Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Case of Itaewon Homicide: One Murder. Two Suspects. No Verdict.

Ripped from the headlines, Hong Ki-seon's sensational docudrama The Case of Itaewon Homicide retells the real-life grisly murder of Jong-pil (Song Joong-ki), a hard-working, clean cut student who gets randomly knifed one night in the restroom of a Burger King by one of two vacationing American teens -- either AJ (Sin Seung-Hwan), a spoiled brat from NYC, or Pearson (Jang Geun-Seok), a half-Mexican gang member with whom he's been hanging out for the last three months. Each of the young men accuses the other of the pointless slaying; both have secrets to hide; and ultimately, both are to blame. Throughout this courtroom drama, you get the feeling that neither is out for justice so much as he's looking for a way to save his own hide. As such, they're both unlikable, and even if you're pretty sure you know who did it, the villain of The Case of Itaewon Homicide actually ends up being not one of the suspects but AJ's attorney (Oh Kwang-rok) who, because his motives are clearly mercenary, undermines the very legal system that he should be honoring.

A defense lawyer's job isn't to decide whether the client is guilty or not; it's to provide the client with the best defense possible.

I've heard that sentiment before and while I "get it," it's also always left an unpleasant taste in my mouth. It's not quite "innocent until proven guilty." It's more like "not guilty if any mistakes are made." The burden as always lies with the prosecution, here represented by Public Prosecutor Park (Jeong Jin-yeong), one of those noble souls who fights the good fight even if victory isn't necessarily attainable. Park's also, interestingly, a perpetual skeptic. He's not a champion. He's a doubter. He doubts the system, his opponent, his client, even himself. Which isn't to say that everything's relative to him or to us. It's just that in a world where no one can be counted on to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, what you end up parsing is a collection of half-truths, coverups, and bogus assertions. It's why nothing ever works as the ultimate truth -- the church, science, the legal system... Every institution is made of people, and people lie, cheat, and hide information for reasons that sometimes we'll never know. In life, I guess you've got to do the best with what you've got. The Case of Itaewon Homicide definitely does that because despite some second-rate performances, it's still a first-rate film.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Jewel Bibimbap






보석 비빔밥 (Bosuk Bibimbap)

 Also known as: Assorted Gems
Previously known as: Hand Signal / Hand Gesture
Genre: Romance, family
Episodes: 50
Broadcast network: MBC
Air time: Saturday & Sunday 21:45


Broadcasting dates :
Sep 05, 2009 ~ Feb 21, 2010





Cast
Gung Family

Ko Na-eun as Gung Bi Chwi (Jade)
So I-hyeon as Gung Ryu Bi (Ruby)
Lee Hyun Jin as Gung San Ho (Coral)
Lee Il Min as Gung Ho Bak (Amber)
Han Jin-hee as Gung Sang Sik
Han Hye Sook as Pi Hye Ja

Other people

Lee Tae-gon as Seo Yeong Guk
Michael Blunck as Kyle
Jeong Yoo-mi as Kang Ji
Choi Ah Jin as Soon
Seo Woo Rim
Park Geun Hyung
Hong Yoo Jin
Kim Young Ok
Jung Hye Sun
Choi Jae Ho
Hwang Chan Bin


Synopsis
The four siblings in the Gung family were named after precious jewels: eldest daughter Bi Chwi (Jade), eldest son San Ho (Coral), second daughter Ryu Bi (Ruby), and the youngest son, Ho Bak (Amber). Like an assortment of beautiful gems, their colours may clash and their sharp edges chip away at each other. Using an analogy of a bowl of rice with assorted ingredients to illustrate the workings of a family, the key to a great dish is using the right balance of ingredients in order to create a good mixture. Assorted Gems tells the story of the different lives of the family members and how they learn from their clashes to find the perfect balance.


