Books, blog and other blather

Category: Korean movies (Page 19 of 31)

Awards, Memoirs, and Ass-kicking

Just wasted an evening watching the 28th Blue Dragon Awards on KBS. Very exciting. A lot of distressing fashion choices there tonight. Granted, I’m no George Clooney, but Kim Tae-hee’s outfit was pretty hideous.

This was my first awards show with HD, and as unfortunate as some of those dresses were, my friends were even more shocked by lines and bad makeup on many of the stars. HD really is pretty cruel to some celebrities.

Anyhow, as for the awards themselves, no single film dominated this year. No real terrible decisions, either.

Best Film – THE SHOW MUST GO ON

Best Director – Hur Jin-ho, HAPPINESS

Best Actor – Song Kang-ho, THE SHOW MUST GO ON

Best Actress – Jeon Do-yeon

Best Supporting Actor – Kim Sang-ho, THE HAPPY LIFE

Best Supporting Actress – Na Moon-hee, CRUEL WINTER BLUES

Best Screenplay – Kim Nam-min, PARADISE MURDERED

Best Cinematography – Yoon Nam-ju, EPITAPH

Best Lighting – HWANG JIN-YI

Best Art Design – EPITAPH

Best Effects – THE RESTLESS

Best New Director – Kim Nam-min, PARADISE MURDERED

Best New Actor – Daniel Henney, MY FATHER

Best New Actress – Jeong Reo-won, THE TWO FACES OF MY GIRLFRIEND

I probably missed a couple of awards, but I cannot think of them right now… and do not care enough to double-check.
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Btw, the great actress Choi Eun-hee has just written an autobiography. You can read a summary of it here.


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And now, for no particular reason, here is a picture from Jun Ji-hyun’s coming film BLOOD: THE LAST VAMPIRE. I think it is a pretty good teaser. Enjoy.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Nov. 16-18

For the third weekend in a row, LE GRAND CHEF was the biggest film in land, adding another $2.7 million to bring its total boxoffice to around $14 million.

BEOWULF followed closely No. 2, with around $2.6 million, or $3.7 million including previews. Once again, the folks in Hollywood screwed up their numbers, though, as for some reason the international trades are reporting BEOWULF was on 159 screens in Korea (not the actual 359, giving the movie an insane per-screen average).

Hrm, just got a call from Warner. They claim the film was on 276 screens. Wonderfully confusing.

I was surprised that the Kim Yun-jin thriller SEVEN DAYS did not do better. I thought it had a strong marketing push and pretty good reviews. Despite that, it only opened in third.

LUST, CAUTION is still doing well, at fourth. Apparently the movie is a big hit with women, who make up 70% of tickets sold (much higher than the usual male/female split, which is closer to 50/50).

SCOUT did remarkably poorly, for a film showing on over 400 screens.

And ONCE is still holding on to 10th, nearly two months after its release. In fact, ONCE’s soundtrack is the best-selling foreign CD in the land at the moment,

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Le Grand Chef (Sikkaek – Korean) 11.01 472 379,566 1,915,622
2. Beowulf 11.14 359 365,619 501,734
3. Seven Days (Korean) 11.14 373 252,313 346,747
4. Lust, Caution 11.08 297 220,343 644,057
5. Scout (Korean) 11.14 403 129,490 167,940
6. Going by the Book (Bareuge Salja – Korean) 10.18 243 64,589 2,108,789
7. Maeulgeumgo Yeonsoe Seupgyeoksageon (Korean) 11.14 226 57,446 75,174
8. The Butterfly 11.08 212 20,173 175,445
9. Lost Lines 11.08 176 17,583 143,280
10. Once 9.20 19 9,740 158,285

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

Korea Weekend Box Office – Nov. 9-11

Lots of interesting things going on at the Korean boxoffice last week. The top film, LE GRAND CHEF, actually increased its weekend haul, rising 15% from last weekend. You do not see that happen very often. After 10 days, CHEF has made about $9 million.

