Title | Release Date | Market Share | Weekend | Total | Screens | |
1 | The Dark Knight Rises (us) | 7/19/12 | 65.30% | 1,992,182 | 2,434,011 | 1,210 |
2 | Deranged | 7/5/12 | 15.70% | 495,156 | 4,172,904 | 534 |
3 | Detective Conan (jp) | 7/19/12 | 5.40% | 190,413 | 204,496 | 350 |
4 | The Amazing Spiderman (us) | 6/28/12 | 6.30% | 189,839 | 4,779,673 | 357 |
5 | The 5-Million Dollar Man | 7/19/12 | 2.00% | 63,943 | 79,794 | 328 |
6 | Two Moons | 7/12/12 | 1.80% | 59,429 | 398,617 | 238 |
7 | A Letter to Momo (jp) | 7/5/12 | 0.90% | 30,825 | 294,196 | 109 |
8 | Midnight in Paris (us) | 7/5/12 | 0.90% | 25,588 | 268,136 | 92 |
9 | Madagascar 3 (us) | 6/6/12 | 0.40% | 11,434 | 1,621,890 | 52 |
10 | Dangerously Excited | 7/12/12 | 0.20% | 7,429 | 214,080 | 95 |
Sunday, July 22, 2012
KBO: The Dark Knight Rises to First (07/20-07/22, 2012)
Friday, July 20, 2012
Weekly Review Round-up (07/14-07/20, 2012)
A number of new releases reviewed this week and much more.
CURRENT FILMS
Bloody Fight in Iron-Rock Valley
(Seongyong's Private Place, July 14, 2012)
Deranged
Thursday, July 19, 2012
PiFan 2012: Bloody Fight in Iron-Rock Valley (철암계곡의 혈투, Cheolhamgyegokeui Hyeotoo) 2011
Part of MKC's coverage of the 16th Puchon International Film Festival. Though this film was presented at last year's event (where it picked up two awards), I thought it would be a suitable way to kick off the coverage of this year's event.
Low-budget filmmakers love to dabble in genre fare and, despite inexperience and other shortcomings, they often wind up making more pertinent and exciting works than more established helmers, who may have lost their youthful filmmaking pizzazz. Horror is particularly popular for budding cineastes: it is cheap; relatively simple; and offers many opportunities for experimentation. Sci-fi, though trickier, has also been thoroughly mined by young filmmakers. Westerns on the other hand are among the hardest genre films to realize.
Film lovers are drawn to this genre and it is no surprise. Its sweeping vistas, epic stories and enduring iconoclasm remain popular among directors looking to make their mark. However, this is a difficult feat to accomplish. First of all westerns are visually demanding and feature the type of careful attention to mise-en-scene that requires time, effort and money. Other genres can cut back on this in certain ways, especially horror, but not the western. The next thing and perhaps the hardest, is striking the right balance and tone. Horror and sci-fi films, depending on their angle, may not need to be taken seriously, but a western will sink or swim on its ability to properly engage a viewer and for a neophyte in the director’s chair, this is often too much to ask for.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
PiFan Preview
Bloody Fight in Iron-Rock Valley (철암계곡의 혈투, Cheolhamgyegokeui Hyeotoo)
90 Minutes (90분, 90-boon) 2012
Horror Stories (무서운 이야기, Nooseowoon Iyagi) 2012
Over My Dead Body (시체가 돌아왔다, Sichega Dolawassda) 2012
Super Virgin (숫호구, Suthogoo) 2012
The Suicide Shop 3D (Le Magasin des Suicides, France) 2012
The Crucible (시련, Silyeon) 2012
Interview with Young Gun in the Time's Oh Young-doo
Young Gun in the Time (영건 탐정 사무소, Yeong-geon Tam-jeong Sa-moo-so) 2012
Zombie 108 (城Z-108, Taiwan) 2012
The Heineken Kidnapping (De Heineken ontvoering, Holland) 2011
Osaka Violence (大阪外道, Japan) 2012
90 Minutes (90분, 90-boon) 2012
Horror Stories (무서운 이야기, Nooseowoon Iyagi) 2012
Over My Dead Body (시체가 돌아왔다, Sichega Dolawassda) 2012
Super Virgin (숫호구, Suthogoo) 2012
The Suicide Shop 3D (Le Magasin des Suicides, France) 2012
The Crucible (시련, Silyeon) 2012
Interview with Young Gun in the Time's Oh Young-doo
Young Gun in the Time (영건 탐정 사무소, Yeong-geon Tam-jeong Sa-moo-so) 2012
Zombie 108 (城Z-108, Taiwan) 2012
The Heineken Kidnapping (De Heineken ontvoering, Holland) 2011
Osaka Violence (大阪外道, Japan) 2012
Well, PiFan gets underway tomorrow and I've been burning with anticipation for a few weeks now. It'll be my first Korean film festival after landing here 6 weeks ago. The programme looks great and there are many people I'm excited to meet. I'll be at the event for the duration though I won't be able to see as many films as I'd like since I do have a fulltime job that gets in the way of most of the screenings during the weekdays but I've still devised a pretty packed schedule.