Production Credits
Director: Baek Ho Min
Screenwriter: Im Sung Han



Sunday, March 25, 2012

Crying Fist: Eyes Swollen With Blood and Tears

In your typical boxing movie, the glory of the big fight depends on the depth of your feelings for one of the contenders: You need to like one guy more than the other. It's the story of an underdog, or of a man seeking justice or demanding payback or earning respect. But Ryu Seung-wan's Crying Fist undermines all that. By building to a championship between rivals with equally tearjerking back stories, this unconventional sports flick leaves you uneasy about rooting for either opponent. Suddenly, both sides deserve your sympathy. Weird!

In one corner is Gang Tae-shik (Choi Min-sik), a former silver medalist who now, over 40, scrapes out a living by letting frustrated passersby beat him up in the street for a fee. Part performance artist, part washed-up local hero, he's a bit of a joke who, more seriously, is going blind from head traumas, even as his wife (Seo Hye-rin) is divorcing him, and his brother (Lim Won-hie) is fleecing him of every won.

In the other corner is Yoo Sang-hwan (Ryu Seung-beom), an emotionally retarded criminal with a devoted, doomed father and a dying, maybe demented, grandma. As sad stories go, he's Tae-shik's equal, especially when you consider that Tae-shik at least has an ongoing bromance with a cafe owner (Jeon Ho-jin) while all Sang-hwan's got is the mentorship of a prison boxing coach (Byeong Hie-bong), who admits all his boys-in-training are like sons to him. Sang-won is just his latest protege.

This all adds up to the climactic fight being discomforting instead of rousing since getting in either guy's corner means abandoning his foe. You almost wish, Ryoo hadn't let the parallel stories converge, that he'd ended with two fights in two weight classes, making each loss and/or victory more personal. Pitting them against each other seems illogical. And yet, it's also what makes this movie so uniquely strange and good.

While hardly a philosophical film, Crying Fist does raise questions beyond who should win... Like why is redemption by violence attractive? How can a natural inclination towards violence be transformed into something constructive? When does a focused application of violence become perverted? When, how and why does violence pay off? Does it ever? Which isn't to say Crying Fist is a cinematic essay on pugilism. It's an effective melodrama. You bring the crying, this movie will bring the fists.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Sexy Teacher



누가 그녀와 잤을까? (Noo-ga Geun-nyeo-wa Jass-eul-gga?)

 Director : Kim Yoo-seong(김유성)

Cast : Kim Sa-rang(김사랑)
Ha Seok-jin(하석진)
Park Joon-gyoo(박준규)
Lee Hyeok-jae(이혁재)
Ha Dong-hoon(하동훈)


Genre : Comedy
Running Time : 109min 35mm
Opening Date : Nov 16, 2006

 Synopsis
Alternative title : "Who Slept With Her"

Beautiful, sexy Ji-young is placed at an all boys’ high school as student-teacher. Teenage boys in puberty think of her as a sex goddess and fantasize about her. Then from one of the classrooms, Dean of Students sees a silhouette of a couple embracing and hears a woman moaning. He goes to the classroom only to discover a pair of red stilettos. He suspects Ji-young and is resolved to protect the boys from her sexual charms.
Supporting Cast
Park Cheol-min (박철민)
Yoo Chae-yeong (유채영)
Lee Joo-sil (이주실)
Baek Il-seob (백일섭)
Ko Gyoo-pil (고규필)
Lee Woo-jin (이우진)
Kim Hae-gon (김해곤)

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Monday, March 19, 2012

Bad Man and Woman


불량남녀

 •Directed by Sin Geun-ho (신근호)
•Screenplay by Choi Jin-won (최진원)
•Comedy/Romantic comedy/Melodrama/Romance
Opening Date : Nov 04, 2010