In No. 2 was Ang Lee’s LUST, CAUTION, which I think is pretty good for a 2 1/2 hour sexual thriller. In just three days, LUST made about $1.9 million. In the United States, the film has needed 45 days to make just $3.7 million.

In third, GOING BY THE BOOK has now topped 2 million admissions, which is generally considered a solid outing.

Fuji-TV’s HERO is now up to 224,000 admissions. Not great, but not bad.

Finally, the No. 9 film, SEVEN DAYS, is pretty interesting this week, as the film has not even been released yet. At least not officially. But already it has pulled in 30,000 admissions before it even hits the screens. Not sure how I feel about this. After all, 30,000 admissions will not make a big difference to its overall admissions count, so it is not like the distributor is trying to boost its numbers. But, still, it does look odd.

Anyhow, congratulations to SEVEN DAYS, for being the latest Korean film to get the Hollywood remake treatment. Summit Entertainment apparently is planning on making a $30 million remake in the next year or so.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Le Grand Chef (Sikkaek – Korean) 11.01 412 507,151 1,290,330
2. Lust, Caution 11.08 298 226,722 269,423
3. Going by the Book (Bareuge Salja – Korean) 10.18 279 182,769 1,981,630
4. The Butterfly 11.08 242 93,427 124,833
5. Lost Lines 11.08 205 85,153 100,003
6. Hero (Japan) 10.25 239 49,415 223,979
7. Shadows in the Palace (Gungneo – Korean) 10.18 249 46,822 1,349,965
8. Kingdom 11.01 173 44,029 224,410
9. Seven Days (Korean) 11.14 (!) 50 15,008 29,843
10. Black Dahlia 11.01 196 13,892 120,080

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

Btw, what is up with international boxoffice reports that have two films from India leading this past weekend? According to the trades, OM SHANTI OM made about $17 million, while SAAWARIYA came second with $14.4 million.

My problem with these reports? I cannot find a weekend ever when the entire top-10 of the Indian boxoffice earned even $12 million. Ever. And now two films alone have pulled in $30 million? Seems very unlikely. I suspect someone is playing games with their numbers.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Nov. 2-4

Big turnover this week, with half of the top-10 consisting of new entries, led by Jeon Yoon-soo’s LA GRAND CHEF, with about $3.6 million. Based on the comic book by Heo Yeong-man (TAZZA), LA GRAND CHEF is also being made into a TV show, so if you like it, you are sure to get plenty more soon enough.

The next new title this week was HERO, the Fuji-TV film featuring a cameo from Lee Byung-hun. With 271 screens, it had the widest release ever for a Japanese film in Korea, just slightly ahead of THE SINKING OF JAPAN’s 256. Did not come close, however, to matching SINKING’s boxoffice, which pulled in 479,000 in its opening weekend, compared to 128,000 for HERO.

Other new releases did not do much. KINGDOM had just 127,000 admissions, BLACK DAHLIA (released a year late) had 75,000. And Lee Joon-ki’s latest, VIRGIN SNOW, took in just 13,000. Although VIRGIN SNOW did get a 44 screen release — for a while there, it was looking like it would only get 10 screens. But this Japan-Korea coproduction has its eye on the Japan DVD market for the bulk of its revenues.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Le Grand Chef (Sikgaek- Korean) 11.01 436 440,813 518,397
2. Going by the Book (Bareuge Salja – Korean) 10.18 329 261,335 1,661,958
3. Shadows in the Palace (Gungneo – Korean) 10.18 287 108,427 1,234,644
4. Hero (Japan) 11.01 271 104,915 128,202
5. Kingdom 11.01 192 102,192 127,675
6. Black Dahlia 11.01 215 60,230 75,412
7. M (Korean) 10.25 318 45,912 396,098
8. Resident Evil 3 10.18 190 34,788 509,799
9. Virgin Snow (Cheotnun – Korean) 11.01 44 10,511 12,814
10. Copying Beethoven 10.11 43 10,122 265,281

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

Korea Weekend Box Office – Oct. 26-28

A disappointing opening for Lee Myung-se’s new film M, making its debut only in third place. That works out to about $1.89 million since its release Thursday night (the KOFIC chart claims it opened on the 26th, but I am certain it was in theaters on Thursday evening). Looks like M will be hard pressed to get to 1 million admissions, let alone the 1.2 million admissions that DUELIST had.

