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Kwang-Hyun Park
Fabricated City Review Fabricated City (2017) Film Review from the 16th Annual New York Asian Film Festival, a movie directed by Kwang-Hyun Park, and starring Chang-wook Ji, Sang-Ho Kim, Eun-Kyung Shim, Jeong-Se Oh, Jae-Hong Ahn, Min-Jung Bae, Ha-Nui Lee, Min-gyo Kim, Seul-gi Kim, Won-cheol Shim, and Ho-jung Kim. Fabricated City opened with a bang, and ended with a bang; but was at [...]
Continue reading: Film Review: Fabricated City: Trippy Journey, Comedown Destination [Nyaff 2017]...
Continue reading: Film Review: Fabricated City: Trippy Journey, Comedown Destination [Nyaff 2017]...
- 2017-08-01
- par Sam Joseph
- Film-Book
'Fist' punches up Motion 101 launch
BUSAN, South Korea -- Leading Korean entertainment company Showbox is launching its new production house Motion 101 with a bang, thanks to the $13 million science fiction blockbuster Fist.
"We want to create a new style that will surprise people, like '300, ' " Motion 101 COO Jeong Tae-sung said. "We want a strong story, but also we want new ideas, new style, everything."
Fist -- the futuristic tale of a young man who becomes the defender of the poor in the slums of the futuristic Blue City -- is the brainchild of Park Kwang-hyun, whose debut film Welcome to Dongmakgol made about $53 million, the most successful Korean movie of 2005 and seventh biggest ever in Korea.
"Park has been talking about this project for a long time," said Jeong, "since before 'Dongmakgol.' Originally it was set in the present and was not science fiction. But when we talked about it, we added that element and decided to make it really fantastical."
To get the futuristic images of the film as extraordinary as possible, producers hired top Korean production designer Ryu Seong-hee (The Host, Oldboy) to come up with the conceptual designs.
"We want to create a new style that will surprise people, like '300, ' " Motion 101 COO Jeong Tae-sung said. "We want a strong story, but also we want new ideas, new style, everything."
Fist -- the futuristic tale of a young man who becomes the defender of the poor in the slums of the futuristic Blue City -- is the brainchild of Park Kwang-hyun, whose debut film Welcome to Dongmakgol made about $53 million, the most successful Korean movie of 2005 and seventh biggest ever in Korea.
"Park has been talking about this project for a long time," said Jeong, "since before 'Dongmakgol.' Originally it was set in the present and was not science fiction. But when we talked about it, we added that element and decided to make it really fantastical."
To get the futuristic images of the film as extraordinary as possible, producers hired top Korean production designer Ryu Seong-hee (The Host, Oldboy) to come up with the conceptual designs.
- 2007-10-08
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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