Books, blog and other blather

Author: Mark (Page 51 of 90)

Summer Releases

Does the opening of WATCHMEN last week mean the summer movie season now starts at the beginning of March? Let’s hope not. However, the real summer releases are beginning to fill the calendar, and this year looks like one of the more interesting in quite some time.

If you follow Korean movies at all, you know the pattern — Korean films start the year pretty strong, thanks in part of the Lunar New Year. But by March the balance flows back to Hollywood. Then May and June and much of July are completely dominated by Hollywood. But by the end of July, Korean films make a comeback and usually do very well in August. Korean films do well again for the Chuseok holiday in late September/early October, then finish the year strong.

Will 2009 be the same? Certainly Hollywood’s rhythms fit that schedule. But this year there are several really big Korean films challenging Hollywood’s turf, so there is at least the potential for a different result this year. It is still a little early to be talking about summer, but what they hey — here’s a look at the coming season’s movies:

April 2
– PRIVATE EYE (Geurimja Sarin). A thriller set early in the Japanese colonial period. So far colonial era films have had rather lackluster results at the box office, but this film looks interesting.
– FAST & FURIOUS 4 (or whatever number this one is).

April 30
– THIRST (Bakjui). The new Park Chan-wook film. Starring Song Gang-ho. Religion, vampires, sex. What else do you need to know?
– WOLVERINE

May 7 – STAR TREK
May 14 – ANGELS AND DEMONS
May 22 – TERMINATOR 4
Some time in May (tentative) – MOTHER. Bong Joon-ho’s latest. Distributor is waiting to see how the film does at Cannes, hoping it gets some good coverage and a bounce. Early word on this film is very strong.

June
– TRANSFORMERS 2: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN. The first TRANSFORMERS film was the most successful foreign film ever in Korea. How will the sequel do?
– GI JOE. Officially slated for August 2, word is Fox has moved this film up to June, although there is no exact date yet. (UPDATE: Nevermind. I’m an idiot. August release it is.) Features Lee Byung-hun has one of the bad guys.

July 2 – PUBLIC ENEMIES

Sometime in July
– HAEUNDAE. Big tsunami hits the sound coast of Korea, in particular the popular beach resort of Haeundae. Big money is going into the disaster effects, plus it stars Sol Kyung-gu and Ha Ji-won.
– JEON WOO CHI. Goblins wreaking havoc on the world? I would be more skeptical, but I am a pretty big fan of Choi Dong-hoon (TAZZA, THE BIG SWINDLE), so I have hope this film could be a lot of fun. Besides, special-effects heavy films coming out in late July/early August have a pretty good record (THE HOST, D-WAR).

No dates yet
– HARRY POTTER 6.
– All those Hollywood comedies. Hollywood still pushes its blockbusters hard in Korea, but the vulgar comedies just do not translate well so often get minimal releases (if any at all).

I am sure I have missed more than a few films. I will update this list as summer gets closer.

Korea Weekend Box Office – March 6-8

The anti-superhero epic WATCHMEN took the top spot this week in Korea — but not by a lot. The classic comic book made just 1.8 billion won ($1.2 million) over the weekend, for a quite tepid opening. Especially considering the film opened on nearly 400 screens (although, to be fair, it was nearly three hours long).

Meanwhile, the cow movie, OLD PARTNER (Wonang Sori) continues to do well, taking in another 1.5 billion won ($1 million) over the weekend to bring its eight-week total to just over $10 million.

(Kind of funny and interesting, btw, how seriously OLD PARTNER’s producers and the police are treating piracy of this film. I mean, I am happy that the powers-that-be are trying to protect anyone’s intellectual property… but with the endemic piracy in South Korea, why is this film so special? And why don’t everyone else’s films deserve the same protection?)

BENJAMIN BUTTON was third, and has now broken the 10-billion-won mark ($6.6 million). Korean film THE SCAM (Jakjeon) was in fourth, with 774 million won to bring its total to 8.8 billion won.

The only other Korean film in the top-10 was HANDPHONE, which was sixth with 314 million won, bringing its total box office to just over 4 billion won.

Not a lot of arthouse love in Korea, as the much acclaimed THE WRESTLER opened in eighth, and the Colin Firth crime caper IN BRUGES opened in 10th.


(All numbers courtesy of KOBIS, and the chart is from KOFIC).

Not that anyone asked, but I liked WATCHMEN, albeit with a lot of reservations. It certainly was not a perfect film, or even great. And it has the worst use of a Leonard Cohen song in a movie soundtrack that I can recall. But I did like the movie’s ambition, and that it followed the comic’s peculiar rhythms instead of the usual three-act Hollywood blockbuster cliche.

Trotting With the Conchords

FLIGHT OF THE CONCHORDS is a rather unusual HBO comedy, featuring a couple of singing New Zealanders running loose in New York City. Each episode is a mix of odd jokes and odder musical numbers.

Season 2 featured one of the most unusual songs yet — a Korean noraebang-style trot tune. Complete with a rockin’ karaoke beat, subtitles, a cheesy background video. It made me do a happy dance. Watch it — you’ll happy dance, too.

