Almost Love (2006) and Love, First (2007), deftly and almost imperceptibly handles the narrative’s many cogs.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
The Yellow Sea (황해, Hwang-hae) 2010
Since the days of the New Korean Wave of the late 80s and early 90s men in Korean cinema have frequently found themselves on the road in
search of answers, a home and their identity. In contemporary Korean cinema male characters are for the
most part much more comfortably settled within the progressive society of
modern Korea and yet their philosophical dilemmas still simmer under the
surface, refusing to go away.
Four years ago, Na Hong-jin burst onto the scene with one of
the most remarkable debuts in modern times. The Chaser was an
under-the-radar genre effort from a rookie director with two mid-level stars,
and yet it became one of the highest grossing films of the year and along with The Good, the Bad and the Weird was also
one of Korea’s most popular exports.
Today, in the spring of 2012, Na and his two stars Kim Yun-seok and Ha
Jung-woo are among the heavyweights of the Korean film industry. Kim’s last five films have all
attracted well over 2 million admissions; in fact most of them have soared over
the 5 million mark (The Chaser; Woochi, 2009; Punch, 2011), a enormous benchmark in the Korean industry that few
films have reached. The
charismatic Ha is now one of the country’s top leading men, indeed two of his
films topped the box office last month alone (Nameless Gangster, Love
Fiction).
For Na’s sophomore feature, the gang got back together again
and delivered another worldwide hit in The
Yellow Sea, originally released in Korea in December 2010 and presented
internationally at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2011. Just like his first film, Na’s follow
up is firmly rooted in genre but disassembles and reconstructs it to further
his own ends. Beginning as an
ominous rumble in the distance, the film accelerates to the point that it
becomes a heart-pumping descent into despair.
Ha Jung-woo plays Goo-nam, a down on his luck cab driver in
the Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture of Northeast China who loses at
mahjong every night as he hopelessly tries to earn enough money to pay off the
loan sharks who funded his wife’s passage to Korea. He’s offered a job to clear his debt by Jeong-hak (Kim
Yun-seok), which sees him smuggled into Seoul in order to kill a man. He has a week to carry out the contract
and while on the peninsula will try to track down his wife whom he hasn’t heard
from since she left.
Na’s mise-en-scene is downbeat, gritty and very
evocative. We follow Goo-nam
around Yanji, a dirty city full of forgotten souls. It operates like a lawless border town, steeped in vice and
hopelessness. The film is split
into a few chapters which each up the stakes over the last. Goo-nam’s debasement is the key
narrative point for much of the film and more than anything, what defines this
is his fractured identity.
Throughout most of The
Yellow Sea he find himself in transit or on the run. He is preyed upon and taken advantage
of from the outset; his lack of clear national identity is also the source of
his lack of confidence. There is
an early scene which features stray dogs and it quickly becomes clear that this
is what he is. He only fights back
through the basest instincts of survival.
Much of the action takes place in boats, buses, cars, ports and roads
and Goo-nam is always in danger.
Like the emasculated males that found themselves wandering the roads of
earlier Korean cinema, he seeks his identity through lines of transportation
but in modern Korea, a country that often seeks to forget about its past, he is
not welcome. He is a visible and
painful reminder of an oppressive and traumatic recent history. Whether jumping off a boat, apprehended
on a bus, chased on the street or crashed into while driving a car, he is
forced into the wild, away from civilization. Conversely it is only in these scenes, high up in the mountains,
that the threat dissipates.
Despite the looming danger, he is safe in the untouched and austere calm
of the outdoors.
The Yellow Sea
begins as a gritty drama and thriller, and then turns into a suspense film for
its second chapter but then becomes an unapologetic and propulsive action film
for the significant remainder of the running time which, though 140 minutes
long, is breathless. It’s an
exhausting and sometimes morbid experience to be sure, but the pure energy and
raw vitality of the set pieces are exceptionally effective. Much of the pulsating back half of the
film had me short of breath.
Just like in The Chaser,
Ha and Kim are exceptional. Though
their roles as protagonist and antagonist are reversed, they are remarkably
engaging. Ha truly embodies
Goo-nam’s despair while Kim, despite his dead eyes and listless mumble is one
of the most ferocious and animalistic cinema villains of recent times.