Most of the rest of the top 10 is basically the same as last week. Top film once again is GOING BY THE BOOK, which took in $2.9 million over the weekend to raise its total boxoffice to something over $8 million.

SHADOWS IN THE PALACE took the second spot again, with $1.8 million over the weekend and a total boxoffice of just less than $7 million.

COPYING BEETHOVEN still going strong in sixth after three weeks.

Most shockingly bad opening in quite some time goes to PUNCH LADY, which had just 22,000 admissions (about $150,000) despite appearing on 240 screens. That does not even come close to paying for 240 prints, never mind the production costs and advertising.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Going by the Book (Bareuge Salja – Korean) 10.18 402 421,500 1,173,875
2. Shadows in the Palace (Gungneo – Korean) 10.18 381 266,723 989,715
3. M (Korean) 10.26 451 229,919 276,336
4. Resident Evil 3 10.18 253 116,701 416,109
5. Love Exposure (Eokkae Neomeo-ui Yeonin – Korean) 10.18 247 56,036 251,796
6. Copying Beethoven 10.11 101 30,123 239,095
7. Tokyo Tower (Japan) 10.25 71 25,211 28,901
8. Happiness (Haengbok – Korean) 10.03 209 23,070 1,178,201
9. Rush Hour 3 10.03 134 22,780 776,106
10. Punch Lady (Peonchi Reidi – Korean) 10.25 240 21,441 25,863

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

Interestingly, KOBIS claims its boxoffice tracking now covers 97 percent of screens in Korea. That is pretty close to complete. Nice to see the KOBIS system finally getting near total compliance.

Korean movies now have 51.1 percent of the year’s boxoffice. Hollywood is down to 43.2 percent. Quite a change in fortunes from July, when Hollywood was outpacing Korea.

Catching up on the Past

I had a nice little surprise at Kyobo Books yesterday — the Korean Film Archive has put out yet another box set of great old films. This set is called THE PAST UNEARTHED, and it is a collection of movies from the Japanese colonial period. Included are ANGELS ON THE STREETS (1941), SPRING OF KOREAN PENINSULA (1941), VOLUNTEER (1941) AND STRAITS OF CHOSUN (1943).


The set comes with a booklet about the films and the period (in Korean and English) and a photo reproduction of the original script for ANGEL ON THE STREETS, in Japanese and Korean. It’s all pretty funky stuff.

Nothing in English about the film at the Korean Film Archives website yet, although you can read their Korean entry here. More about the DVD set at the Kyobo Books website here. And at less than 30,000 won, it is quite worth purchasing.

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As long as I am on the subject of the olden days, I should mention a couple of other interesting things I ran across recently.

First, there are these old Korean singers’ videos on Youtube. Totally worth checking out:
Kim Choo-ja
Kim Choo-ja
Kim Jung-mi
Kim Jung-mi (short clip)
Sandpebbles

And apparently the nice people at Brothers Entertainment have set up a Kim Choo-ja website.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Oct. 19-21

Score another one for Jang Jin. The prolific filmmaker has another hit with the No. 1 opening of GOING BY THE BOOK. Actually, Jang only wrote the initial screenplay for the film, which was directed by Ra Hee-chan. But since Ra got his start as Jang’s Assistant Director and has pretty much said he considers this to be a Jang film, let’s give Jang the credit.

I was a little surprised that SHADOWS IN THE PALACE opened only in the No. 2 spot. I guess I should not have been, but I was. SHADOWS was the debut by Kim Mi-jeong, who also was an AD on some high-profile films.

