Books, blog and other blather

Author: Mark (Page 68 of 90)

Korea Weekend Box Office – Jan. 11-13

A bit of a change starting this week, as I will be reporting weekly revenue instead of attendance. Seems like the more relevant stat to me. But if something significant happens to a movie’s attendance (like topping 10 million admissions), I will try to mention it.

The Korean won is worth about 940 won/dollar, so you can approximate the chart to millions of dollars easily enough.

Let me know if you have any feedback, questions, concerns with the change.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Revenue (bil. won) Total Revenue (bil. won)
1. Women’s Handball Team (Uri Saengae Choego-ui Sungan – Korean) 1.10 493 4.14 4.92
2. Open City (Mubangbi Dosi – Korean) 1.10 413 3.06 3.61
3. Bee Movie 1.03 296 1.48 4.37
4. The Mist 1.10 256 1.32 1.58
5. Enchanted 1.10 322 1.01 1.23
6. National Treasure 2 12.20 233 0.396 11.15
7. The Golden Compass 12.18 210 0.320 17.82
8. The Jacket 1.10 179 0.318 0.370
9. 30 Days of Night 1.10 144 0.312 0.364
10. Gidarida Micheo – Korean 1.01 237 0.200 2.79

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)

Random Notes – Vol 3, No. 2

  • I checked out some surprisingly good bands at Freebird the other night. It has been quite a while since I even thought about Freebird, but this time it had the best bands I have seen in Korea for ages.

    Most notable was ORIENTAL LUCY (sorry, I only have these crappy cell phone pics). Each song was quite different, ranging from a retro-70s-rock sound to a bizarre cover of a trot classic that sounded like something by SIOUXSIE AND THE BANSHEES. (They have a Cyworld page here, but it is one of those annoying ones you need to sign into to use, so it is pretty much useless for most people.)


    Another very good band was FRENZY, a four-man instrumental shoe-gazing band that sounded a bit like classic Echo and the Bunnymen (my friend’s assessment).


    The other band was JERANG, perhaps not as good, but still interesting in their own way. A bit of an early-Radiohead, whiny sound, but not bad. I believe JERANG won the most recent Korea national high school talent competition. They four guys in the band are just 20 (Korean age, I would imagine, so 19 in the rest of the world), so they have some time to improve. But a good beginning.

  • I just ran across a relatively new-ish magazine and website dedicated to the Seoul art scene, called NEXART (actually, I think Nex Art has been around since 2006, but I just discovered it). At the moment it is in Korean only, but the website claims that an English section will be coming in March. If you pick up the ‘zine around town, most of the stories have a short English intro, which is limited but quite interesting.
  • Poking around on the Nex Art website then led me to the English (and Korean) website EAST BRIDGE, another site for finding out more about the Korean art scene.
  • As long as you are at East Bridge, do not forget to check out their huge list of Korean art links.
  • I just checked out the first two episodes of THE WIRE’s fifth season (through totally legitimate means, I am sure… Stealing them via Bittorrent would be wrong).

    Totally love it. Season 5 is, somehow, even more bleak than the first four seasons. But despite the depressing edge to things, it is still the best show on television, by far. Great writing, solid insights and, despite the dark cynicism, more than a few funny moments.

    In case you have not heard, THE WIRE season 5 turns an eye to the media, in particular to modern newspapers, with all the brutal insight the show has used to examine city politics, the war on drugs, schools and all the rest.

    Some early reviews have criticized the shows creator for having an exaggerated or cartoon-like perspective on the troubles facing the modern newspaper, but I think those criticisms are off-base. Sure it is not 100-percent correct, but THE WIRE is a fictional, entertainment program, not a documentary. I am guessing its view of the newsroom is as accurate as all the other institutions it has skewered over the years (which is to say quite accurate, but very much fiction).

    If you are in Korea, you can still track down season 1 of THE WIRE here and there, for just 20,000 won or so. Totally worth it. Or you can order seasons 1-4 from Amazon.com.