I will say that The
Yellow Sea is best enjoyed as a genre effort as held under close dramatic
scrutiny, it may turn up some unsatisfying conclusions. A small price to pay in my eyes for
what was one of the most invigorating cinematic experiences of the last few years. While Korean cinema may have a lot more
to offer than its thrillers, when a film like this comes along, it’s easy to
see what all the fuss is about.
The Yellow Sea is out on DVD/Blu-ray in the UK on March 26th, from Eureka Entertainment.
★★★★☆
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Monday, November 28, 2011
Korean Box Office Update (11/25/11/27, 2011)
Weekend of November 25-27:
A new champion was crowned this weekend at the Korean box office and business was up over last weekend and last year. A total of 1.43 million tickets were sold over the frame and Korean market share was an even 50% which represented gains over last years 1.22 million admissions and 44% share. Despite only holding 4 of the top 10 spots and facing some tough competition from Hollywood, the Korean films fared impressively.
The new king of the box office is the new Korean film SIU which opened with a strong 346,875. Besides the very present marketing I have not heard much about the film so it is hard to say where it might go from here. In any case it will most certainly be a one-trick pony in the top spot as it will do battle with Twilight next weekend.
Punch way have gone down a notch after five No. 1 weekends in a row but it only slowed about 20%, leaving it with a 288,874 weekend and a 4,745,131 total, which was enough for it to surpass Silenced for no. 4 on the yearly chart. It will cross Detective K and clinch no.3 in the coming day or so but any further climbing of the chart will require an additional 2.6 million tickets to catch up with Sunny. This probably won't happen, especially given some strong competition ahead, but if this year's Korean box office stories have taught us anything it is that it is certainly possible.
The next 6 slots were all occupied by American fare, starting with the seasonal children's movie Arthur Christmas which had an okay start with 180,315.
At No. 4 Real Steel continued to show very impressive legs as it lost less than 15% of its business for a 119,490 weekend. The Brad Pitt critical darling Moneyball was off a little under 40% for 117,611 and already has half a million admissions, a good result not doubt due to the star presence of Mr. Pitt and the locally popular baseball theme. Immortals slowed under 50% for 103,727 as it leaped over the one million mark. Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part I banked 88,116 during its very strong previews. Finally 50/50 opened to a low but predictable 43,390.
You're My Pet took the penultimate spot with 30,600, a sizable drop from last weekend but it has amassed a decent 519,726 to date. Finally Penny Pinchers also took a fall to 24,552 for a reasonable 407,914 total.
Outside the top 10: Perfect Partner crumpled after its lackluster debut and wound up with 8,943. Chilling Romance took in 5,867 during its previews ahead of next week's opening. Documentary Dancing Cat stayed nearly level adding 2,046 to its total. Secrets, Objects sold 1,569 tickets over the weekend, about level with last weekend.
Next weekend: A big test ahead for domestic films as the new Twilight will open wide after it's already successful previews. I'm expecting a slightly better opening than the previous installments and then a steep drop-off so look for a opening in the region of 850,000, which will be more than enough for first place.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Title | Release Date | Weekend | Total | |
1 | SIU | 11/24/11 | 346,875 | 419,042 |
2 | Punch | 10/20/11 | 288,874 | 4,745,131 |
3 | Arthur Christmas (us) | 11/25/11 | 180,315 | 187,475 |
4 | Real Steel (us) | 10/12/11 | 119,490 | 3,398,026 |
5 | Moneyball (us) | 11/17/11 | 117,661 | 501,195 |
6 | Immortals (us) | 11/10/11 | 103,727 | 1,241,104 |
7 | The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn (us) | 11/30/11 | 88,116 | 90,650 |
8 | 50/50 (us) | 11/24/11 | 43,390 | 53,378 |
9 | You're My Pet | 11/10/11 | 30,600 | 519,726 |
10 | Penny Pinchers | 11/10/11 | 24,552 | 407,914 |
- | Perfect Partner | 11/17/11 | 8,943 | 82,073 |
- | Chilling Romance | 12/1/11 | 5,867 | 6,147 |
- | Dancing Cat | 11/17/11 | 2,046 | 8,057 |
- | Secrets, Objets | 11/17/11 | 1,569 | 6,808 |
A new champion was crowned this weekend at the Korean box office and business was up over last weekend and last year. A total of 1.43 million tickets were sold over the frame and Korean market share was an even 50% which represented gains over last years 1.22 million admissions and 44% share. Despite only holding 4 of the top 10 spots and facing some tough competition from Hollywood, the Korean films fared impressively.
