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Stop (Korean: 스톱; RR: Seutop) is a 2015 South Korean-Japanese co-production directed by Kim Ki-duk that had its premiere at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic. [1] [2] The film is set in Japan and addresses the aftermath of Fukushima-Daichi disaster; the cast of the film is mostly Japanese. [3]
According to Kim Hyun, "South Korea's movie industry, like that of most countries, is grossly overshadowed by Hollywood. The nation exported US$2 million-worth of movies to the United States last year and imported $35.9 million-worth". [37] One of the first blockbusters was Kang Je-gyu's Shiri (1999), a film about a North Korean spy in Seoul.
Kim Yang-hee Yang Ik-june, Jeon Hye-jin, Jung Ga-ram: CJ CGV: September 21: The Star Next Door: 이웃집 스타: Kim Seong-wook Han Chae-young, Jin Ji-hee, Lim Seul-ong: Storm Pictures September 21: I Can Speak: 아이 캔 스피크: Kim Hyun-seok: Na Moon-hee, Lee Je-hoon: Lotte Entertainment: September 27: Lost to Shame: 분장: Nam Yeon-woo ...
Opening English title Native title Director(s) Cast Ref. J A N U A R Y 2 Dogs in the House: 청춘빌라 살인사건: Shin Hae-kang: Kim Young-ho, Kim Jung-pal, Yoon Bong-gil [2]9 Don't Cry for Me Sudan: Shukran Baba
The Korean nominee is chosen annually by a special committee assembled by the Korean Film Council. South Korea has submitted thirty-three films for consideration. In 2019, Burning became the first Korean film to make it to the final nine-film shortlist of the 91st Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film. [4]
In early 1970s Seoul, a film director Kim Ki-yeol is obsessed with the fact that the ending of his already wrapped film Cobweb would be better if remade.. Two series of sequences alternate: scenes in colour depicting the events that happen while the crew is filming under constraints of time and censorship, with somehow reluctant actors, who have been asked to come back in emergency to the film ...
Released English title Native title Director(s) Cast January 1: No Mercy: 언니: Im Gyeong-taek Lee Si-young, Park Se-wan, Lee Joon-hyuk: January 9: The Dude in Me: 내안의 그놈
In 2011, the movie sold 7,375,110 tickets, and grossed ₩54,034,324,100 (US$47,068,227), making it the year's second highest grossing Korean film and fourth highest grossing overall film in South Korea. [5] [20] [21] [22] At the end of the movie's run, it had sold 7.38 million admissions, with an additional 90,555 from a director's cut. [5] [9]