Since I won't be able to take in each day from morning to night I won't be publishing daily recaps as I did for this year's Fribourg and Udine Film Festivals but there will still be plenty of reviews, some news and hopefully a few interviews as well. Anything that comes up here will be crossposted on Twitch, where I will be covering the event with James Marsh (@Marshy00) and in addition I will also be participating in daily coverage of the event for Cine21, Korea's no. 1 film magazine.
Korean Cinema News (07/12-07/18, 2012)
PiFan is upon us and once it gets underway tomorrow I dare say I won't have time for anything else. This means that there will be no Korean Cinema News next week but don't worry I'll double the week after the fest!
PIFAN
Final two previews from James Marsh and I over at Twitch:
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
KOFA Treasures: Kim Ki-young's Woman of Fire (화녀, Hanyeo) 1971
Ongoing series on classic Korean film recently made available for free and with English subtitles on Youtube courtesy of the Korean Film Archive.
Aside from a few choice selections, remakes have become something of a bane for contemporary cinephiles. They are borne out of commercial interests and, for the most part and almost by default, they are unoriginal. They are also omnipresent on today’s marquees, but this wasn’t always the case. Despite the good examples that do exist, the announcement of a remake almost never inspires much confidence, but what about when a director remakes his own work?
Surprisingly this has happened quite often, mainly when a foreign filmmaker remakes his own successful work for Hollywood. Among the oldest examples are Hitchcock’s British and US versions of The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934 and 1956) or Yasujiro Ozu’s I Was Born But… (1932) and Good Morning (1959), both Japanese. Among the most intriguing ones are Michael Haneke’s almost identical versions of Funny Games (Austria, 1997 and US, 2007): the US version was a fascinating meta-narrative experiment that explored our species' fascination with violence, I’m just not sure it’s what the studio had in mind, despite it being a shot-for-shot copy of the original.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Korean Box Office Update (07/13-07/15, 2012)
Deranged Infects the Charts
Title | Release Date | Market Share | Weekend | Total | Screens | |
1 | Deranged | 7/5/12 | 43.60% | 1,148,211 | 3,226,499 | 734 |
2 | The Amazing Spiderman (us) | 6/28/12 | 28.80% | 679,675 | 4,396,250 | 652 |
3 | Two Moons | 7/12/12 | 7.60% | 204,806 | 238,454 | 347 |
4 | Dangerously Excited | 7/12/12 | 4.90% | 127,816 | 157,225 | 278 |
5 | A Letter to Momo (jp) | 7/5/12 | 3.80% | 108,895 | 247,814 | 248 |
6 | Limitless (us) | 7/12/12 | 2.30% | 60,765 | 76,399 | 159 |
7 | Midnight in Paris (us) | 7/5/12 | 2.50% | 60,051 | 196,927 | 144 |
8 | Madagascar 3 (us) | 6/6/12 | 2.00% | 54,143 | 1,606,573 | 163 |
9 | The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (uk) | 7/12/12 | 0.90% | 22,967 | 31,650 | 149 |
10 | Street Dance 2 (us) | 7/12/12 | 0.80% | 20,875 | 26,179 | 133 |
Friday, July 13, 2012
Weekly Review Round-up (07/09-07/13, 2012)
Lots more NYAFF coverage this week and an early review for incoming blockbuster The Thieves. Next week PiFan gets underway so get ready for plenty of new genre release reviews!