The new king of the box office is the new Korean film SIU which opened with a strong 346,875. Besides the very present marketing I have not heard much about the film so it is hard to say where it might go from here. In any case it will most certainly be a one-trick pony in the top spot as it will do battle with Twilight next weekend.
Punch way have gone down a notch after five No. 1 weekends in a row but it only slowed about 20%, leaving it with a 288,874 weekend and a 4,745,131 total, which was enough for it to surpass Silenced for no. 4 on the yearly chart. It will cross Detective K and clinch no.3 in the coming day or so but any further climbing of the chart will require an additional 2.6 million tickets to catch up with Sunny. This probably won't happen, especially given some strong competition ahead, but if this year's Korean box office stories have taught us anything it is that it is certainly possible.
The next 6 slots were all occupied by American fare, starting with the seasonal children's movie Arthur Christmas which had an okay start with 180,315.
At No. 4 Real Steel continued to show very impressive legs as it lost less than 15% of its business for a 119,490 weekend. The Brad Pitt critical darling Moneyball was off a little under 40% for 117,611 and already has half a million admissions, a good result not doubt due to the star presence of Mr. Pitt and the locally popular baseball theme. Immortals slowed under 50% for 103,727 as it leaped over the one million mark. Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part I banked 88,116 during its very strong previews. Finally 50/50 opened to a low but predictable 43,390.
You're My Pet took the penultimate spot with 30,600, a sizable drop from last weekend but it has amassed a decent 519,726 to date. Finally Penny Pinchers also took a fall to 24,552 for a reasonable 407,914 total.
Outside the top 10: Perfect Partner crumpled after its lackluster debut and wound up with 8,943. Chilling Romance took in 5,867 during its previews ahead of next week's opening. Documentary Dancing Cat stayed nearly level adding 2,046 to its total. Secrets, Objects sold 1,569 tickets over the weekend, about level with last weekend.
Next weekend: A big test ahead for domestic films as the new Twilight will open wide after it's already successful previews. I'm expecting a slightly better opening than the previous installments and then a steep drop-off so look for a opening in the region of 850,000, which will be more than enough for first place.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Korean Box Office Update (11/11-11/13, 2011)
Weekend of November 11-13:
Punch led another strong weekend at the Korean box office with a total 1.44 million tickets sold, of which 55% were for Korean films. This represented a slight uptick for tickets sold but a drop for Korean market share versus the same weekend last year. Though, of late, many Korean films have been underperforming, the slack has been picked up by a handful of particularly successful films. It's great to see so many Korean films stack up millions of admissions but also a little worrying that this is happening at the expense of many other films which are barely registering with moviegoers.
Despite some big competition from the just-released Immortals, Punch scored its fourth consecutive win with another big 462,670. This is the first time it has dropped since it release, though a 35% decline versus last week's final figures is nothing to be worried about, in fact that percentage will likely shrink as the final count is tallied for this weekend's receipts. The well-received picture now sits on 3,382,457 and will quickly cross 4 million with a very good chance of challenging for 5. It remains to be seen whether the word of mouth as reached it zenith. Like Sunny earlier this year, it is not inconceivable that it will increase again.
Immortals opened with 391,347, a respectable figure given how it has done in other territories. Real Steel added another 175,253 (a 40% drop) and is now within striking distance of the 3 million mark. If it crosses it, it will be only the fifth non-Korean film to do so this year, an impressive result.
You're My Pet managed a 158,219 opening weekend without the benefit of any previews last week. For a mid-level film this is an okay start but if it drops fast next week, it won't be seen as a satisfactory result. Similarly Penny Pinchers went wide this weekend with 111,793, another so-so opening that will be tested this coming weekend.
Despite some positive word of mouth, Couples completely fell apart, dropping a catastrophic 84%. People who have seen it have expressed surprise at the film, expecting something mediocre and being delighted to be contradicted. Is this poor result the fault of bad marketing? Why is it that people assumed this was going to be a bad film? Perhaps it never had a chance.