RESIDENT EVIL 3 opened in third. No way was I going to spend money to see that film in the theaters, but I suspect once it hits cable TV, I will be watching it endlessly (probably whenever I discover it during some late night flicking).

LOVE EXPOSURE opened in fourth. Is it my imagination, or has there been a minor flood of uninspired movies about relationships, sex, love and cheating over the past few months?

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Going by the Book (Bareuge Salja – Korean) 10.18 438 458,834 538,352
2. Shadows in the Palace (Gungneo – Korean) 10.18 427 416,551 511,308
3. Resident Evil 3 10.18 281 183,376 217,021
4. Love Exposure (Eokkae Neomeo-ui Yeonin – Korean) 10.18 236 107,882 138,332
5. Happiness (Haengbok – Korean) 10.03 288 72,477 1,126,482
6. Rush Hour 3 10.03 245 59,709 735,390
7. Copying Beethoven 10.11 174 50,601 189,149
8. Becoming Jane 10.11 223 36,570 184,148
9. Nanny Diaries 10.03 143 28,193 467,462
10. Brave One 10.11 159 22,363 147,801

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 94% of nationwide box office)

Up next week — Lee Myung-se’s M.

Kind of a weird year this year. Chuseok came and went with barely a ripple, but some much more interesting films seem to be coming out now. Kind of playing havoc with people’s forecasts.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Oct. 12-14 (and Oct. 5-7, too)

At long last, Hur Jin-ho lands on the top of the box office. Not just once, but two weeks in a row, with his latest melodrama HAPPINESS. Sure, 967,000 admissions in 10 days is not so impressive, but HAPPINESS has made Hur quite happy anyway because he has never led the box office in Korea before. Good for him. And good for Zip Cine, the company that produced the movie.

Otherwise, the most notable thing about this week’s box office to me is how egalitarian it is. The No. 10 movie, THE BOURNE ULTIMATUM, is in nearly 200 theaters! And it made around $350,000. I do not recall the No. 10 films doing 50 percent as well as the No. 3 movie before. Kind of unusual.

Also surprising is that a new Jodie Foster thriller and a new Clive Owen action film were both bested by a couple of fairly small films — BECOMING JANE and COPYING BEETHOVEN. I am not sure what that all means, but it is kind of nifty.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Happiness (Haengbok – Korean) 10.03 341 217,117 967,790
2. Rush Hour 3 10.03 270 167,384 621,617
3. Nanny Diaries 10.03 229 98,177 405,779
4. Love (Sarang – Korean) 9.20 263 97,350 1,966,448
5. Becoming Jane 10.11 238 88,135 104,719
6. Copying Beethoven 10.11 165 86,527 99,366
7. Brave One 10.11 169 81,014 95,473
8. Shoot ‘Em Up 10.11 172 55,947 66,932
9. The Happy Life (Jeulgeoun Insaeng – Korean) 9.12 149 52,994 1,177,938
10. Bourne Ultimatum 9.12 199 49,801 1,976,069

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 94% of nationwide box office)

Last Week’s Box Office (Oct. 5-7)
Title – Weekend Admissions – Total Nationwide Admissions

1. Happiness (Korean) – 322,400 – 583,565
2. Rush Hour 3 – 211,069 – 354,381
3. Love (Korean) – 143,991 – 1,770,649
4. The Nanny Diaries – 139,852 – 238,029
5. The Bourne Ultimatum – 98,780 – 1,878,427
6. The Happy Life (Korean) – 77,188 – 1,084,124
7. Kidnapping Granny K (Korean) – 58,219 – 1,458,958
8. Crank – 39,171 – 68,027
9. The Mafia, The Salesman (Korean) – 31,982 – 867,188
10. Invasion – 23,316 – 544,173

Spiffy PIFFy Wrap Up

Sorry (again) for not updating the site over the past week. This year’s Pusan International Film Festival was even crazier than usual (at least for me) thanks to the dailies The Hollywood Reporter published.