 Also known as 'Love on the Debt'
A comedy movie that tells the story of a criminal detective with bad credit and a bond company worker who argue and eventually fall in love.
Cast
Im Chang-jeong 임창정 As Homicide detective with bad credit, Bang Geuk-hyeon (신용불량 강력계 형사, 방극현)
Eom Ji-won 엄지원 As Bond company worker, Kim Moo-ryeong (카드사 채권팀 사원, 김무령)
Jeong Eun-woo 정은우 As Sang-hyeok (상혁)
Sa Hee 사희 As Sang-mi, Moo-ryeong's junior (무령의 후배, 상미)
Kang Jae-seop 강재섭 As Detective Kim (김 형사)
Lee Jae-goo 이재구 As Detective Jang (장 형사)

    So THIS is what happened to #Agent77 - it's getting so exciting! Check it out at 
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Sunday, March 18, 2012

Heart is... 2

마음이2 (Ma-eum-i Doo-beon-jjae I-ya-gi)

 •Directed by Lee Jeong-cheol (이정철)
•Screenplay by Lee Jeong-cheol (이정철), Yoo Jae-hwan (유재완)
•Drama
•92min
Opening Date : Jul 21, 2010












 Also known as 'Hearty Paws 2'

“Heart is...,” the movie that reduced the whole country to tears, is back. This time, the sequel intends to break even more hearts.

Since the last movie, Dong-wuk (Song Joong-ki), now a high schooler, has had to transfer to three different schools, as his reputation as a skilled fighter has always brought trouble. Yet, even through the difficult times, Maumi has stayed loyal to her beloved owner.

But when Dong-wuk’s mother becomes concerned that her son is spending too much time with Maumi, she temporarily sends the dog and her three puppies away to Dong-wuk’s uncle.

One day, two jewelry thieves on the run, Heyok-pil (Seong Dong-il) and Du-pil (Kim Jeong-tae), spot Maumi and her puppies. They hatch a plan to kill one puppy to stuff him with hidden stolen jewels. The plan is on when they manage to nab the youngest puppy, Jang-gun. When her puppy is taken in front of her eyes, Maumi chases the thieves.

When Dong-wuk visits his uncle to see Maumi, he realizes that his beloved dog and her pup are nowhere to be found, and his search for his best friend begins.
CastDali 달이 As Ma-eum-i (마음이)
Seong Dong-il 성동일 As Hyeok-pil (혁필)
Kim Jeong-tae 김정태 As Doo-pil (두필)
Song Joong-ki 송중기 As Dong-wook (동욱)
Zhang Han 张翰
Lee Jeong-woo-II 이정우

   So THIS is what happened to #Agent77 - it's getting so exciting! Check it out at 
  A unique programme that’s making a difference to orphaned girls. Be a ‘Kakak Angkat’ to them today!
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Saturday, March 17, 2012

The Day a Pig Fell Into the Well: The Brutal Beginnings of Auteur Hong Sang-soo

It's easy to think you've got an artist figured out after watching a few films. And after seeing Woman on the Beach, Night and Day, and the short Lost in the Mountains among others, I thought I knew what to expect from a Hong Sang-soo movie and quite frankly, I wasn't that impressed. There'd be some heavy drinking, some philosophical talking and some unsatisfactory sex, as men used clingy women and disappointed women griped. Even in The Power of Kangwon Province, the movie of his I probably like the best, the same elements remained.

But summing up a career based on your acquaintanceship with a handful of works is a big mistake. Imagine judging Woody Allen on Celebrity, Cassandra's Dream, and September or assessing Bernardo Bertolucci strictly on Little Buddha, Stealing Beauty and The Dreamers. Big mistake! Which is another way of saying that I may have written off Hong Sang-soo a little too soon.

His feature debut, The Day a Pig Fell Into the Well, isn't a great movie but it's a pretty interesting one. And yes, you still have the drinking, the abusing, and the longing but with this particular flick all of that's heightened quite a bit. The arrogant artist -- no stranger to Hong's ouevre -- is a super jerk here. If this is Hong's stand-in, he started his career a lot less sympathetic to his type. A failed writer with a real sense of entitlement and a persecution complex, Hyo-sub (Kim Eui-sung) is a cantankerous diva who picks fights with a girlfriend he doesn't like (Cho Eun-sook), a married woman he claims to love (Lee Eun-kyeong), and all his drinking buddies, including one played by Song Kang-ho in his big screen debut!