Always fell hard again, about 70%, but 23,065 weekend has brought it very close to the 1 million mark, which it will likely cross in the next week or 10 days. Not a bad result but still a little underwhelming.
In Time and The Help also saw considerable drops this weekend, though the former, with over half a million admissions has had a decent performance.
After all but disappearing from marquees last weekend, A Reason to Live has bounced back, growing nearly 200%. Though the resulting 7,266 weekend is not necessarily something to be jubilant about. Still, the film is set to cross 100,000 admissions now so it will save some face.
The other of last week's openers, The Kick and Mr. Idol, fell 80% and 90% respectively. Even with significant media coverage, these films have completely floundered at the box office. What went wrong exactly? The Kick's failure does not bode well for further Thai-Korean co-productions or indeed for martial arts films in general while the dud that is Mr. Idol seems to show little overlap between the K-Movie and K-Pop worlds.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Title | Release Date | Weekend | Total | |
1 | Punch | 10/20/11 | 462,670 | 3,382,457 |
2 | Immortals (us) | 11/10/11 | 391,317 | 490,466 |
3 | Real Steel (us) | 10/12/11 | 175,253 | 2,850,840 |
4 | You're My Pet | 11/10/11 | 158,219 | 208,344 |
5 | Penny Pinchers | 11/10/11 | 111,793 | 158,337 |
6 | In Time (us) | 10/27/11 | 33,774 | 523,998 |
7 | Couples | 11/2/11 | 28,850 | 307,340 |
8 | Always | 10/20/11 | 23,065 | 987,972 |
9 | The Help (us) | 11/3/11 | 14,569 | 89,441 |
10 | A Reason to Live | 10/27/11 | 7,266 | 94,243 |
- | The Kick | 11/3/11 | 6,111 | 45,660 |
- | Mr. Idol | 11/3/11 | 3,742 | 69,878 |
- | King of Pigs | 11/3/11 | 1,991 | 7,786 |
- | The Crucible | 9/22/11 | 853 | 4,668,645 |
- | The Client | 9/29/11 | 542 | 2,395,115 |
Punch led another strong weekend at the Korean box office with a total 1.44 million tickets sold, of which 55% were for Korean films. This represented a slight uptick for tickets sold but a drop for Korean market share versus the same weekend last year. Though, of late, many Korean films have been underperforming, the slack has been picked up by a handful of particularly successful films. It's great to see so many Korean films stack up millions of admissions but also a little worrying that this is happening at the expense of many other films which are barely registering with moviegoers.
Despite some big competition from the just-released Immortals, Punch scored its fourth consecutive win with another big 462,670. This is the first time it has dropped since it release, though a 35% decline versus last week's final figures is nothing to be worried about, in fact that percentage will likely shrink as the final count is tallied for this weekend's receipts. The well-received picture now sits on 3,382,457 and will quickly cross 4 million with a very good chance of challenging for 5. It remains to be seen whether the word of mouth as reached it zenith. Like Sunny earlier this year, it is not inconceivable that it will increase again.
Immortals opened with 391,347, a respectable figure given how it has done in other territories. Real Steel added another 175,253 (a 40% drop) and is now within striking distance of the 3 million mark. If it crosses it, it will be only the fifth non-Korean film to do so this year, an impressive result.
You're My Pet managed a 158,219 opening weekend without the benefit of any previews last week. For a mid-level film this is an okay start but if it drops fast next week, it won't be seen as a satisfactory result. Similarly Penny Pinchers went wide this weekend with 111,793, another so-so opening that will be tested this coming weekend.
Despite some positive word of mouth, Couples completely fell apart, dropping a catastrophic 84%. People who have seen it have expressed surprise at the film, expecting something mediocre and being delighted to be contradicted. Is this poor result the fault of bad marketing? Why is it that people assumed this was going to be a bad film? Perhaps it never had a chance.
Always fell hard again, about 70%, but 23,065 weekend has brought it very close to the 1 million mark, which it will likely cross in the next week or 10 days. Not a bad result but still a little underwhelming.
In Time and The Help also saw considerable drops this weekend, though the former, with over half a million admissions has had a decent performance.