  • Korea Weekend Box Office – Jan. 4-6

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
    1. B Movie 1.03 334 305,448 358,690
    2. National Treasure 2 12.20 334 192,535 1,586,336
    3. The Golden Compass 12.18 346 176,933 2,698,140
    4. Gidarida Micheo – Korean 01.01 306 151,828 321,030
    5. P.S. I Love You 1.03 249 119,076 214,123
    6. Sex Is Zero 2 (Saekjeuk Sigong Sijeun 2 – Korean) 12.13 256 104,151 1,934,090
    7. August Rush 11.29 174 80,352 2,102,733
    8. American Gangster 12.27 252 75,237 355,866
    9. My Love (Nae Sarang – Korean) 12.20 199 62,300 932,806
    10. Rainbow Eyes (Gamyeon – Korean) 12.27 211 55,351 286,975
    11. Hansel & Gretel (Korean) 12.27 223 53,616 288,086

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)

    More Crummy Than Bread Crumbs — Hansel & Gretel Loses Its Way

    Some day, Im Pil-sung is going to make a really great movie. ANTARCTIC JOURNAL, his first film, was not. And, sad to say, HANSEL & GRETEL is not one either.


    The story is simple enough (and I will try to avoid spoilers). Eun-su (Cheon Jeong-myeong) is driving through the countryside, on his way to meet his mother, when he gets into a car accident. His is thrown from the car and passes out. When he wakes up, there is a girl with a red cloak and a lamp who guides him to her house in the forest.


    The girl’s house and family are very odd and unnatural. Lots of candy and sweet food, even though no one does any baking. Lots of bright colors and strange designs. And there are apparently some strange, nasty things that go bump in the night.


    Eun-su also soon discovers that he cannot get away; there is no way out of the forest. After a couple of days, the kids’ parents disappear, to be replaced by a more malevolent fellow. Gradually the mystery is revealed, along with plenty of blood and general ickiness.

    The good? Well, the designs are the usual bright and freaky stuff we always expect from Ryu Seong-hee (OLDBOY, I’M A CYBORG BUT THAT’S OKAY, THE HOST). And there are parts (especially in the middle) where the surrealism is interesting and promising.


    Unfortunately, the bad far outweighs the good. The story is too odd to be taken seriously as a drama, but not fantastic enough to be interesting in it’s own right. Eun-su is not a very interesting character and does not draw you in at all. The psychology underlying the surreal story is puddle deep. Furthermore, the characters keep saying the same things over and over again… Very annoying.

    In addition, like all Korean horror movies, a large chunk of the second half is filled with endless explaining and crying and explaining and crying. Ugh. Why do the bad, evil people at the heart of the story do the things they do? Who cares… they are just bad and evil. No nuance.

    Which is too bad. I like Im. I think he is underrated. Considering how tepid and similar far too many Korean movies were these days, it is great to see someone trying to do something different and off-beat. I think he was trying to do something like PAN’S LABYRINTH, but Im’s story is horribly underdeveloped.

    If you are interested in seeing more of the film (despite my mean review), the movie trailer is at Youtube. You can also see the trailer at the movie’s official website here.

    Random Notes – Vol 3, No. 1

  • There was a potentially interesting story a couple of days ago in the Korea Herald about President-Elect Lee Myung-bak’s transition plans, in particular about PE Lee thinking about getting rid of Korea’s numerous press regulations. Which would be quite welcomed, at least by me. The Korean government’s endless meddling in media (and so much else) is always annoying.

    Not controlling the press. Allowing universities to set their own admissions policies. If PE Lee really going to pull the government back and reduce its clumsy, authoritarian tendencies, I think it would be very good for Korea.

  • My story on AFN getting kicked off of cable here in Korea has finally been published at The Hollywood Reporter. I am not exactly happy about the headline, but the story itself was fun to write (especially tracking down John Lee, AFKN engineer 1958-64).

    As my story says, AFN is being taken off the local cable systems solely because of copyright concerns (unlike a lot of the more conspiratorial and even bizarre theories I have seen floating around). While the American networks are not exactly happy about anyone with an antenna being able to see their programs, what really pissed them off was the cable companies adding AFN to their selection of programming — in effect, getting paid for an unauthorized retransmission.

    Actually, it is quite unusual for AFN to be available on free-to-air TV, in the heart of a bustling metropolis. Most US Military bases are not in such heavily populated areas. Certainly AFKN was not in that sort of situation when the channel went on the air in 1957.

    With a large military and military-related population to serve in Korea (and in particular, a large population that would need evacuating in the event of war), free-to-air AFKN was the most efficient way to make emergency announcements (at least in the pre-Internet era).

