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Korea Weekend Box Office – Sept. 5-7

Whoops. Forgot to click “Publish” after writing this post. It has been sitting on my browser for hours.

Anyhow, CJ Entertainment’s historical drama THE DIVINE WEAPON was the top film in its opening weekend, taking in a respectable $4 million. Well, quasi-historical. The hwacha was a pretty interesting piece of military hardware that was cooked up in the 15th century. But it was not terribly effective on the battlefield. Personally, I was more impressed by those big wooden spike cannons that the Joseon armies used to use.

THE DIVINE WEAPON has now topped 1 million admissions, including the advanced screenings that were held last weekend. With Chuseok holiday weekend coming and no major competitors on their way, THE DIVINE WEAPON could end up a decent haul.

The screechy giggle-fest MAMMA MIA! also had a pretty decent opening (and, like THE DIVINE WEAPON, had many advanced screenings the previous weekend), with $3.5 million over the weekend to bring its total to $5.3 million. But I have ABBA bred in the bone, so I enjoyed it. Especially the encores at the end (Pierce Bronson’s voice, not so much).

I was pleasantly surprised to see the documentary EARTH open in No. 4. Few documentaries do well in Korea these days, so it was nice to see do well. If you like that sort of thing, be sure to check out the EBS Documentary Film Festival, opening Sept. 22.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Revenue (bil. won) Total Revenue (bil. won)
1. The Divine Weapon (Singijeon – Korean) 9.04 667 4.15 6.56
2. Mamma Mia! 9.04 516 3.68 5.49
3. Dark Knight 8.07 333 0.92 26.07
4. Earth 9.04 211 0.45 0.51
5. Star Wars: The Clone Wars 9.04 261 0.31 0.34
6. Wall-E 8.07 175 0.20 6.70
7. Blood Bell (Gosa – Korean) 8.07 175 0.14 10.24
8. An Eye for an Eye (Nunenuen Nun Ieneun I – Korean) 7.31 111 0.083 13.39
9. The Good, the Bad, the Weird (Joheun Nom, Nappeun Nom, Isanghan Nom – Korean) 7.17 132 0.084 45.84
10. Midnight Meat Train 8.14 84 0.053 1.94

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 98% of nationwide box office)

Random Notes – Vol 3, No. 4

  • An interesting little story on Mongolian hiphop in the UB Post. Unfortunately, it does not mention many bands (just Tartar and Har Sarnai, who have been around forever). But interesting to hear that hiphop continues to spread its influence.

    The first time I went to Mongolia, back in the 1990s, the live bands were mostly rock. But each time I go back to Ulaanbaatar, it seems like there is more and more hiphop. I can still remember sitting beside my van once, in the middle of nowhere Mongolia, as this family on horseback rode by; the teenage kid in the family takes one look at me and reflexively said “Yo, gee!” and made a bunch of hiphop-esque sounds.

  • I’m sure you have heard by now, but the Wonder Girls have been named by Virgin Media as one of the top up-and-coming girl groups to watch. Kind of neat that they are getting noticed abroad. The cynic in me will try to overlook the difference between “groups to watch” and “groups to listen to.”
  • Congratulations to Sangsang Madang, the arts space in Hongdae that is run by the Korea Tobacco & Ginseng. Until Sept. 7, Sangsang is holding the Sangsang Festa, featuring outdoor concerts, art exhibitions, movies and more.
  • What the heck? I just went to the Sangsang Madang website and found a post for a free Hongdae tour for foreigners. The tour is Sept. 28 at 1:30 and goes to 5pm. Tour will be lead by the singer for Band the Mu:n (never heard then, although I have heard of them, I think). Tour is limited to 20 people, and you need to apply by Sept. 15.
  • Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 29-31 (Philip K. Dick edition)

    A very strange box office report this week — the No. 2 and 3 films have not been released yet. Officially, they hit the theaters on Sept. 4. I guess their distributors decided to take advantage of the weak competition and open them a week early.

    Either that or else the Matrix of our reality just accidentally revealed how our whole fabric of existence is just a preplanned, preordained sham, a shell covering our base programming. As if Time were Out of Joint. I guess it depends on what numbers KOBIS gives us next week.

    Anyhow, THE DARK KNIGHT held on to the top spot for one more week. And, I suspect, one last week. MAMMA MIA, No. 3 in pre-release, is doing very well in advanced registrations for the coming weekend. It has been a big musical hit in Korea (several times), and I would not at all be surprised if it does really well in the theaters.

