Blech.
Author: Mark (Page 67 of 90)
Quite the battle of all-against-all last weekend, with four major new films opening (not to mention the continuing success of FOREVER THE MOMENT). Nevertheless, it was a quite weekend overall, and no single film really took hold of the public’s imagination. This long weekend, with the Seollal holiday, will show what people think of those new releases.
Overall, though, I think it was a decent weekend for Korean movies. The top four movies were all Korean, and five of the top six, and six of the top 10. Not bad. Good enough, in fact, to raise Korean films to 53.9 percent of the box office so far in 2008.
This Week | Title…………………………………….. | Release Date | Screens Nationwide | Weekend Revenue (bil. won) | Total Revenue (bil. won) |
1. | The Game (Korean) | 1.31 | 441 | 2.42 | 2.88 |
2. | Forever the Moment (Uri Saengae Choego-ui Suga – Korean) | 1.10 | 409 | 2.02 | 19.91 |
3. | Once Upon a Time in Corea (Korean) | 1.31 | 394 | 1.87 | 2.31 |
4. | The Man Who Was Superman (Syupeomaenieossdeon Sanai – Korean) | 1.31 | 514 | 1.38 | 1.71 |
5. | The Warlords | 1.31 | 293 | 0.81 | 0.99 |
6. | Radio Days (Korean) | 1.31 | 314 | 0.56 | 0.68 |
7. | Cloverfield | 1.24 | 255 | 0.42 | 3.47 |
8. | Happily N’Ever After | 1.24 | 212 | 0.28 | 1.32 |
9. | Open City (Mubangbi Dosi – Korean) | 1.10 | 159 | 0.24 | 10.3 |
10. | Bee Movie | 1.03 | 118 | 0.13 | 6.82 |
(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)
I just checked out a show by the all-female band Juck Juck Haeseo Grunge (적적해서 그런지). And while they probably are not the band I enjoy the most these days, I would call them the best band in Korea.
How to describe them? A little Sonic Youth, a little PJ Harvey, a little Patti Smith, a little Led Zepplin… and a whole lotta’ rock. Lots of distortion and tempo changes, but a heavier, slightly more metal sound than Sonic Youth. They told me that they have been around since April-ish, so I guess they are still a fairly young group. No idea if their sound is still evolving or what.
Even rarer for the Hongdae scene, Juck Juck has stage presence. Between songs, they don’t just tune their instruments or blather on endlessly, they keep things hopping. And the just FEEL like rock stars, dammit.
They mostly play at the small club Badabie, but on Feb. 10 they will be playing at Club FF, which I think will be a much better setting for a band like this.
So I got the chance to see Hong Sang-soo’s latest film NIGHT & DAY a few days ago. The film officially makes its world premier on Feb. 12 at the Berlin International Film Festival, but, well, there are ways…
Of course, I am sworn to secrecy about the film. But I can say what the press kits talk about — it is the story of a middle-aged artist who flees to Paris after smoking a little pot in Korea. While in Paris he meets an ex-girlfriend, makes a new girlfriend, and smokes and drinks a lot.
It was Hong’s longest movie so far, clocking in at 144 minutes, but it felt quite brisk and I never felt bored. Perhaps not as fun as WOMAN ON THE BEACH, but most worthwhile. I will try to write more about it after its official premier in 10 days.
1. A Virgin Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors
2. Woman on the Beach
3. Night and Day
4. Turning Gate
5. The Day a Pig Fell in the Well
6. The Power of Kangwon Province
7. Woman Is the Future of Man
8. Conte du Cinema
I would not put too much stock in that list, though. Nos. 1 and 8 are fairly entrenched, but the rest of the list fluctuates a lot day by day.
Like Popular Gusts, I have long considered Sanullim’s second album to be one of my favorites. When you have had a couple of adult beverages too many and you are at some old bar at 2 or 3 in the morning, and that great bass line from Nae Maeum-ae Judan-eul Kkalgo comes on the bar’s stereo, it is one of my favorite feelings. I am just happy I was able to catch the band live in concert at their 30th anniversary show a couple of years ago.