    Anyhow, the pics AFN sent me did not make the online version of the story, so here are a couple for you.



  • HANSEL & GRETEL review to come tomorrow.
  • Korea Weekend Box Office – Dec. 29-Jan. 1

    Hi all. Sorry for not mentioning that I was taking some time off for the holidays this year. The time away was much appreciated though. Now I am back and ready for 2008.

    Hollywood is certainly starting off 2008 strong, with nearly 70 percent of the boxoffice. Top film over the holidays was THE GOLDEN COMPASS, which has made over $15 million since it opened on Dec. 18. NATIONAL TREASURE 2 is also doing well, with around $8.2 million since Dec. 20.

    Top Korean movies is SEX IS ZERO 2, with about $12 million since Dec. 13 (with about $1.1 million of that coming over the long holiday weekend).

    Very sad to see HANSEL & GRETEL open so poorly. Just $1 million since it opened on Dec. 27. Very disappointing on a lot of levels. I missed the press screening because I was on holiday, but I hope to get a review up on this site in the next few days.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
    1. The Golden Compass 12.18 397 332,053 2,167,087
    2. National Treasure 2 12.20 338 237,722 1,105,853
    3. Sex Is Zero 2 (Saekjeuk Shigong Sijeun 2 – Korean) 12.13 319 158,320 1,658,665
    4. I Am Legend 12.12 313 145,944 2,274,330
    5. American Gangster 12.27 318 137,895 165,587
    6. Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium 12.19 287 133,782 446,776
    7. My Love (Nae Sarang – Korean) 12.20 293 133,508 749,388
    8. Hansel & Gretel 12.27 245 117,121 140,455
    9. Rainbow Eyes (Gamyeon – Korean) 12.27 261 113,846 142,701
    10. August Rush 11.29 189 98,266 1,894,308

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)

    Hrm… Looks like KOBIS has updated its website. Looks nice enough, but it still does not work well at all with Safari. More information than ever, though.

    Korea Weekend Box Office – Dec. 14-16

    Some strange goings-on with the top-10 this week. When KOBIS published the weekend numbers on Monday morning, they were obviously really low. I AM LEGEND, for example, was listed as doing about half of what its true business was. Turns out that there were some computer problems and a bunch of theaters had not reported their weekend business.

    Apparently the Monday KOBIS numbers are always preliminary, and final figures are not confirmed until Tuesday. I did not know that. I hope I have not posted any wrong box office figures here in past weeks.

    Anyhow, big weekend for Will Smith’s I AM LEGEND. Kind of funny, considering how no one I know who saw the film liked it. Score one for Warner Bros’ marketing team. LEGEND had $6.5 million, including its early Wednesday opening (true weekend numbers were closer to $5 million).

    I was surprised LEGEND outperformed both SEX IS ZERO 2 and THE FIGHT. Was sure at least one of those would be a breakout hit. As it turns out, SEX IS ZERO 2 was the big Korean film over the weekend… a fact I find endlessly distressing. No, I have not seen it yet, but the original SEX IS ZERO was such a miserable film, I am disappointed people went back for more punishment.

    THE FIGHT opened only in fourth, which had to have been disappointing to its distributor. It felt like I have seen ads for this film every five minutes on TV here. (SEX IS ZERO 2, on the other hand, was pretty much invisible, at least on the channels I watch).

    Kind of cool to see KIKI’S DELIVERY SERVICE in the top ten, especially since that movie was released a few weeks ago. Are all of Hayao Miyazaki’s old films going to be periodically rereleased in Korean theaters, like Disney’s film used to be when I was growing up? It would be cool is young people had the opportunity to see his films in the theater.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
    1. I Am Legend 12.12 486 678,619 918,396
    2. Sex Is Zero 2 (Saekjeuk Sigong Sijeun 2 – Korean) 12.12 440 439,031 584,284
    3. August Rush 11.29 314 239,645 1,336,512
    4. The Fight (Ssaum – Korean) 12.13 396 164,750 236,328
    5. Seven Days (Korean) 11.14 243 97,629 1,932,717
    6. Lust, Caution 11.08 200 69,467 1,821,731
    7. Hairspray 12.06 215 56,117 294,936
    8. Le Grand Chef (Sikkaek – Korean) 11.01 115 25,057 2,969,549
    9. Kiki’s Delivery Service 11.22 38 7,500 23,716
    10. My Eleventh Mother (Yeolhanbeonjjae Eomma – Korean) 11.29 46 6,275 333,337

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)

    Running Down a Dream (Cinema)

    My ever-so-cool colleague Chun Sujin just wrote a feature about the end of Dream Cinema, the last non-multiplex theater in Seoul. Dream Cinema is an ugly concrete box, with fading paint, broken seats and a dubious sound system (at the best of times). But when it was opened in 1964, it was one of the fancier cinemas in the city, like the Daehan or Picadilly.