After all but disappearing from marquees last weekend, A Reason to Live has bounced back, growing nearly 200%. Though the resulting 7,266 weekend is not necessarily something to be jubilant about. Still, the film is set to cross 100,000 admissions now so it will save some face.
The other of last week's openers, The Kick and Mr. Idol, fell 80% and 90% respectively. Even with significant media coverage, these films have completely floundered at the box office. What went wrong exactly? The Kick's failure does not bode well for further Thai-Korean co-productions or indeed for martial arts films in general while the dud that is Mr. Idol seems to show little overlap between the K-Movie and K-Pop worlds.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Korean Box Office Update (10/28-10/30, 2011)
Weekend of October 28-30, 2011:
Another healthy weekend at the box office, although with little discernible difference from last week's. Admissions totalled 1.53 million, yet another increase over last year. The market share held steady at 56% which was below last year's weekend (70%) when The Unjust opened.
Punch remained on top after a strong start, not only that but ut managed to increase by nearly 20% in its sophomore frame for a 594,125 three-day and 1,510,522 total. This will certainly be Kim Yun-seok's fifth straight feature to top 2 million, a remarkable feat. The question is how far can it go in the coming weeks, word of mouth seems to be strong so I'm betting it will cross 3 million before long.
Real Steel declined a modest 30% to 355,383 and managed to cross 2 million in the process. A strong performance for a film that has underwhelmed in its homeland. Justin Timberlake seems to be flavor of the week as his romcom Friends With Benefits, which opened months ago in the west, and his current In Time both opened to middling figures, 29,920 and 188,317 respectively. Friends With Benefits seemed to fare particularly badly but I don't think romcoms play well in Korea since the homegrown product in that department is so strong.
Always lost half its audience after a midlevel start and wound up with 173,033. At this point it may or may not cross the 1 million mark. The Client, which had played strong throughout the month took a big tumble as it prepares to exit theaters. It added 39,924 to an impressive 2,367,018 total. Silenced performed similarly as it dropped to 27,994 for what will likely to its last weekend in the top 10. It has sold 4,640,739 tickets to date and sits at number 4 on the yearly chart.
Song Hye-kyo's new movie, A Reason to Live, which premiered at Busan, got off to a very disappointing start with 27,424 admissions. This will likely be its one and only week in the top 10.
Next week, the anticipated marital arts Thai-Korean co-production The Kick will make its bow in theaters.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Title | Release Date | Weekend | Total | |
1 | Punch | 10/20/11 | 594,125 | 1,510,522 |
2 | Real Steel (us) | 10/12/11 | 355,383 | 2,085,158 |
3 | In Time (us) | 10/27/11 | 188,317 | 220,966 |
4 | Always | 10/20/11 | 173,033 | 735,159 |
5 | The Client | 9/29/11 | 39,924 | 2,367,018 |
6 | Friends with Benefits (us) | 10/27/11 | 29,920 | 46,366 |
7 | The Three Musketeers (uk) | 10/12/11 | 28,755 | 644,117 |
8 | Silenced | 9/22/11 | 27,994 | 4,640,739 |
9 | A Reason To Live | 10/27/11 | 27,424 | 39,162 |
10 | The Tree of Life (us) | 10/27/11 | 19,205 | 24,663 |
- | Teacher and the Devils | 10/27/11 | 3,012 | 6,078 |
- | You Pet | 11/10/11 | 2,305 | 2,305 |
- | HIT | 10/13/11 | 1,538 | 109,167 |
- | Couples | 11/2/11 | 1,456 | 7,994 |
Another healthy weekend at the box office, although with little discernible difference from last week's. Admissions totalled 1.53 million, yet another increase over last year. The market share held steady at 56% which was below last year's weekend (70%) when The Unjust opened.
Punch remained on top after a strong start, not only that but ut managed to increase by nearly 20% in its sophomore frame for a 594,125 three-day and 1,510,522 total. This will certainly be Kim Yun-seok's fifth straight feature to top 2 million, a remarkable feat. The question is how far can it go in the coming weeks, word of mouth seems to be strong so I'm betting it will cross 3 million before long.
Real Steel declined a modest 30% to 355,383 and managed to cross 2 million in the process. A strong performance for a film that has underwhelmed in its homeland. Justin Timberlake seems to be flavor of the week as his romcom Friends With Benefits, which opened months ago in the west, and his current In Time both opened to middling figures, 29,920 and 188,317 respectively. Friends With Benefits seemed to fare particularly badly but I don't think romcoms play well in Korea since the homegrown product in that department is so strong.