What makes it even better for me is that when I was breaking into journalism a few years ago, I was working at the Joongang Daily under Hal Piper, a first-rate reporter and editor who spent most of his career at the Baltimore Sun.
Season five has been especially controversial to some (journalists, mostly) because of its portrayal of cutbacks and the modern evolution of the news room. Some people think that David Simon, the show’s creator and veteran crime reporter for The Sun, has been unduly harsh and petty about the leadership at The Sun when he was there. Others think he was spot on. There have been some great debates.
As for Mr. Piper, he has not seen THE WIRE, but this is what he had to say about The Sun and Mr. Simon and the others:
Yes, I knew Simon (not well), Carroll and Marimow. The latter two were my bosses in my last few years at the Sun, and I respected them a lot. I have seen what Simon says, but I think Carroll and Marimow reversed a prior decline in the quality of the Sun. When I left it in 2001 I thought it was a better paper than it had been in 10 or 15 years. Now that I am back in Baltimore, and reading the Sun again, I think it is a worse paper than I can remember in my lifetime. So, acknowledging Simon’s talent — he really was a great police reporter — I wouldn’t trust his evaluation of the paper as a whole. That said, I am dying to see the show. Some of my friends who are no longer with the paper have bit roles as reporters.
He goes on to say: “The issue, it seems to me, is that management has made a strategic decision in favor of mediocrity (closing foreign bureaus, using mostly wire stuff for travel and book reviews, etc.).” Ouch.
At any rate, you can read Simon’s point of view about the series and Baltimore and more in this fine story.
Very impressive totals for FOREVER THE MOMENT, as the women’s handball film chugs past the 2.7 million admissions mark, or about $17.3 million. But will it be enough to revive MK Pictures?
This Week | Title…………………………………….. | Release Date | Screens Nationwide | Weekend Revenue (bil. won) | Total Revenue (bil. won) |
1. | Forever the Moment (Uri Saengae Choego-ui Sungan – Korean) | 1.10 | 493 | 3.50 | 16.3 |
2. | Cloverfield | 1.24 | 344 | 2.01 | 2.40 |
3. | Open City (Mubangbi Dosi – Korean) | 1.10 | 318 | 1.43 | 9.46 |
4. | Sweeney Todd | 1.17 | 284 | 1.04 | 4.11 |
5. | Hellcats (Tteugeoun Geosi Joha – Korean) | 1.17 | 284 | 0.88 | 3.37 |
6. | Happily N’Ever After | 1.24 | 240 | 0.70 | 0.87 |
7. | Bee Movie | 1.03 | 226 | 0.50 | 6.57 |
8. | Alien vs. Predator | 1.17 | 180 | 0.37 | 1.75 |
9. | Mist | 1.10 | 178 | 0.27 | 3.27 |
10. | Enchanted | 1.10 | 138 | 0.26 | 2.63 |
(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)
But this is the crazy weekend, with so many high-profile, big-budget films coming out for the Seollal lunar new year holiday. There is a nice analysis in this KOREA TIMES story about how oversupply is hurting (crippling?) the Korean film industry. So true. Everyone knows that 70-ish films is the “proper” amount for the Korean market, and yet the film industry keeps on cranking out 110 a year. Doesn’t this feel like a lesson from your Economics 101 textbook? But what can you do when stupid money insists on throwing itself away?
Hey, look at that. We are now at www.koreapopwars.com. More changes to come in the near future…
And please let me know if anything here is acting buggy on your computer.
Thus an eight-volume CD collection named “The New Original Hit Pops” contains a hologram mark of the Korea Music Copyright Association. But the certificate serial number C6-00028279 on the sticker was given to a soap opera starring Choi Ji-woo, the association said.
(How is selling on the subways legal anyhow? Shouldn’t those “vendors” all get the boot and fined for selling things without a permit? Seems like an easy way to end the problem and put a bit of money into the city’s coffers.)
Actually, I really misjudged the amount of space they had available, and originally I wrote way too much. Cutting was probably for the best, though. I can usually use some tightening up. In case anyone cares, here is what I wrote:
By Mark Russell
Of all the different aspects of the entertainment industry, none have had a deeper and yet more complex relationship with globalization than the movies.