This time around, the bickering doesn't culminate in a shouting match. Indeed, what distinguishes The Day a Pig Fell in the Well from other Hong movies is that it's meaner and nastier to start and bloodier and more bewildering at the end. It's also infinitely more enigmatic. The final sequence of the movie flashes back and forward in time, both real and imagined. Whether the brutal realities depicted in those jarring sequences are reflecting internal or external states doesn't matter. Hong's first drama comes at you with both fists flying and you're likely to feel stunned and bruised and even a bit disoriented by the time the credits roll. It's not a knockout but it does pack a wallop.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Lawyers of The Great Republic Korea


대한민국 변호사 (Lawyers of The Great Republic Korea)

 Director : Yoon Jae Mun(윤재문)

Cast : Lee Seong-jae(이성재)
Lee Soo-kyeong(이수경)
Han Eun-jeong(한은정)
Ryoo Soo-yeong(류수영)

Genre : Drama
Broadcasting dates :
Jul 09, 2008 ~

 Synopsis

Lee Ae Ri and Han Min Gook are a couple who are in the process of getting their divorce. Han Min Gook is a wealthy man who maintains a million dollar fortune and his top actress wife, Ae Ri, files a 100 billion won lawsuit against him. Byun Hyuk is the lawyer that represents Ae Ri in her divorce suit against her husband while Woo Lee Kyung is the new lawyer who represents Min Gook. Though they don’t get along with each other in the beginning because they each represent other clients, Byun Hyuk and Lee Kyung slowly fall for each other.
 Supporting Cast
Jeon Joon Hong
Kim Byeong Man
Yoon Joo-sang
Shin Shin Ae

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Prosecutor Princess


검사 프린세스 (Geomsa Princess)

 Chinese Title : 检察官公主
Previously known as: 검사 마타하리 / Prosecutor Mata Hari
Genre: Romance
Episodes: 16
Broadcast network: SBS
Broadcast period: 2010-Mar-31 to 2010-May-20
Air time: Wednesdays & Thursdays 21:55
Broadcasting dates :
                                                      Mar 31, 2010 ~ May 20, 2010

 Synopsis

Ma Hye Ri is a woman with an excellent memory and ability to focus, which allowed her to pass the bar exam with ease. Despite her talents, she is more interested in being fashionable and dislikes hard work, so she is far from being an ideal prosecutor and has doubts about her suitability for her job. Through her conflicts with senior colleages and struggles with difficult cases, however, Hye Ri gradually matures into a brilliant prosecutor with a sense of duty and justice.
 Cast
Kim So-yeon as Ma Hye Ri
Park Shi Hoo as Seo In Woo
Han Jung Soo as Yoon Se Joon
Choi Song Hyun as Jin Jung Sun
Yoo Gun as Lee Min Suk
Choi Sung Ho as Chae Ji Woon
Lee Eun Hee (이은희) as Lee Jung Im
Lee Seung Hyung as Cha Myung Soo
Kim Sang Ho as Na Joong Suk
Choi Jung Woo as Ma Sang Tae
Yang Hee Kyung as Park Ae Ja
Min Young Won as Lee Yoo Na
Park Jung Ah as Jena Ahn
Sung Byung Sook (성병숙) as Han Mi Ok
Kim Ji Won as Yoon Bin
Baek Seung Hyun
Production Credits
Chief Producer: Kim Young Sup
Director: Jin Hyuk
Assistant Director: Park Sun Ho (박선호)
Screenwriter: So Hyun Kyung
   The unforgettable #FrisoGUTDays journey with ur family from 13-18 Mar at AEON Bkt Indah, JB.
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  Cute girl at 00:56! Anyone know who that is?