(Thanks to All K-Pop for the catch).

Celebrity Suicide

Korea is the worst country in the OECD for suicides, with 21.9 per 100,000 in 2006 — which is actually down from 24.7 in 2005. (Hrm, WHO has slightly different nu

Korea used to have a more moderate suicide rate, below 10 per 100,000, but between 1995 and 2005 it grew much worse, by over 150 percent.

Like in most countries, men have always had a much higher suicide rate in Korea. Back in 1985, the male suicide rate was 13.3 per 100,000 while for women it was just 4.9.

http://www.who.int/mental_health/media/repkor.pdf

Korea Weekend Box Office – Feb. 27-March 1

I guess this really is the year of the cow — OLD PARTNER (Wonang Sori) was the No. 1 film in the land for a second week. The low budget documentary made another 2.4 billion won ($1.55 million) to bring its total box office now to 13.3 billion won ($8.4 million). In fact, OLD PARTNER has now topped 2 million admissions. Pretty amazing for a film that did not sell even 6,000 tickets in its opening weekend.

In second, once again, was BENJAMIN BUTTON, followed by Korea’s THE SCAM (Jakjeon). The top new film was Clive Owen’s THE INTERNATIONAL, down in fourth. Other new openers were THE UNBORN in sixth and Korea’s GUSEJU 2 in ninth.

December’s big hit, SCANDAL MAKERS (Gwasok Seukaendeul) finally dropped out of the top 10, falling to 12th. But don’t feel too bad for the silly Cha Tae-hyun comedy: now that it is topped 8.2 million admissions, SCANDAL has become the sixth-biggest film ever in Korea. And, even better, it has apparently had its remake rights picked up by Hollywood.

The Devils Are in the Details

A few days ago I picked up the reissue of the first two albums by Devils, a Korea rock band from the 1970s best known today for being the inspiration behind the movie GO GO 70’S.

Devils were a six-man band founded in 1969, and started playing in Itaewon bars like 007 Club and American Club, or sometimes played in Paju at the Paradise Club. They released their first album in 1971 and went on to record three more albums by 1977. The CD re-release that I bought includes the first two albums, along with a couple of bonus tunes.

There is not much information available about the band, though, and until the GO GO 70’S film, I think they were not really well known (even by the forgotten standards of Korean classic rock). You can read a bit about them in Korea here.

To be honest, this is not my favorite band from the era. They have some good songs, but nothing that really blows me away like Shin Joong-hyun’s best stuff can. There is not any crazy guitars or heavy drums solos. No, most of the Devils songs were more straightforward rock, with the layering you would expect from a six-man band. I am not bashing them — they certainly have some solid songs. I am just saying they are a little more sedate and modest than my favorite bands from the 1970s.

Also, there are a couple of cover tunes on the albums, such as a cover of Proud Mary. Strangely, one song is described as “Theme Sound From Shaft,” but I hear few similarities between the song on the Devils album and the famous Isaac Hayes tune.

So call this an interesting album. Not a must-buy, but worth your time if you like listening to old Korean music.

R-O-C-K in the D-P-R-K 2, Plus Links

I just ran across this little article about a Western musician who has played in some unusual locations around the world, including in North Korea. Kind of an amusing story.

While I linking there, I should note that Koreanpop.org is a pretty good website, not so much about pop music as the interesting stuff. There are a whole bunch of articles translated from the Weiv Korean music website, interviews and more.

Also worth a read is Inter-Asia Pop, which is a more scholarly look at music around Asia, with a lot of Korean stories.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Feb. 20-22

It has been a long, steady climb, but at last, six weeks after being released, the low-budget documentary OLD PARTNER (Wonang Sori) is the No. 1 film in the land. OLD PARTNER pulled in nearly 3 billion won ($1.5 million … yikes, what an exchange rate) over the weekend to bring its total box office to 9.4 billion won ($6.3 million).

Not bad for a $70,000 film that opened on just seven screens.

Additionally, Korean movies took in three of the top four spots on the chart this week, with HANDPHONE (Haendeupon) opening in third and THE SCAM (Jakjeon) in fourth.

Must be rather disappointing for HANDPHONE, making just 1.7 billion won ($1.2 million) despite opening on 443 screens; even with its great surge, OLD PARTNER is still on only 276 screens).

THE SCAM has now pulled in over 870,000 admissions and 5.8 billion won ($3.9 million).

Just one other Korean film on the chart this week, as SCANDAL MAKERS (Gwasok Seukaendeul) landed in ninth, bringing its total revenue to 52.9 billion won ($36 million). According to KOBIS, SCANDAL MAKERS is now at 8.1 million admissions, but remember that KOBIS does not track every theater in the nation, so SCANDAL MAKERS has probably done slightly better than that. The film is almost certainly now ahead of FRIEND to become the sixth-biggest movie ever in Korea.

The biggest non-Korean, non-Hollywood film, RED CLIFF 2, fell to 13th. In five weeks the John Woo epic pulled in 2.7 million admissions and made 18 billion won ($12 million).

Oh, and MARINE BOY is nearly done, too, landing in 12th, with 24,000 admissions to bring its total to 825,000 admissions.

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