The importance of the outside world in stimulating the creative boom of the 1990s is well known and well documented. Many of the great strides made in Korean movies, whether on the artistic side or the financing, came from innovators who were educated abroad for at least a few years – for example, Lee Mie-kyung and CJ Entertainment, director Kwak Kyung-taek (“Friend”), and Ryu Seong-hee, the art designer for such movies as “The Host” and “Hansel & Gretel.”
In fact, the global film market has had an important role in Korea pretty much since the film industry started here. In the 1920s and 30s, Korea was the most lucrative movie market in Asia for Hollywood, and all the major studios (Universal, Paramount, United Artists, MGM, RKO) had offices here. After the Korean War, too, international films flourished for a time.
Even the movie market opening to foreign direct distributors in the mid-1980s, generally considered an event that nearly killed the local movie business, in many ways was good for Korean movies. For example, as the Hollywood studios fought for access to the Korean market, they also fought against the heavy censorship regulations that once stifled domestic creativity.
These days, it feels like those lessons have been forgotten. Foreign movies are seen by some as a threat to the local industry, despite the huge growth in Korea’s movie exports over the past decade and despite Korean movies far outpacing their foreign competitors at the box office. The screen quota remains another major hot-button issue. And I even hear about Korean actors losing roles in major international movies because their managers are not comfortable with English or working outside of Korea.
The trouble is, globalization is always a two-way street, and anytime you cut yourself off from the world, you are cutting yourself off from new ideas, innovation, and creativity.
The Seo Taiji boom in music has long since turned stagnant, a neverending recycling of the same teen pop ideas.
Korean television dramas, once seen as a fresh, lively alternative around Asia, have quickly lost their freshness, and with that they are losing their audiences.
And the movie business – arguably the most innovative and impressive of Korea’s entertainment industries – is threatening to fade, declining into mainstream mush and a handful of innovative directors.
Strangely, despite Korea’s amazing shift into becoming an online information society, it has defied one of the most basic assumptions of what the information age means – Korea has not grown more diverse, in many ways it has grown less so.
Many analysts and writers have long said that as a society moves into the information age, choice will naturally grow as people can find easily anything they like and producers lose their control.
But the movie industry in 2007 produced far fewer interesting, challenging and bizarre movies than it did in 1997. Korea’s films are usually very good looking and slick, and each year usually brings a few big-budget ambitious epics. Creatively, however, not a lot is happening these days.
“The Korean Wave” was an impressive achievement. It brought international level production, distribution and related skills that revolutionized the entertainment industries and made Korea into an example for much of Asia.
Clearly another wave is now needed, one that focuses on creativity, if Korea is to continue to be a major cultural force in the future. A handful of star directors is not enough. Korea needs to systematically put creativity into the movie development process. Movie companies, particularly the largest ones that dominate so much of the business, need to carve out niches where experimental and promising talents can be nurtured and encouraged to develop.
It is a lesson that many of Korea’s automobile and electronics companies have already learned, and that more of the Korean economy will need to learn in the future. It is not enough to copy on the cheap, true value comes from innovation. And if you want to compete on the world stage, your products must be innovative at world class levels.
This Week | Title…………………………………….. | Release Date | Screens Nationwide | Weekend Revenue (bil. won) |
Total Revenue (bil. won) |
1. | Forever the Moment (Uri Saengae Choego-ui Sungan – Korean) | 1.10 | 587 | 4.93 | 9.74 |
2. | Open City (Mubangbi Dosi – Korean) | 1.10 | 537 | 2.89 | 6.45 |
3. | Sweeney Todd | 1.17 | 321 | 1.84 | 1.84 |
4. | Hellcats (Tteugeoun Geosi Joha – Korean) | 1.17 | 315 | 1.43 | 1.44 |
5. | Bee Movie | 1.03 | 384 | 1.18 | 5.56 |
6. | The Mist | 1.10 | 357 | 1.01 | 2.58 |
7. | Alien Vs. Predator 2 | 1.17 | 178 | 0.88 | 0.88 |
8. | Enchanted | 1.10 | 464 | 0.79 | 2.00 |
9. | Little Prince (Eorin Wangja – Korean) | 1.17 | 228 | 0.22 | 0.22 |
10. | 30 Days of Night | 1.10 | 181 | 0.18 | 0.55 |
(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)
Note: I have changed WOMEN’S HANDBALL TEAM to FOREVER THE MOMENT, the name KOFIC seems to be using.
