Tag Archives: south-korea

REVIEW: Genre-bound War Picture The Front Line Still Offers a Few Startling Moments

South Korea’s 2012 contender for a foreign language Oscar feels more like a war movie than a movie about the Korean war, right up until its pitilessly bleak final frames. Though the American presence in that war is peripheral to its story, Hollywood clichés pervade The Front Line , from its slate and sepia tones to its stock company of characters and dialogue that translates macho posturing into present-day slang. And yet the movie has its startling moments, moments with the spark of specificity and the bitter clarity of perspective. Those stabs of the unexpected culminate in an ending that refuses to raise even the mildest or most melancholy flag of redemption. Is it worse for history to downplay a war as pivotal as this one or for the culture to overlook it entirely? Roughly based on true events, the film gives a grunt’s eye view of a conflict that some feel has been forgotten in popular retellings of the 20th century, despite the efforts of Don Draper and co. Perhaps this under-representation drove director Jang Hun to go for broke in telling the story of the end of the Korean civil war in 1953. The genre poaching begins with the flimsy hook of a mole investigation: An officer named Kang Eun-Pyo (Shin Ha-Kyun) is sent to the front to explore the apparent assassination of the famed Alligator Company’s commander. There he finds a group of men poised on the border of insanity, and among them an old friend name Kim Soo-Hyuk (Ko Soo). Since Kang last saw him Kim has been transformed from a frightened naïf into a soulless killer — the ruthless soldier who’s too cool to die, too hot to live. A rivalry seethes between the two friends about who has seen the worst of the war. Through their philosophical divide — for Kang there are only orders, for Kim there is nothing left to obey — the film explores the worth of a single life in a balance too steep for anyone to bear. Hun takes pains to emphasize the futility of the war; again and again the men ask why they are fighting. That question might seem a little curious to anyone who has paid even the most fragmented attention to the plight of North Korea over the last sixty years. Every inch withheld from Kim Il Sung and his heirs is an inch free from despotic rule and decades of mass starvation. But The Front Line focuses on the muddled, desperate view from the ground, and the absurdist terms on which war is actually fought. The bulk of the film is set in the Aerok Hills, mountainous territory on the embattled Eastern border. North and South exchange possession of one particular hill so many times that they begin leaving notes and gifts for each other in a bunkered cubbyhole. Hun is careful not to demonize the North Korean fighters, spreading the stereotypes out evenly: The Reds get the grizzled leader with the bitchin’ facial scar and the legendary sniper who turns out to be a foxy woman. The battle scenes, like most shot in the wake of Saving Private Ryan , feel derivative when they’re not quoting that film directly. A sequence recounting a frenzied insurrection during a failed amphibious landing is horrific on its own terms, however, as is the depiction of an overwhelming assault led by the Chinese. But The Front Line , at almost two and a half hours, develops its own case of battle fatigue. By the time the “one last job” trope is deployed in the wake of an armistice, the point has been made bloodily and well that war is same everywhere — appalling — and everyone sounds the same screaming for their mother. We don’t know what they’re fighting for any better than they do, and the dialogue is too thick with treacle for archetype to clarify into character. What ultimately makes the film compelling is the extent to which it uses the shared language of cinema to telegraph the caustic feelings of a people toward their own history. The Front Line was a smash in South Korea, which is more remarkable given the absolute nihilism of its finale. What secrets lay in that response? Are they just tougher than we are, with clearer memories? Was it not worth it, after all? Though the movie’s coda is not enough to lift the film out of its genre-bound shackles, in finally rejecting formula it feels defiant in more ways than one. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Genre-bound War Picture The Front Line Still Offers a Few Startling Moments

Kim Bo Kyung Profile Height Weight

Profile * Name: 김보경 / Kim Bo Kyung (Kim Bo Gyung) * Profession: Actress * Birthdate: 1976-Apr-03 * Birthplace: Seoul, South Korea * Height: 170cm * Weight: 47kg * Star sign: Aries TV Shows * After the Opera (KBS2, 2010) * Telecinema After Wedding Banquet (SBS, 2009) * Spotlight (MBC, 2008) * Kimcheed Radish Cubes (MBC, 2007) * White Tower (MBC, 2007) * The Immortal Lee Soon-Shin (KBS1, 2004) * School 4 (KBS2, 2001) Movies * Milky Way Liberation Front (2007) * Epitaph (2007) * Before The S

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Kim Bo Kyung Profile Height Weight

Chinese women’s national soccer loses Olympic ticket

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Chinese women’s national soccer loses Olympic ticket