    Very much worth a read, especially since I can still remember a time before there were any multiplexes in Korea. Amazing how fast things change.

    Writing this makes me remember the last time I went to the Dream Cinema to watch a film. It was the first Korean press screening for LORD OF THE RINGS: FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING. The sound system was in worse shape than usual that day, and about 20 minutes into the film the sound went out entirely. I had to wait another couple of days until the next press screening to see the movie. As I was dying to see FELLOWSHIP (geek that I am), I was pretty bitter about that.

    And if you want to check out the Dream Cinema, it will stay open until January or so. To commemorate the theater and its closing, the manager booked DIRTY DANCING, which has turned into something of a surprise hit (and tickets are just half-price, compared to other theaters).

    Dream Cinema is located in Seodaemun, right by the Seodaemun Subway Station on line No. 5.

    SSS – XXX

    Andrei Lankov has a great (if short) essay about the classic Korean “ero” film MADAME AEMA at the Korea Times (here). Totally worth a read.

    If you like that sort of thing, you can read a short essay about the 3S policy in KOFIC’s KOREAN CINEMA book (which you can download for free here (yeah, there is a more normal link at www.koreanfilm.or.kr, but it does not seem to work with Mac computers, so I linked to Google’s html cache instead. If you use PC, though, you can see the article here ).

    If you are interested in urban history or more of the sports side of the 3S policy, there is a very interesting article about Seoul’s urban policy and the 1988 Olympics here.

    Now if someone would only write such an essay about PPONG


    Hey! Great collection of posters and stills of PPONG at the Korean Movie Database. Nifty.

    Korea Weekend Box Office – Dec. 7-9

    Score one for parity this week, as no one movie occupied over 300 screens. I cannot remember the last time that happened. All the movies in the top-10 this weekend were on between 276 and 98 screens.

    Actually, now that I think about it, last weekend was pretty even, too, as all the movies occupied between 321 and 160 screens.

    Anyhow, the biggest film, yet again (and rather mysteriously) was AUGUST RUSH. That is about $1.8 million over the weekend for a total of $5.7 million. Once again, a movie doing better in its second weekend than in its first. What an odd trend this fall.

    But does anyone really want to see that film? It could make a more cynical person think that CJ was “encouraging” all its employees (and their family and friends) to see the film. How very lucky for me that I’m not cynical.

    FYI, AUGUST RUSH has made a little over $25 million in the United States. Plus $1.4 million in the UK and $600,000 in Italy.

    SEVEN DAYS continues to do fairly well — about $1.2 million over the weekend for a total of around $12 million.

    HAIRSPRAY was the biggest debut this week. But John Travolta is no Devine.

    LUST CAUTION also continues its remarkable Korean run, with another $720,000 or so, bringing its total box office to about $12 million.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
    1. August Rush 11.29 276 254,767 826,241
    2. Seven Days (Korean) 11.14 265 167,030 1,670,485
    3. Hairspray 12.06 218 107,219 133,286
    4. Lust, Caution 11.08 220 104,490 1,628,512
    5. Le Grand Chef 11.01 260 91,577 2,866,683
    6. Our Town (Uri Dongne – Korean) 11.29 228 58,249 311,285
    7. My Eleventh Mother (Yeolhanbeonjjae Eomma – Korean) 11.29 224 57,151 279,598
    8. Death Sentence 12.06 122 36,434 44,607
    9. Hitman 11.29 147 23,920 143,173
    10. Beowulf 11.14 98 17,698 957,057

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 97% of nationwide box office)

    A pretty big movie weekend on its way, with SEX IS ZERO 2 and VENUS AND MARS (or “The Fight,” “Ssaum,” in Korea) both opening.

    Hey, the SPEED RACER trailer.

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