After a bit of a dull stretch of film, Hong had a comeback of sorts with WOMAN ON THE BEACH, which I quite liked. Advance word on NIGHT AND DAY is pretty good so far… even though it clocks in at an intimidating 2 hours 24 minutes.
I am especially looking forward to NIGHT AND DAY because the wonderful and talented Chun Sun-young worked on it as Assistant Director. Sun-young was nominated for a BAFTA award back in 2002 for her short film GOOD NIGHT.
I say this is interesting because anyone who knows Korea’s online gaming world will recognize that business model.
E.A.’s most recent experiment with free online games began two years ago in South Korea, the world’s most fervent gaming culture. In 2006, the company introduced a free version of its FIFA soccer game there, and Gerhard Florin, E.A.’s executive vice president for publishing in the Americas and Europe, said it has signed up more than five million Korean users and generates more than $1 million in monthly in-game sales.
Kind of cool. Although, to be honest, a little frustrating, too. Back in 2004-ish, I was talking with EA for months about writing a major feature about this business model and how EA was using the Korean method of online gaming and trying to take it global. But EA kept delaying and delaying and eventually the story kind of fell apart. So close…
Jan. 23 – Club FB – Point Zero Three (Yukie’s jam band from Japan)
Jan. 25 – Club Yogiga – Organic Music Concert. And more Point Zero Three.
Jan. 27 – Club Yogiga – Bulgasari (4pm)
As a reporter who does a lot of stuff in media issues, one of the major government ministries I need to deal with is the Ministry of Information and Communications (MIC). I also write about Korean science, which has me dealing with the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST).
So what does President-elect Lee Myung-bak do? He axes both the MIC and MOST. Yikes. Should I take that personally?
I am cautiously optimistic about these changes. A professor of mine used to say, you can change the length of the alimentary canal all you want, the end product is still the same. But the truth is, organization does matter. It may not be as sexy or easy to understand as a great pop song or a cool movie, but boring stuff like infrastructure and organization is a vital part of any industry. Do not kid yourself, the “entertainment business” is as much business as it is entertainment.
What do these changes mean? First of all, getting the MIC out of the way potentially a huge boon for much of the Information Technology industry. IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) has been held up for years because of the MIC’s squabbling with the Korean Broadcasting Commission. Also, how about Blackberries? Lots of cool toys like that have been kept out of Korea because of roadblocks put up by the MIC. There are plenty of tech issues keeping the iPhone out of Korea, but today we are one step closer to getting them.
We can only hope that the end of the MIC will also mean an end to (or at least a reduction in) Internet censorship. Way too much of the Internet in Korea gets shut off at the whim of random bureaucrats.
Despite the downsizing, Lee Myung-bak had a lot of science and IT stuff in his election platform. And he brought in people like Park Chan-mo (former head of POSTECH and all-round cool guy) to be one of his main advisors. Expect science and IT to remain central to Korean policymaking. After all, science, education and tech have been combined to create the Ministry of Knowledge-Based Economy (MOKBE?), which is quite a mouthful, but a clear sign of where Lee’s priorities lie.
And who knows? What will happen once Lee Myung-bak comes up against the full force of bureaucratic intransigence? Once everything settles down, I imagine much less will change than people think right now.
But some deregulating in the media industry could be a great shot in the arm, helping Korea’s media companies get a little more profitable, which in turn gives us consumers a better chance at getting better movies, TV, music and whatnot (“content” in boring industry-speak).
And at least Lee kept the Ministry of Culture. It is not like the accountant barbarians are taking over everything.
(Note: I might update this post over the weekend as additional stuff occurs to me).