War of the Arrows: History and Archery Shoot a Pointed Arrow to Your Heart

I'm not sure why the idea of watching a historical drama tends to dishearten me because when I think about it, I bet I like them more often than I don't. Looking back over the years, I can immediately name a few epics set way back when which made my annual top ten lists: The King and the Clown, A Frozen Flower, Musa - The Warriors... Even so, I was ready to be bored to tears when I sat down to watch War of the Arrows. Boy, was I wrong.

Kim Han-min's anything-but-dull drama set in the 17th century is, for all its fancy robes and bedazzled leather, a heart-stopping action pic with an extended chase scene in which bows and arrows prove every bit as thrilling as martial arts or souped-up weaponry ever did.

On the run is Nam-yi (Park Hae-il), a disgraced archer whose father was beheaded for being a traitor, and whose sister Ja-in (Moon Chae-won) is, at one point, abducted by a Manchurian kidnapper-prince (Park Gi-woong) who wants to tame her like a leopard's pelt. Well, the royal rapist is about to learn not to mess with an independent woman with a strong set of teeth. As to his invading militia, they're about to pay the price for underestimating members of the Joseon Dynasty.

Pursuing Nam-yi is a bald Machurian commander (Ryoo Seung-yong), his second-in-command Wanhan (Lee Seung-joon), and their small posse of fellow warriors who despite tricked up arrows and studded leather armbands, find themselves dropping off one by one. A random tiger that comes out of nowhere doesn't help matters for them either.

Although half of War of the Arrows is consumed by this great chase, my favorite part comes right beforehand -- an uplifting scene in which a feudal lord's son (Kim Mu-yeol), assisted by lovable sidekicks Gang-du (Kim Gu-taek) and Gab-young (Lee Han-wi), leads a prisoners' revolt against the invading army. Tired, dirty, and unarmed, the townsfolk charges their captors and through sheer numbers and unstoppable fury drive the enemy into the sea before burning the Manchurian flag. It's one of those common man against the oppressor feel-good scenes that always makes you feel more optimistic about being one of the hoi polloi.

Note: Some reviews accuse War of the Arrows of plagiarizing Apocalypto which does make me want to see the latter movie.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Frozen Flower


쌍화점 (Ssang-hwa-jeom)

 Directed & Screenplay by Yoo--Ha

Cast : Jo In-Seong as King`s bodyguard, Hong-rim
Joo Jin-mo as Koryeo`s king
Song Ji-hyo as Queen

Genre : Drama, Historical
Running time : 133min
35mm, Cinemascope(2.35)
Opening Date : Dec 30, 2008


Synopsis
Synopsis In the end of Goryeo era politically manipulated by the Yuan Dynasty, the ambitious King of the Goryeo Dynasty organizes Kunryongwe. Hong Lim, the commander of Kunryongwe, captivates the King of Goryeo, and the Queen keeps her eyes on the relationship between Hong Lim and the King with a reluctant view. Meanwhile, the bilateral relation between Goryeo and the Yuan gets worse as Yuan demands to install the cousin of the King in the Crown Prince of Goryeo with ascribing it to no son the King has. The King refuses it resolutely, so the high-ranking officials of Goryeo, who are in submission to Yuan, are discontented with the king. One day, the King gives Hong Lim a covert yet unobjectionable order to sleep with the Queen instead of himself to protect the independence of Goryeo from the Yuan by making a son, the successor to Goryeo throne.