Always lost half its audience after a midlevel start and wound up with 173,033. At this point it may or may not cross the 1 million mark. The Client, which had played strong throughout the month took a big tumble as it prepares to exit theaters. It added 39,924 to an impressive 2,367,018 total. Silenced performed similarly as it dropped to 27,994 for what will likely to its last weekend in the top 10. It has sold 4,640,739 tickets to date and sits at number 4 on the yearly chart.
Song Hye-kyo's new movie, A Reason to Live, which premiered at Busan, got off to a very disappointing start with 27,424 admissions. This will likely be its one and only week in the top 10.
Next week, the anticipated marital arts Thai-Korean co-production The Kick will make its bow in theaters.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Korean Box Office Update (10/21-10/23, 2011)
Weekend of October 21-23, 2011:
A Korean film reclaimed the top spot this weekend, but only by a very slim margin. Once again business gained over last year's comparable frame, going up 50% to 1.59 million admissions. The Korean market share also saw a healthy increase over last weekend, topping 60%, last year it was 50%.
The number one movie was Punch, which after getting good notices at the Busan International Film Festival and performing well in previews last weekend, opened to a solid 461,290. Word of mouth will likely be strong, which means it could play well through November. In recent years, Kim Yun-seok has turned into a massive force at the box office. One of the few bankable stars remaining in Korea, his most recent features have all gone way past 2 million viewers: The Yellow Sea (2.42 million), Woochi (6.1 million), Running Turtle (3.05 million), and The Chaser (5.07 million). If Punch continues this trend, which it likely will, his streak is not likely to an end any time soon with the release of the much anticipated The Thieves just around the corner.
Coming a very close second this weekend was Real Steel in its sophomore frame with 453,322, down only 25%. As around the rest of the world, the film seems to be playing well with families. The Three Musketeers fell 64% for 99,595, it will likely fall far down the chart next weekend. The only major Hollywood release was Paranormal Activity 3, which despite posting a franchise best opening in the US, opened to a small 49,321, about 30% of what the previous installment. Major: Yujo No Winning Shot from Japan also opened low on the chart with 7,085.
Always seemed poised for a decent opening considering all the attention it received as BIFF's opening gala presentation and its promising previews last weekend but the negative buzz and critical savaging of the picture as already caught up to it. It opened to a disappointing 268,422 and will likely exit the Top 10 swiftly.
The Client, which had been holding on to the number 2 spot for three weeks fell to number 4 with a 60% drop. Its weekend haul of 115, 135 was enough for it clinch the last spot in the yearly top 10. It may still have enough left in the tank to crawl up two more rungs and unseat Marrying the Mafia IV.
Silenced (aka The Crucible) took another big fall this weekend (67%) as the media attention it had been receiving has died down, it added 80, 528 to its total. I wonder whether it could still move up to number 3 for the year by topping Detective K's total.
Hit came in at number 8 with 14,372 after seeing two thirds of its theater count slashed. Rounding out the top 10 was the director's cut of War of the Arrows which opened in select locations to 5,256. The new cut may play wider depending on its performance but I think it is more likely to tour around different locations.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Title | Release Date | Weekend | Total | |
1 | Punch | 10/20/11 | 461,290 | 584,528 |
2 | Real Steel (us) | 10/12/11 | 453,322 | 1,485,699 |
3 | Always | 10/20/11 | 268,422 | 372,552 |
4 | The Client | 9/29/11 | 115,135 | 2,256,985 |
5 | The Three Musketeers (uk) | 10/12/11 | 99,595 | 564,313 |
6 | Silenced | 9/22/11 | 80,528 | 4,544,968 |
7 | Paranormal Activity 3 (us) | 10/20/11 | 49,321 | 56,590 |
8 | Hit | 10/13/11 | 14,372 | 84,142 |
9 | Major: Yujo No Winning Shot (jp) | 10/20/11 | 7,085 | 8,251 |
10 | War of the Arrows Director's Cut | 5,256 | 6,290 | |
- | Couples | 11/3/11 | 4,430 | 6,126 |
- | War of the Arrows | 8/10/11 | 3,810 | 7,451,344 |
- | Fighting Spirit | 10/6/11 | 2,558 | 209,104 |
- | Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild | 7/27/11 | 1,359 | 2,197,866 |
A Korean film reclaimed the top spot this weekend, but only by a very slim margin. Once again business gained over last year's comparable frame, going up 50% to 1.59 million admissions. The Korean market share also saw a healthy increase over last weekend, topping 60%, last year it was 50%.