    THE DIVINE WEAPON looks a little more dicey, although it has the potential to be a decent mid-range hit, especially with the big Chuseok weekend coming soon.

    Hey, GOSA has an English title — BLOOD BELL. I had missed that. Anyhow, fixed it for this week.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Revenue (bil. won) Total Revenue (bil. won)
    1. Dark Knight 8.07 503 2.02 24.42
    2. The Divine Weapon (Shingijeon – Korean) 9.04 405 1.50 1.58
    3. Mamma Mia! 9.04 272 0.94 0.99
    4. Wall-E 8.07 331 0.55 6.35
    5. Blood Bell (Gosa – Korean) 8.07 328 0.51 9.92
    6. CJ7 8.21 334 0.38 1.80
    7. Eye for an Eye (Nuneneun Nun Ieneun I – Korean) 7.31 217 0.33 13.07
    8. Midnight Meat Train 8.14 296 0.35 1.73
    9. The Good, the Bad, the Weird (Joheun Nom, Nappeun Nom, Isanghan Nom – Korean) 7.17 284 0.32 45.55
    10. Mummy 3 7.31 321 0.24 26.19

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 98% of nationwide box office)

    Since summer is over, perhaps it is worth summarizing the top films of the summer season:
    1. The Good, the Bad, the Weird – 45.6 billion won
    2. Kung Fu Panda – 29.3 billion won
    3. Another Public Enemy – 28.3 billion won
    4. Iron Man – 27.8 billion won
    5. Mummy 3 – 26.2 billion won
    6. Indiana Jones 4 – 26.1 billion won
    7. Dark Knight – 24.6 (and rising)
    8. Wanted – 19.8 billion won
    9. Hancock – 17.9 billion won
    10. Eye for an Eye – 13.1 billion won

    Why do I think I am forgetting something? Anyhow, Kim Jee-woon’s Manchurian Western was easily the most popular film of the summer. Then there were only two other Korean films in the top ten, Kang Woo-suk’s ANOTHER PUBLIC ENEMY and the hardboiled thriller AN EYE FOR AN EYE. There were a lot of Hollywood superheroes. KUNG FU PANDA became the most successful animated film ever in Korea. And I would rather not contemplate the meaning behind the success of WANTED…

    Another odd action film, TAKEN did very well, with about 15 billion won. But it was released in April and made only 5.9 billion won since May 1, so it did not make the summer chart.

    All together, 16 movies pulled in over 1 million admissions, but only five Korean films. Korean films now account for 40 percent of the boxoffice for 2008, up from June, but still their worst year since 2002 or so.

    R.I.P. AFKN

    Well, it came several months late, but at least AFN Korea has been taken off of my cable dial.

    I wrote in the beginning of the year about how AFN Korea was getting removed from Korean cable TV services because the cable service operators are not licensed to retransmit the channel. AFN was supposed to be all gone by May, but it continued to linger, at least on my cable system.

    Some time a few months ago, my analog cable service stopped carrying AFN (not sure exactly when, as I very rarely use the analog service). And finally on Tuesday, the digital cable channels were all rearranged, and in the process, AFN Korea was removed from it, too.

    I use C&M Cable, which is the biggest cable company in Korea, so this looks pretty final. No more AFN for me … unless I buy a big ole’ antenna, so I can get it free-to-air for another three or four years. But I doubt that is going to happen.

    I have so many found memories of AFN Korea, from when I first moved to Seoul. Back when Korean TV was truly dire. In the 1990s, there were very few cable channels, and few of them had much in the way of foreign programming. Deathly dull.

    Back then, AFN offered a whole bunch of first-rate American programs, usually within months of being broadcast in the United States. For special broadcasts, like the last episode of Seinfeld, they would show the program just a few hours later. We also got to watch plenty of sports, most of the NCAA basketball tournament, most of the NBA playoffs, and a whole lot of football. (And oodles of NASCAR, but that is not really my thing). Plus there was all those old, heavily edited movies AFN played from 1am until 5am on weekdays.