Extended Cast

Shim Ji-ho as Second commanding officer, Seung-gi
Im Joo-hwan as King's men, Han-baek
Yeo Wook-hwan as ;;;; King's men, Im-bo
Jang Ji-won as King's men, Bo-deok
Kim Choon-gi as Eunuch Hwang
Lee Jong-goo as Tae-sa
Kwon Tae-won as Jo Il-moon
Do Yong-goo as Ki Won-hong
Ko In-beom as Yeon Ki-mok
Ham Geon-soo as Won kingdom's servant
No Min-woo as Min-woo
Do Ye-seong as Choi Kwan
Park Jong-soo as Eunuch Shin
Kim Dae-hoon as King's men
Jeong Seong-il as King's men
Lee Seok-woo as King's men
Kim Hyeon-woo as King's men
Baek Jae-ho as King's men
Kim Ji-won as King's men
Lee Jae-won I as King's men
Hwang Joon-hyeok as King's men
Han Tae-seong as King's men
Yoon Yeong-jin as King's men
Ri-eul as King's men
Park Seong-hoon as King's men
Jeong Woo-jin as King's men
Kim Ki-beom as King's men
Dae-ho as ;;;; King's men
Kim Hyeon-woong as King's men
Kim Seong-joon as King's men
Hong Jong-hyeon as King's men
Moon Seok-hee as King's men
Jo Sang-min as King's men
Kim Woo-hee as King's men
Jo Kang-hyeon as King's men
Kim Tae-soo as King's men
Cha Seung-joon as King's men
Son Jong-hak as Secret messenger
Kang-poong as Secret messenger
Jo Yong-hyeon as Young eunuch
Kim Pil-joong as Young eunuch
Jeong In-hwa as Palace lady Park
Park Jong-bo as Chin-won noble
Yeo Jin-goo as Young Hong-rim
Lee Poong-woon as Young king
Baek Seung-ho as Young Seung-gi
Seo Yeong-joo as Young Han-baek
Kim Gi-seok as Young monk
Park Min-gyoo as Young monk
Kim Gi-bang as Byeok-ran-do store owner
Lee Se-rang as Hyang-nang store owner
Lee Ye-na as King's additional wife
Hong Ga-yeon as King's additional wife
Min Ji-hyeon as King's additional wife
Lee Jeong-joo as Palace lady dressed as a man
Kim Min-ah as Queen's maid
Lee Jin-ah as Queen's maid
Kim Hee-seon as Young-soo palace lady
Kim Se-hee as Young-soo palace lady
Kim Kyeong-hee-I as Palace lady
Choi Seung-hee as Palace lady
Choi Seung-il as Eunuch


Lee Seon-min as Eunuch
Kang Dong-gyoon as Eunuch
Kim Hyo-joo as Celebration dancer
Han Seon-yeong as Celebration dancer
Park Seon-yeong as Celebration dancer
Choi Yoo-jin as Celebration dancer
Im Ji-hyeon as Celebration dancer
Im Ji-yeong as Celebration dancer
Lee Mi-yeon as Celebration dancer
Kim Se-jeong as Celebration dancer
Kim Ga-eun as Celebration dancer
Kim Soo-ji as Celebration dancer
Lee Geum-hee as Celebration dancer
Yoon Hye-seon as Celebration dancer
Jeong An-woo as Young king's men
Jeong Gwang-min as Young king's men
Kim Gi-yoon as Young king's men
Kim Gwang-jo as Young king's men
Jo Jin-woong - Cameo
Lim Hyeon-seong - Cameo

 Cute girl at 00:56! Anyone know who that is?
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Sunday, March 4, 2012

My Heart Beats: Feminist Professor Finally Gets Laid

My Heart Beats is a freaky little piece of hypersexual filmmaking. Creepily voyeuristic with a zombie like performance at its center, this oddly heady skin flick is all about a depressed, middle-aged professor (Ryu Dong-sook) who, in the midst of preparing for a feminist class on erotica, decides that she must get into a porno film since she's so desperate to get laid. (That's definitely one way of doing it.) Lucky for her, she's got a sassy old frenemy (Byun Yi-yeon), who runs a video production company specializing in skin flicks. After dieting, exercising, studying the Kama Sutra and punching herself in the stomach to beat out her damned spare tire, this academic is deemed ready to take it off and get it on! Her hobby in humping has begun.

