| France Telecom and Deauville Festival to present Asian films on cell phones (Source) |
2010/02/18 |
France Telecom subsidiary Orange™ has teamed up with the 12th Deauville Asian Film Festival (March 10 to 14, 2010) to showcase Asian cinema on its service portals. Films to be screened include a focus on Korean maverick auteur KIM Ki-duk plus two popular Korean features. Orange™ is the ISP and mobile network operator for the telecom giant's over 189 million customers.
Continuing a partnership it began with the festival in 2009, the Orange cinéma séries channels will screen KIM's masterpiece "Address Unknown" (2001) and the Buddhist themed "Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... And Spring" (2003) along with LEE Jeong-hyang's rustic-nostalgia-piece "The Way Home" (2002) and LEE Joon-ik's saucy period-hit "The King and the Clown" (2005).
Other spotlights in the series include Japanese director Miike Takashi and Hong Kong's Johnnie To. Orange™ is involved in film distribution through its coproduction arm Studio 37, pre-purchasing films in production, and screening world cinema through ... |More
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| MoMa to screen works of award-winning director Kim Ki-duk (Source) |
2008/04/22 |
New Yorkers will be able to taste a series of artistic Korean movies made by director Kim Ki-duk from Wednesday (Apr. 23).
The Department of Film at New York's Museum of Modern Art, or MoMa, will hold a screening of the works of award-winning moviemaker Kim Ki-duk, 48, who has directed artistic yet controversial films since 1996.
During the exhibition at MoMa's Theater 1, co-organized by the Korean Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the Korean Film Council, and supported by the Korean Film Archive in Seoul, movie lovers will be able to take in a total of 14 movies directed by Kim, which will include several features never before seen in the United States, according to MoMa.
Kim is a self-taught maverick filmmaker whose works have impressed international cinema industry with a focus on symbolism and his strong sense of motifs and intensity.
He was a former factory worker, soldier, seminarian and a street artist in France between 1992 and 1995 where he discovered cinema thro... |More
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| Actress Kim Yeong-im, gone to her eternal rest at such young age (Source) |
2008/01/10 |
Actress Kim Yeong-im passed away on 7th December, while struggled against breast cancer in Kyung-ki-do Il-san cancer center. She was diagnosed with a terminal breast cancer last February and after 10 months of long struggle against the illness; she passed away at such young age of 28.
Kim Yeong-im had been uploading pictures of herself smiling in her personal homepage to show her strong determination to fight the illness. After death of her daughter, Kim Yeong-im's mother left a comment on her homepage, "I just send my lovely daughter to Father. Our Father must have love her as much as I loved her and couldn't wait for her any longer", showing her deep grief for losing her dear daughter.
Kim Yeong-im made her debut in 2000 and worked intensively in the industry, appearing in dramas including "Sassy Girl, Chun-hyang" and "Immortal Admiral Yi Sun-shin"; and films such as "Address Unknown", "Once Upon A Time In Highschool" and "Cracked Eggs and Noodles"
In meantime, many netiz... |More
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| Top Stars Join KIM Ki-duk's 15th Feature (Source) |
2008/01/08 |
Controversial director KIM Ki-duk has cast South Korean leading actress LEE Na-young alongside one of Japan's top actors, Joe Odagiri, in what will be his 15th feature film. Titled "Bi-mong" ("Dream"), the new project began shooting January 4 in Seoul and is scheduled to wrap on January 25.
Much interest is being given the new project as actress LEE is one of Korea's most adored stars, taking memorable roles in such films as "Maundy Thursday" ("Our Happy Time") (2006) and "Someone Special" (2004). Paired with Joe Odagiri (Tokyo Tower (2007)), a favorite with women across Asia, the film carries much commercial potential despite the generally cold reception KIM's films receive in his home country.
The new film will, as in many of KIM's previous works, distort the boundaries between reality and dream. The story revolves around a man (Odagiri) who dreams that he caused a car accident. Waking, he goes to the place where the dream occurred, only to find that an actual hit-and-run... |More
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| [DRAMA REVIEW] Yang produces 'Offending the Audience' (Source) |
2007/05/18 |
The show starts with four actors announcing that there will be no play, no story and no performance. By questioning the essence of a theater performance, the show breaks every theatrical convention: the distinction between actors and the audience, the space between the stage and the seats, and the definition of right or wrong. Then actors start to point fingers at and insult the audience, making the observers aware of themselves that they are part of the show.
This is what happened in Daehangno Wednesday at Studio 76, which staged the Korean language adaptation of playwright Peter Handke's 1966 anti-play "Offending the Audience". The 2007 Korean version of the avant-garde play has been updated by rap vocals that made the house full of provocative, abusive language and unexpected embarrassment.
What makes the drama more noticeable is that it is the first production by Yang Dong-geun, successful actor and also a popular hip hop singer in the country.
Debuting in 1987 with the TV... |More
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