    Gradually, however, American TV execs got pissed off that people like myself (ie, non-military types) were watching all that US programming for free. Even worse, they really were upset that the cable companies were making money off of programs that were supposed to be only for US servicemen. When the Korean TV industry was tiny, no one cared, but as the 1990s went on, it began to grow into a much more lucrative market. So the US television companies started to deny AFN Korea the right to retransmit their programs. The sports quickly dried up. The TV programs grew older and lamer until there was seemingly nothing but Star Trek Voyager and Judge Judy. Then the news disappeared, too. For the last few months, FAMILY GUY and the other Tuesday animated shows (and GENERAL HOSPITAL) were just about the only reason I watched AFN.

    So, bye-bye AFN. Thanks for the fond memories. The Anthrax Ninja. The great advice (Don’t use a beer bottle as a weapon. Don’t ruin OPSEC. Don’t waste your tour. Don’t commit suicide.) The Eagle. (Btw, who would win in a fight between the AFN Eagle and the Anthrax Ninja?).

    Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 22-24

    Looks like the Olympics have hastened our descent into the summer doldrums, with no film really doing a whole lot of business last weekend. This was a remarkably equal weekend, with the No. 10 film doing about half the business of the No. 2 film. No one film dominating the theaters. In fact, a couple of films did not even make the top 10, despite appearing in over 200 screens (X-FILES and SUPERHERO).

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Revenue (bil. won) Total Revenue (bil. won)
    1. Dark Knight 8.07 418 2.86 21.05
    2. Gosa (Korean) 8.07 297 0.95 9.01
    3. CJ7 8.21 288 0.91 1.05
    4. Wall-E 8.07 296 0.79 5.40
    5. Midnight Meat Train 8.14 252 0.79 0.96
    6. Mummy 3 7.31 291 0.65 25.72
    7. The Good, the Bad, the Weird (Joheun Nom, Nappeun Nom, Isanghan Nom – Korean) 7.17 237 0.57 44.96
    8. Dachimawa Lee (Korean) 8.14 291 0.55 3.43
    9. Baby & I (Agi-wa Na – Korean) 8.14 235 0.44 2.16
    10. Eye for an Eye (Nuneneun Nun Ieneun I – Korean) 7.31 191 0.48 12.45

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 98% of nationwide box office)

    Digging in the Historical Records

    So I recently picked up an unpleasant habit… potentially more dangerous than drugs, more costly than gambling, more insidious than drinking. I bought a turntable. Worse — I started buying old records.

    Over the past couple of years on this blog, I have written about classic Korean rock music a few times. There is a lot of music from the 1960s and 1970s in Korea that I really enjoy. However, not a whole lot of music from that period has been reissued on CD. Yes, a lot of the biggest names are available on CD, especially from the Shin Joong-hyun family, but there was a heck of a lot of other stuff that never made it to CD.


    Then one day, I was strolling through Hoehyeon Underground Mall, near Myeongdong, when I noticed all the used record stores there. I mean, of course I have seen them before, but I never really paid much attention to them. Why would I? But one this one occasion, I decided to ask about old Korean rock and pop music.

    What a happy discovery that was. Plenty of interesting stuff to be had. Sure, if you want to buy mint-condition Shin Joong-hyun, you are going to pay a lot of money. But if you go off the beaten track and try out some less famous artists, the prices are not nearly as bad.

    I think my best find as far has been The Trippers. Not as psychedelic as I might like, but not bad. Plus hearing a 1971 Korean version of “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” is just too cool (RIP Isaac Hayes).

    The Bunny Sisters seem to have not aged well, as wherever I went, there was plenty of their albums for pretty cheap. Sure, they are a little saccharine, but not a bad addition.


    I also managed to find a He5 album. Granted, it was not in good condition (hence, I could afford it), but it still feels good to have a big album like that.


    Very interesting (and more expensive) was ’71 King Hit Album, a compilation featuring songs by Kim Choo-ja, Kim Sang-hee, the Pearl Sisters and a whole bunch of other female singers.


    And then there was the totally random. I also picked up some early Lee Soo-man albums, if only to get a sense of the man who would create SM Entertainment and the biggest pop music hit machine in Korea.

    Once upon a time, the Daelim Sangga, running down Jongno 4-ga to Toegyero 4-ga, used to be the best place in Korea for old records. Sadly, those days are gone. I know because I took some bad advice and looked all over those concrete bunkers looking for old records. Plenty of people selling old turntables and stereo equipment, but only one person selling old records that I could find (and he was mostly selling old Journey and Judas Priest era albums).