UPCOMING FILMS
(The Korea Times, July 11, 2012)
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Pink (핑크, Pingkeu) 2011
The passage of time affects us all in certain ways, our experiences and our memories all take on different forms after we’ve lived them and they leave behind a trace. This imprint can be faint and slip through our conscious memory just as it can leave an indelible mark, a scar that bears the weight of its genesis. Most things change with the passage of time but some do not and Jeon Soo-il’s new feature Pink is a dirge to the intransigence of the roots of our defining characteristics.
Jeon, who hails from Korea’s vibrant port city Busan, is a fiercely artistic filmmaker who has quietly been making films for the past 15 years. While respected within the filmmaking community, Jeon has never attracted anywhere near the same level of international reputation as his arthouse contemporaries, such as Hong Sang-soo (The Day He Arrives, 2011), Kim Ki-duk (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter… and Spring, 2003) and Lee Chang-dong (Poetry, 2010). His films are slow, deliberate and difficult and though they are successful on the festival circuit (he has won awards at Fribourg, Busan and Venice), a larger audience may never gravitate towards his oeuvre.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Korean Cinema News (07/05-07/11, 2012)
Plenty of news this week so dig in! PiFan is just around the corner by the way, get started next Thursday!
Check out the following previews for this year's PiFan, written by myself and James Marsh over on Twitch:
PiFan 2012 Preview Part 3: Vision Express
PiFan 2012 Preview Part 4: Strange Homage, Forbidden Zone & More
PIFAN
Check out the following previews for this year's PiFan, written by myself and James Marsh over on Twitch:
PiFan 2012 Preview Part 3: Vision Express
PiFan 2012 Preview Part 4: Strange Homage, Forbidden Zone & More
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
NYAFF 2012: Doomsday Book (인류멸망보고서, In-lyoo-myeol-mang-bo-go-seo) 2012
Part of MKC's coverage of the 11th New York Asian Film Festival.
(by Peter Gutiérrez)
No doubt about it: it’s definitely a cliché to remark on how anthology films can be uneven – in fact, it’s probably also a cliché at this point to point out how commonplace such an observation is. Yet although this assessment applies to Doomsday Book, which gets its North American premiere Wednesday evening at NYAFF, the film is also refreshing in that I could see different viewers holding disparate ideas as to which are the stronger and weaker entries in this ambitious, three-part science-fiction extravaganza.
The opening story, “A Brave New World,” takes what seems like a well-worn zombie formula and, in the hands of Antarctic Journal’s Yim Pil-Sung, fashions one of those optimal mixtures of the audaciously dark and the goofily humorous that can make Korean genre cinema so wonderful. That’s not to say that Yim’s goals are purely pulply, its ironical tone and light intellectualism are evident from the title. Taking its cue less from Shakespeare, or Huxley, and more from the Bible, this segment looks terrific and boasts some solid storytelling, so you’ll be forgiven for not noticing its more highbrow aspirations. Like Steven Soderbergh’s Contagion, which played for both more laughs and more horror, “A Brave New World” is so adept at grabbing and holding your attention that you may be a bit disappointed when it seems satisfied in leading you into romance (!) territory and leaving you there.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Korean Box Office Update (07/06-07/08, 2012)
Deranged Beats Spidey in Massive Debut
Title | Release Date | Market Share | Weekend | Total | Screens | |
1 | Deranged | 7/5/12 | 39.20% | 1,128,335 | 1,323,523 | 755 |
2 | The Amazing Spiderman (us) | 6/28/12 | 42.90% | 1,059,076 | 3,362,773 | 896 |
3 | A Letter to Momo (jp) | 7/5/12 | 3.30% | 102,728 | 114,887 | 252 |
4 | Madascar 3 (us) | 6/6/12 | 2.80% | 83,087 | 1,545,255 | 247 |
5 | The Raven (us) | 7/5/12 | 2.40% | 65,946 | 87,472 | 264 |
6 | Midnight in Paris (us) | 7/5/12 | 2.30% | 61,735 | 80,391 | 187 |
7 | All About My Wife | 5/17/12 | 2.00% | 56,070 | 4,516,210 | 184 |
8 | The Emperor's Concubine | 6/6/12 | 1.60% | 44,226 | 2,569,270 | 252 |
9 | Haywire (us) | 7/5/12 | 0.90% | 26,675 | 34,093 | 199 |
10 | Cabin in the Woods (us) | 6/28/12 | 0.80% | 20,773 | 211,874 | 184 |
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