The number one movie was Punch, which after getting good notices at the Busan International Film Festival and performing well in previews last weekend, opened to a solid 461,290. Word of mouth will likely be strong, which means it could play well through November. In recent years, Kim Yun-seok has turned into a massive force at the box office. One of the few bankable stars remaining in Korea, his most recent features have all gone way past 2 million viewers: The Yellow Sea (2.42 million), Woochi (6.1 million), Running Turtle (3.05 million), and The Chaser (5.07 million). If Punch continues this trend, which it likely will, his streak is not likely to an end any time soon with the release of the much anticipated The Thieves just around the corner.
Coming a very close second this weekend was Real Steel in its sophomore frame with 453,322, down only 25%. As around the rest of the world, the film seems to be playing well with families. The Three Musketeers fell 64% for 99,595, it will likely fall far down the chart next weekend. The only major Hollywood release was Paranormal Activity 3, which despite posting a franchise best opening in the US, opened to a small 49,321, about 30% of what the previous installment. Major: Yujo No Winning Shot from Japan also opened low on the chart with 7,085.
Always seemed poised for a decent opening considering all the attention it received as BIFF's opening gala presentation and its promising previews last weekend but the negative buzz and critical savaging of the picture as already caught up to it. It opened to a disappointing 268,422 and will likely exit the Top 10 swiftly.
The Client, which had been holding on to the number 2 spot for three weeks fell to number 4 with a 60% drop. Its weekend haul of 115, 135 was enough for it clinch the last spot in the yearly top 10. It may still have enough left in the tank to crawl up two more rungs and unseat Marrying the Mafia IV.
Silenced (aka The Crucible) took another big fall this weekend (67%) as the media attention it had been receiving has died down, it added 80, 528 to its total. I wonder whether it could still move up to number 3 for the year by topping Detective K's total.
Hit came in at number 8 with 14,372 after seeing two thirds of its theater count slashed. Rounding out the top 10 was the director's cut of War of the Arrows which opened in select locations to 5,256. The new cut may play wider depending on its performance but I think it is more likely to tour around different locations.
The Korean Box Office Update is a weekly feature which provides detailed analysis of film box office sales over the Friday to Sunday period in Korea. It appears every Monday morning (GMT+1) on Modern Korean Cinema. For other weekly features, take a look at Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up. Reviews and features on Korean film also appear regularly on the site.
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Dueling Masculinities in Running Turtle (Geobugi dallinda, 2009)
Just a look at the synopsis for Running Turtle will invite a
lot of comparisons to Na Hong-jin’s seminal 2008 work The Chaser. It is a
thriller about a middle-aged detective who gets booted out of the force and
goes after a young wanted fugitive. The detective is played by none other than
Kim Yun-seok, also the lead in Na’s thriller. This is a different beast though,
but no less compelling and effective in its depiction of a middle-aged tough
guy forced to the end of his wits and the edge of his already shady moral
compass.
Kim, who has truly become a force to be reckoned with of
late, is magnificent as Pil-seong, the rough-around-the-edges anti-hero. He is
a lone wolf, experienced enough to understand how things work, and not above
abusing the system to his own ends. Despite his malefactions, his family is
nearly penniless and he gambles most of his earnings away to escape the endless
tirade of abuse he receives from his ever-suffering wife. The domestic scenes
in the first part of the film are a marvel, which may seem like a strange word
to use because they are brutal and unpleasant. However, they are so well
staged, passionately acted, and efficiently paced that they become energetic,
as well as vituperative, and strangely endearing. We feel for Pil-seong when
contrasted with his wailing banshee of a wife but no sooner does he leave the
confines of his home when he’s up to his old tricks which likely are the cause
of his life partner’s bitterness.
