Tuesday, June 12, 2018
Review: LITTLE FOREST Will Have You Yearning for the Simple Life
Monday, June 11, 2018
Jeonju 2018 Review: A GOOD BUSINESS, NK Defector Doc Poses Fascinating Ethical Quandaries
Friday, June 8, 2018
Jeonju 2018 Review: WINTER'S NIGHT Takes a Colorful and Introspective Trip Down Memory Lane
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Jeonju 2018 Review: GRADUATION Scores Top Marks for Its Young Director and Star
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Jeonju 2018 Review: HELLO DAYOUNG, Korean Comedy Goes Full Chaplin
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Review: BELIEVER, Explosive DRUG WAR Remake Puts Faith in Livewire Cast
Monday, June 4, 2018
Cannes 2018 Review: BURNING, a Slow Burn for the Ages
Saturday, March 10, 2018
Review: HUMAN, SPACE, TIME AND HUMAN aka Rape: The Movie
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.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Review: ALONG WITH THE GODS: THE TWO WORLDS, Ambitious Fantasy Epic Indulges in Cheesy Backdrops and Melodrama
Riding in on a wave of curiosity and anticipation, popular webcomic adaptation Along with the Gods: The Two Worlds, the opener of Korea's first simultaneously filmed two-part series, represents one of the biggest gambles in Korean film history. No Korean film has ever relied on so much VFX work and at a cost of roughly $36 million, failure would spell certain doom for the people behind it.
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Review: STEEL RAIN, Bombastic Action-Drama Ponders Nuclear Armageddon
The first of a trio of major end-of-year releases in Korea this winter, Steel Rain is the third North Korea-themed action-thriller of 2017 (following Confidential Assignment and V.I.P.) and easily its most bombastic. From The Attorney helmer Yang Woo-suk, who adapts his own webtoon of the same name, the threat of nuclear armageddon on the Korean peninsula has never been so great in a film that is as ambitious as it is disjointed. Leads Jung Woo-sung and Kwak Do-kwon reunite just over a year after Asura: The City of Madness.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
Top 15 Korean Films of 2017
By Pierce Conran
Following what turned out to be one of the all-time best years of Korean cinema, 2017 had its work cut out for it, and, sure enough, it fell well short of 2016’s benchmark. Yet what could have been a placeholder year was saved by an array of important titles that signalled a changing current in the industry, particularly the mainstream.
Following what turned out to be one of the all-time best years of Korean cinema, 2017 had its work cut out for it, and, sure enough, it fell well short of 2016’s benchmark. Yet what could have been a placeholder year was saved by an array of important titles that signalled a changing current in the industry, particularly the mainstream.
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