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No Regret was released in South Korea on November 16, 2006, and over the course of its theatrical run received a total of 43,265 admissions, [4] becoming the top grossing independent film at the Korean box office. [5] It was especially popular with young female viewers, some of whom claimed to have seen it more than forty times. [6]
Lee-Song Hee-il (Korean: 이송희일; Hanja: 李宋喜一; born 1971) is a South Korean film director whose first feature film No Regret is regarded as "the first real Korean gay feature." [1] The film won him Best Independent Film Director at the 2006 Director's Cut Awards. [2] Lee-Song is openly gay. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Bad Movie (1997) Ban Geum-ryeon (1982) Barefoot Ki-bong (2006) Barefooted Youth (1964) Barking Dogs Never Bite (2000) The Battleship Island ; Be a Wicked Woman (1990) The Beast and the Beauty (2005) Beasts of Prey (1985) Beat (1997) Beautiful (2008) Beautiful Sunday (2007) Beautiful Vampire (2018) Bet on My Disco (2002) A Better Tomorrow (2010)
No Regret: 2006: The film has been credited as "the first 'real' Korean gay feature", [12] (although earlier South Korean films, such as Road Movie, released in 2002, have dealt with gay relationships), and is also the first South Korean feature to be directed by an openly gay Korean filmmaker. [13] Like a Virgin: 2006
Phantom. Streaming premiere TBD. Based on the 2007 Mai Jia novel, Feng Shung, this spy action film will keep you guessing until the very end.During the Japanese colonization of Korea, five ...
No Regret may refer to: No Regret, a 2000 album by Lonnie Gordon; No Regret, a 2006 South Korean film "No Regret" (song), a 2006 song by Kumi Koda; No Regret, a South Korean film starring Nam Koong Won; No Regret, a Hong Kong film starring Carol Yeung Ling; Crusader: No Regret, a 1996 action computer game
Korean box office record holder for admissions. [4] Won "Best Picture" at the 27th Blue Dragon Film Awards, [5] "Best Film" at the 43rd Baeksang Arts Awards, [6] "Best Film" at the 5th Korean Film Awards, [7] and "Best Picture" at the inaugural Asian Film Awards. [8] Host and Guest 방문자 Shin Dong-il: Kim Jae-rok, Kang Ji-hwan: November 15 ...
I Want to Know Your Parents (Korean: 니 부모 얼굴이 보고 싶다; RR: Ni Bumo Eolguli Bogo Sipda; lit. I Miss Your Parents' Faces) is a 2022 South Korean mystery drama film directed by Kim Ji-hoon and written by Gim Gyung-mi. Based on a Japanese theatrical play Oya no Kao ga Mitai by Seigo Hatasawa, [2] the film stars Sul Kyung-gu, Chun Woo-hee, Moon So-ri, Oh Dal-su and Ko Chang-seok.