Reviews and features on Korean film appear regularly on Modern Korean Cinema. For film news, external reviews, and box office analysis, take a look at the Korean Box Office Update, Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up, which appear weekly on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings (GMT+1).
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
Domestic scene |
The film also follows another character, Gi-tae, who is a
famed martial artist on the run after having escaped from jail. Pil-seong,
after having been suspended from the force for brutality and subsequently reached
rock bottom, gets lucky when he gambles his wife’s savings on a long shot and
wins. He is not so lucky when Gi-tae attacks his bookies for being offensive to
his girl and takes his winnings. From this point on he tries to apprehend Gi-tae,
even though each time he corners him he gets beaten to within an inch of his
life. For some it may be frustrating to watch Pil-seong go after Gi-tae when it
is so clear that he will be overwhelmed, but it is a demonstration of
remarkable tenacity and stubbornness on the former’s part. The reason for this
is that Gi-tae has become embroiled with Pil-seong at a very fragile time.
Being booted off the force, unable to provide for his family, facing the ire of
his wife, and losing the respect of all his former colleagues, he his
emasculated to a degree where he will do anything to prove his masculinity. Running
straight into Gi-tae’s fists, knowing full-well that he will be overcome, is
the little he can do to stake his claim at being a man. The more he loses, the
more frustrated and careless he becomes. As such he joins the ranks of the many
post-traumatic males of Korean cinema that have appeared in the last 25 years.
Pil-seong (Kim Yun-seok) after winning his bet |
The film is ostensibly about a man chasing down a criminal
but really the narrative pits Pil-seong in a scrappy fight and breathless
search for his elusive masculinity. After being pummeled again and again, he must
pullback and make use of his mental faculty. It is thought and intellect that will
allow him to reclaim his desired position in society, as in this instance physicality
has clearly failed. The climax and the audience’s interpretation will decide
whether he succeeds in reclaiming his identity. In the meantime the other male
in the narrative serves as an obstacle.
Gi-tae seems like a one-note character that we learn little
about, he is just young, boyishly handsome, and endowed with nearly superhuman
fighting skills. Korean cinema seems to be rife with characters who seem
positively unbeatable, although they always fall in the end, recent examples
include Haunters (2010) and The Yellow Sea (2010). The latter in particular
featured Kim Yun-seok yet again in another role in which he displays a gritty
bravado and masculinity. Unlike The Chaser and Running Turtle however, his
character in The Yellow Sea is in complete control of his persona and with
ruthless brutality and unnerving calmness, easily cuts down his adversaries dozens
at a time. Haunters features Choi Deok-moon as a nearly emotionless psychic
with the ability to control everyone that comes near him like a puppet, save
for the hero. Much like Pil-seong, the hero in Haunters puts himself
continually in the psychic’s path with no tangible plan of action, although he
does not suffer from the same kind of masculine lack.
Pil-seong cannot overcome Gi-tae physically |
These all-powerful antagonists typically show very little
emotion and even less regard for human life. They have spades of masculinity
but are disconnected from normal society and healthy human interactions. As far
as the recuperation of the male id in Korean cinema, which generally takes the
form of men who blunder through narratives in search of their lost masculinity,
these characters seem to emanate from the darker side of this act of
reconstitution. They have their masculinities but at the expense of all else:
history has been erased or deliberately forgotten.
Gi-tae is on some kind of a journey too but his destination
or goal isn’t clear. He fights, or rather defends himself, during the film but
still hangs around. Perhaps he has nowhere to go, certainly he has no need to
reconstitute his masculinity as he is not emasculated like Pil-seong. Yet his
identity is lost and perhaps he knows that he cannot recuperate it, any journey
he goes on must therefore be doomed.
For these reasons Running Turtle acts as a very effective
thriller and fascinating, if somewhat simplistic, character study. It helps
that it builds momentum on the way towards its climax. The more I think about
it, this film is actually very similar to The Chaser, thematically as well as
aesthetically. Strongly recommended for fans of thoughtful, well-made Korean thrillers.
Reviews and features on Korean film appear regularly on Modern Korean Cinema. For film news, external reviews, and box office analysis, take a look at the Korean Box Office Update, Korean Cinema News and the Weekly Review Round-up, which appear weekly on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings (GMT+1).
To keep up with the best in Korean film you can sign up to our RSS Feed, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
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