South Korean actor So Ji-sub and director Song Il-go

The opening film will be “Always”, directed by South Korea#39;s Cannes Jury Prize winner Song Il-Gon. Starring heartthrob So Ji-Sub, the film heralds Song#39;s transformation “from auteur to populist”, according to organisers. A romance about an ex-boxer and a telephone operator who is slowly losing her vision will open Asia#39;s top film festival in the South Korean city of Busan next month, organisers said Thursday. The 16th Busan International Film Festival (BIFF), formerly known as the Pus

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South Korean actor So Ji-sub and director Song Il-go

Han Hyo Joo Profile Height Weight

Profile * Name: 한효주 / Han Hyo Joo (Han Hyo Ju) * Profession: Actress and model * Birthdate: 1987-Feb-22 * Birthplace: Cheongju, South Korea * Height: 172cm * Weight: 48kg * Star sign: Pisces * Blood type: A * Talent agency: BH Entertainment * Family: Younger brother Han Hyo-joo (Korean: 한효주, born February 22, 1987) is a South Korean actress and model. She made her debut in the sitcom Nonstop 5. Han Hyo-joo attends Dongguk University, where she majors in the theatre and film department. Her h

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Han Hyo Joo Profile Height Weight

Kim Tae Hee Profile

Profile * Name: 김태희 / Kim Tae Hee (Kim Tae Hui) * Nickname: Angel * Profession: Actress and model * Birthdate: 1980-Mar-29 * Birthplace: Ulsan, South Korea * Height: 165cm * Weight: 45kg * Star sign: Aries * Blood type: O * Family: Older sister and younger brother/actor Lee Wan * Talent agency: Namoo Actors Kim Tae Hee (Korean: 김태희, born March 29, 1980) is a South Korean actress and model from Ulsan. She is best known for her roles in the TV series My Princess, Iris, Love Story in Harvard and

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Kim Tae Hee Profile

Goo Hara Profile

Profile * Name: Goo Ha-Ra * Hangul: 구하라 * Born: January 13, 1991 * Birthplace: South Korea * Height: 163cm. * Blood Type: * Origin Gwangju, Republic of Korea Genres K-pop, dance-pop * Occupations Singer, Dancer, Actress * Instruments Singing * Years active 2008–present * Labels DSP Entertainment * Associated acts Kara Goo Hara was born on January 13, 1991, in Gwangju, South Korea. Before debuting, she participated in the SM#39;s youth appearance tournament in 2005. In 2007, she auditio

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Goo Hara Profile

Seo Taiji Bio

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Biography for Seo Taiji Birth name Jeong Hyeon-cheol Also known as Taiji, Dae-Jang, Seomeo, Seovely, Rubberband Lord, Seocrooge Born February 21, 1972 (1972-02-21) (age 39) Origin Seoul, South Korea Genres Pop, heavy metal, hip hop, rap rock, nu metal, emocore Years active 1989–1996 1998–present Labels Bando Entertainment, Seo Taiji Company, Yedang Entertainment Associated acts Sinawe, Seo Taiji and Boys, Seo Taiji Band Website http://www.seotaiji.com/ Birth name Hangul 정현철 Hanja 鄭鉉哲

Seo Taiji Bio

3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy Breaks Hong Kong Box Office Records

Earlier this month we reported on 3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy, the big-budget titty flick that producers were touting as the world’s first 3D IMAX porno film. Well, it turns out that it is not the first 3D porno- check out the 1977 John Holmes / Uschi Digard vehicle Hot Skin , aka Disco Dolls in 3D . It’s not even the first porno to use the brand spanking new 3D IMAX technology- that honor goes to South Korea’s Natali , released last year. (The producer of 3D Sex and Zen has no love lost for the makers of Natali , publicly accusing them of rushing the film to theaters in order to steal his thunder.) But now 3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy has a record of its very own- highest grossing 3D opening in Hong Kong ever! The film grossed HK$2.79 million ($360,000) in its opening weekend, blowing (among other things) the previous record holder, Avatar, out of the water. The film also set a new record for highest-grossing Category III (that’s Cantonese for “X”) opening ever, a record that was previously head by Ang Lee’s Lust, Caution (2007) . Skinterestingly, the ladies of Hong Kong have been a major factor in the success of 3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy , packing theaters for girls-only “lady’s house” screenings. The ancient Chinese secret’s out- porno is for everybody!

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3D Sex and Zen: Extreme Ecstasy Breaks Hong Kong Box Office Records

Japan radiation leak to Philippines

U.S. warships and planes helping with relief efforts moved away from the coast temporarily because of low-level radiation. The U.S. Seventh Fleet described the move as precautionary. South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore and the Philippines said they would test Japanese food imports for radiation. France#39;s ASN nuclear safety authority said the accident could be classified as a level 5 or 6 on the international scale of 1 to 7, putting it on a par with the 1979 U.S. Three Mile Island meltdown, h

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Japan radiation leak to Philippines