    Most of those old shops have moved, either to the Hoehyeon underground shopping arcade, or else to the Yongsan Jeonja Land mall, second floor. A great way to waste some time and money.

    Anyhow, I don’t mean to bore anyone. But it is rather fun and interesting to have a whole new part of Korea to dive into. Hopefully I will not go overboard.

    Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 15-17

    Not a lot of change this week in the top-10. The new films — DACHIMAWA LEE, BABY & I, X-FILES — all failed to impress audiences, and did little business. DARK KNIGHT, MUMMY 3 and (to a lesser extent) WALL-E and GOSA continued to hold their audiences for a second week.

    Looks like THE GOOD, THE BAD, THE WEIRD is rapidly running out of steam. It might make it to 7 million admissions, which would make it by far the most successful Kim Jee-woon film ever, but would barely be breaking even for its investors.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Revenue (bil. won) Total Revenue (bil. won)
    1. Dark Knight 8.07 465 3.63 14.58
    2. Mummy 3 7.31 316 1.49 23.60
    3. Gosa (Korean) 8.07 302 1.37 6.46
    4. Dachimawa Lee 8.14 342 1.09 1.71
    5. Wall-E 8.07 312 0.98 3.78
    6. The Good, the Bad, the Weird (Joheun Nom, Nappeun Nom, Isanghan Nom – Korean) 7.17 296 0.97 40.47
    7. Baby & I (Agi-wa Na – Korean) 8.14 248 0.65 0.97
    8. An Eye for an Eye (Nuneneun Nun Ieneun I – Korean) 7.31 258 0.70 11.12
    9. X-Files 8.14 267 0.57 0.87
    10. Keroro 8.07 67 0.19 0.70

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 98% of nationwide box office)

    Not a lot of excitement on the horizon. Will be interesting to see how MIDNIGHT MEAT TRAIN does next weekend, followed by STAR WARS: THE CLONE WARS and MAMMA MIA in early September. MAMMA MIA could be especially interesting, given how well that musical has done in Korea over the years.

    Seoul Fringe Festival Kicks Off

    Okay, this post is late, very sorry. But it is not too late to check out this year’s Seoul Fringe Festival, taking place right now in Hongdae.


    This is the 11th Seoul Fringe Festival, a two-week celebration of independent, underground and sometimes just plain weird art, music, theater and other cultural goodness. Do not expect to see many of Hongdae’s biggest bands at Fringe. The whole point of the show is to give unestablished artists a chance to show off. They might be raw and unready (and they might not be any good), but I think it is good to shaking things up from time to time… especially in a place as hierarchical as Korea.

    The festival takes place pretty much all over the area around Hongik University, with the bulk of events happening along the “meat street” area (the twisting road/park that runs just behind the LG Palace, KFC, and Soundholic).

    You can download a map of Hongdae showing all the Fringe Festival locations from the front page of the English website (sorry, but it is a javascript link, so I cannot link directly to it).

    Everything I Learned About Life I Learned From Korean TV Dramas…

    Okay, this is hardly new, but it amused me greatly when someone reminded me of it recently. It is the top 50 things I learned from watching Korean TV dramas.

    50 things you can learn from a korean drama

    1) Hot, rich, younger men love fat, older vulgar women.

    2) If you have a best guy friend, he is in love with you. And secretly you are too.

    3) You and your boyfriend will always playfully chase each other on an ice rink, at the beach, or in the leaves. And you’ll laugh for no reason and your boyfriend will hit you “playfully” but the force of his push will have you flying across the room. But it’s okay. Cuz you’re still laughing like a crazy person.

    4) Brothers/cousin/uncles-newphews will always love the same girl.

    5) You’re allowed to make uturns wherever you want in Korea. And there is never traffic on the side you want to u turn to.

    6) There is a super quick payment device that allows you to pay a bill quickly enough for a guy to run immediately out of a restaurant after his angry girlfriend storms out.

    7) Everyone has cancer.

    8) If you’re sick, all you need is an IV to make you feel lots better.

    9) There is vomit and urine all over Seoul at nights.

    10) Fighting at a pojangmacha with a random stranger is merely part of a normal night’s event.

    11) Soju must cost 10 cents. Everyone drinks it everyday all the time, especially the poor people.

    12) If you’re rich, you’re a jerk.

    13) If you’re poor, you’re an angel.

    14) Women sleep and wake up with a full set of makeup on.

    15) You’re not studying hard enough unless you get a nosebleed.