In addition to the THR Dailies, though, this year’s PIFF seemed different for several reasons:
– More attention from the West
– A typhoon
– Ridiculous complaining by the local press (especially the online variety)

GRACE US WITH YOUR PRESENCE

Important news first — I got to meet Grace Park. Yes, that Grace Park, of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA fame. She was in town promoting her new film (CJ Entertainment’s WEST 32ND) and participating in the Asia Pacific Actors Network.


No, she was not dressed like that when I met her. She had this 1970s hair thing going on (feathered), but she looked good. Okay, we did not talk very much, just brief chitchat at some loud party, but my inner-geek was pleased.

By the way, random observation — Yes, Grace Park is an attractive woman… but doesn’t she look like Astro Boy?


Anyhow, due to the Asia Pacific Actors Network starting this year and the Star Summit Asia (now in its second year), there were more celebrities than I remember seeing before at PIFF. Daniel Dae Kim was there, Jason Scott Lee, John Cho (also in WEST 32ND).

Gore Verbinski (PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN) and Michelle Yeoh also attended. Peter Greenaway, too, but I missed his events, which had me a little annoyed with myself. Sure, his movies are crazy pretentious, but I rather like them. Plenty of agents and other business people walking around, too.

No shortage of regional celebrities, either, and they were easily the most popular and recognizable stars for Busan film fans. Takuya Kimura and some guy from Super Junior were especially popular with the 13-year-old girls, who turned out in force this year. They were nutty.

While in general I am not a big fan of actors (nothing particularly wrong with the job, but usually I find the writers and directors to be more interesting), I was very pleased to have met Kong Hyo-jin. What a charming young woman. She and Hong Suk-chon were goofing around and being pretty amusing at the APAN party. Good times.


OH MY WHINGE

PIFF has generally enjoyed pretty good press since it started in 1996. But this year, the complaining and crying by the press was pretty amazing, especially by the Internet press (and by the English-language local media — you can read a representative whine here)

There were three major complaints/accusations about this year’s PIFF:
1) Ennio Morricone was treated poorly and left in a huff
2) The PIFF Pavilion leaked rain badly
3) The M press conference was a mess

Okay, the truth about Morricone, as far as I know. Morricone led a concert in Seoul on Wednesday (Oct. 3) night. He flew down to Busan on Thursday and, despite feeling ill (the dude is 80), he agreed to show up to the opening ceremonies, at least briefly. Morricone was picked up at the airport by one of PIFF’s programmers (sadly, without a translator) and driven to his hotel.

Then he was taken to the opening ceremonies. There was a little disorganization backstage for a few minutes because of the politicians who wanted to attend (particularly Lee Myung-bak, who was quite late). PIFF organizers said it was about 5 minutes, while another person I talked to estimated it was longer. Morricone and his wife were then introduced and led to their seats.

After a few minutes, because he was feeling ill, Morricone went back to his hotel and skipped the opening party. He left early the next day, as scheduled.

No idea where the rumor started that he felt mistreated by PIFF. After all, he did the hand printing. If he was so angry, why would he have done that? There is absolutely no proof that anything bad happened (besides the delay at the opening ceremonies). Just a lot of silly gossip.

As for the leaking PIFF Pavilion, well, yeah, it leaked. But there was a tropical depression (the remnants of Supertyphoon Krosa) sweeping through.

I think a lot of the bad press stemmed from the press conference for Lee Myung-se’s new movie, M. It was really overcrowded (again, thanks to the Internet press, whose numbers are as legion as their credentials are not). Thanks to the chaos, Lee talked for only 20 minutes, not the scheduled hour.

Obviously PIFF has to work out its policy toward the press and online press by next year. But I think this is where PIFF’s problems really began. The bad event put a lot of journalists (and “journalists”) into a bad mood. And once the Internet turns on you, the griping just keeps on piling up. Really pretty petty, at least in my book. Some people need to grow up.

SUPERTYPHOON KROSA

This was the first PIFF ever in its 12 fine years to get major rain on opening night. Although it did stop the moment the opening movie, ASSEMBLY, started.