    16) If you have a nosebleed, you most definitely have cancer. And you have no money to pay for the surgery that will save your life. And your liver is missing. We’re not sure where it went, but it’s making your cancer progress faster.

    17) If you work in a sool jeep, you have massively curly hair and wear flashy colors from the early 90’s.

    18) You always order orange juice or coffee at a cafe. And you never drink it. EVER.

    19) You will always call your boyfriend by his job title. Or simply sunbaenim. Never his name. Never. He doesn’t have one.

    20) If you TRULY love each other, you must die together in the end. Frozen outside instead of finding shelter like sane people. Just frozen….

    21) You go to America you come back miraculously successful. You go to England you come back amazingly fashionable. You stay in Korea the only thing that changes is your hairstyle.

    22) And if you come back with no apparent reason then it’s because you have cancer.

    23) Everyone always goes to the same hospital no matter where they are.

    24) If you stand out in the rain for more than five minutes, you’ll end up with a fever and vertigo and people will rush you to the hospital to get some magic IV. And instead of taking an ambulance or driving they’ll race you on their back.

    25) Even if you’re poor and can’t eat, you never wear the same clothes twice.

    26) If you play a poor kid, you always have dirt on your face and your hair is always messy.

    27) If you’re saving someone from being hit from a car, you’ll push them out of the way and wait for the car to hit you instead.

    28) Everyone has a long lost sister/brother/twin. Usually one they didn’t know about.

    29) If you don’t want to answer your phone, you can’t just turn it off. The battery
    needs to be taken out.

    30) All korean men can drink hard, smoke long, sing well and play piano. Usually all at the same time. And at the same restaurant that has a piano that they let anyone use.

    31) If you’re in a relationship, you must at one point leave and have your lover tearfully come RIGHT before you board the plane (vice versa applies as well. You can be the chaser). 60% of the time you see each other, the other 40% you’re roaming around in circles and pass each other about six times, but miraculously never see them.

    32) If you’re getting off a plane, you’re ALWAYS wearing sunglasses. ALWAYS.

    33) All guys wear hideous tracksuits zipped up to their neck. Even if all they’re doing is jumping rope.

    34) Girls will always storm off because they’re mad and the guy will stoically grab them by the arm and swing them back- and by magic, not dislocate their shoulders.

    35) Guys always look like they’re 6 feet tall, even if they’re only 5’10. Thank you camera angles.

    36) Guys like to wear foundation, eyeliner and sometimes a smudge of lipliner.

    37) You always get stuck in an elevator with someone who makes you feel uncomfortable. Even if there are six different elevators, you’ll always be stuck in the same one with that bastard you hate (or just fought with).

    38) Unless you’re fabulously rich, your in-laws will always hate you.

    39) So will your sister-in-law.

    40) Your brother-in-law might be pining away for you.

    41) There are only 2 ways to kiss. You either press your lips against theirs with your mouth completely shut, and just press away for a very long and uncomfortable time. OR you devour the other person and suck out their soul. In both instances, the world spins.

    42) A guy will always get the right size ring, even if you’re never held hands.

    43) People stare off into space and ponder a lot. They’ll just stop in the middle of the road and watch a leaf on a tree for a good three minutes, and just ponder.

    44) You’ll get pregnant the first time you have sex.

    45) You’ll get pregnant if he kisses you on the forehead.

    46) Hell- you’ll get pregnant if you hold hands.

    47) If you overcome great obstacles to be together, one of you must die. Probably due to cancer.

    48) One Korean man can kick the butts of 6 gangstas. Especially when they all stand in a circle and attack the guy one by one. Then when each of them get their butts OWNED, they wise up and attack the guy at the same time. Then the guy will get pulverized and bleed out onto the dusty concrete floor of the empty warehouse they’ve found to fight in. There will be a fire in a trashcan somewhere. And the girl will have watched this the entire time, screaming in horror. Instead of calling 119, she’ll just watch and cry. But it’s okay. Cuz the next day the guy will be fine with a few random bandages and a few face scars. But never a black eye.

    49) It ain’t a real fight unless the gangstas fight dirty with a stick or switchblade.

    50) If you study in the states (perferably Harvard), you are one of the top students and can speak perfect English (as assumed by the reactions of those around you). Why the rest of the world OUTSIDE of the TV can’t understand a single word uttered out of your melodramatic mouth is beyond me.

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