But a couple of days later, the remnants of supertyphoon Krosa hit Korea. There was not much left after it hit Taiwan and China badly, but it was still impressively rainy and windy. Best of all, the waves at Haeundae Beach were incredible. I went out swimming a little on Tuesday, when they were at their peak, and it was wonderfully scary (especially since Haeundae has a mean undertow). Good stuff.

Despite the weather, it looks like attendance was still pretty good this year. Something over 190,000 is the early estimate.

KILLER MOVIES

Jonathan Landreth, the Asia Editor of The Hollywood Reporter, snagged the scoop that Korean-American director John H. Lee will remake John Woo’s THE KILLER. Jonathan and I sat down with Lee and had a great talk about his plans for the film and his other work and I was pleasantly surprised (you can read the interview in the Day 7 PDF file, or go here).

Like a lot of people, I was rather surprised when I heard about the remake. Especially since Lee’s last film, the melodrama A MOMENT TO REMEMBER, was pretty far from the guns-ablazing style of Woo. But Lee had a lot of interesting ideas for his version. He definitely is not just transplanting the same story from Hong Kong to Los Angeles. He has a bunch of cool ideas.

But more than THE KILLER remake, Lee has a bunch of other great projects in the works.

Other fun movie stuff… I met the music director for the coming Korean film GO-GO SEVENTIES, which I am really looking forward to seeing. And Jonathan also interviewed Yi Ling, the director of YASUKUNI, a really interesting documentary about the controversial shrine (THR’s review here).

Sadly, the only movie I was able to see was the opener, ASSEMBLY. ASSEMBLY is about the Chinese civil war, and hte film is most notable for using the special effects team from TAEGUKGI for the (long) battle scenes. The movie was okay to look at, but the big battles in the first half went on and on and on, and the second hour was mostly a lot of histrionics and Communist Party history. I found it boring.

THE MAGAZINE

It was the first time THR printed dailies, and for several reasons we decided to team up with Korea’s CINE 21 and publish dailies together. After all, CINE 21 has been publishing their own dailies at PIFF for years (since the beginning?), and rather than try to reinvent the wheel, we decided to work together. Luckily, the cool cats at CINE 21 thought it was a good idea, too, and so a fun partnership was formed.


Cool things about working together with CINE 21:
– Great distribution. The publish around 15,000 copies of each issue, so we were really everywhere.
– Good format. Usually CINE 21’s dailies are just a simple matt-finish, basic magazine. So imagine our surprise when we received the first issue on Thursday and it was printed on great, shiny stock. No one told us they were going to change. No one even told CINE 21’s dailies editor.
– Another format point — THR and CINE 21 are almost the exact same size anyway, so it was natural for our publications to fit together (the other international trade magazines are all printed on larger paper).
– Again, good people. A very helpful and fun crew.

If you are interested, you can see PDF versions of all eight dailies at www.hollywoodreporter.com/pusan.

PIFF Preparations

So this year is the first time The Hollywood Reporter has published dailies at the Pusan International Film Festival. In order to get the dailies up and running, I had to arrive in Busan on Tuesday, along with a team of people from Los Angeles and some others.


(The dailies do not appear to be available on the Internet, but you can read our various stories here).

It was kind of nice to get here a couple of days early and have time to get my bearings before the festival craziness begins. Tuesday night I zipped up to the Pusan National University area (for the first time in years) to check out some of the old haunts and see a friend I had not seen in years. I could barely remember the neighborhood, but it was good to check it out again.

One of the first things I saw in Busan when I arrived was a really big sign that proclaimed “No Piracy Allowed in Korea”, which caused me to nearly hurt myself laughing. Turns out the government is launching a new anti-piracy awareness program (see Gregg Kilday’s story here), so the posters are more a statement of intent than a reflection of reality.

Today the festival begins for real. ASSEMBLY is the opening film. Oodles of people are arriving. I suspect my leisurely pace is about to change radically.

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