To protect her tenure though, she wears a series of Mardi Gras masks as does her first sex partner (in life and on camera). He's an impossibly hot -- and presumably mute -- young man (One Tae-hee) with many strange scars on his chest, that resemble pink putty leeches. Coincidentally, this masked stud is so many years his on-screen lover's junior that he's actually looking to get into a college to become a professor himself. Call it serendipity. Eventually, I suppose they'll be able to say they've taught each other something deep.

Learning is a painful process, sadly, and since this is basically soft porn with a story, the only happy endings for these characters are the ones captured by the film within the film. Actually, those aren't very cheery outcomes either. But outside the celluloid fantasy, the instructress loses her job, the gigolo loses his heart, and the self-styled auteur (Kang Seok-ho) deciding the camera angles loses his artistic control.

It's worth noting that My Heart Beats is directed by a woman: Huh Eun-hee. Because of that perhaps, there's lots of staring at crotches instead of cleavage, and a couple of minor male characters (Lee Dong-hyun and Ahn Sung-gun) who never disrobe but have killer pecs. Also, the Cinderella-type transformation of the movie's heroine is about an odd duck becoming a more attractive odd duck instead of a bona fide swan. I liked that. I also got a kick out of the fruity symbolism in which the protagonist goes from learning to bite an apple, to learning to share a peach, to learning to give a pomegranate without expectation. Kooky but sweet.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

The Spirit of Jeet Kune Do: Bruce Lee Can't Get You a GED

In the law of the jungle known as high school, you can gain a decisive advantage over the school bully if you're willing to stab him in the leg right before the big fight. That said, you'll have an even bigger advantage if your father is a Taekwondo instructor and you're willing to hit your opponent in the back of the head with a pair of nunchucks before the battle begins. Such are the lessons of The Spirit of Jeet Kune Do, Yu Ha's wistfully violent coming-of-age film about a painfully shy student named Hyeon-su (Kwone Sang-woo) who evolves from a simpering sidekick to rough-and-tumble classmate Woo-shik (Lee Jeong-jin) to a formidable Bruce Lee disciple tough enough to take on an entire gang of meanies entirely by himself.

Hyeon-su's a lover, not a fighter though, for while his training regimen does get him great delts and a sweet set of abs, his luck with the ladies leaves something to be desired. His big crush Eun-ju (Han Ga-in) thinks of him as a friend, a kind of eunuch she can hang out with while talking about music and getting drunk. The super-hot cougar (Kim Bu-seon), who runs the local cafe and wants to get down his pants, doesn't strike his fancy. (Something she learns the hard way after unzipping his pants.) This is one young man who's going to have to make do with gaining the respect of his father by kicking ass. Since Dad's made a business out of his own fists of fury, he knows all about the power of the punch. Violence is the answer!

The notion that muscles reign over the mind recurs throughout The Spirit of Jeet Kune Do: Teachers brutalize wayward students for being stupid or disobedient; hall monitors shove anyone who dares to make eye contact or talk back; Hamburger (Park Hyo-jun), the fat kid who sells bestial porn to earn tuition money, slaps a girl repeatedly who won't dance with him at the local disco. In Seoul in the '70s, smarts didn't get you much as a teenager. Better to hit the weights, kick the heavy bag, and learn to do pushups on your finger tips. Pining for the pretty girl on the bus is a waste of time. Re-enacting a scene from a Bruce Lee movie is a lot more fun. So is running through the hallway breaking windows and screaming "All the schools in Korea are fucked!" Now that's a total blast.

Festival - 2010

페스티발 (Pe-seu-ti-bal)

•Directed by Lee Hae-yeong (이해영)
•Comedy/Romantic comedy/Romance
•110min
Opening Date : Nov 18, 2010
A bright sexy comedy about a wholesome town and four mysterious couples and their sneaky lives. It is the new work of director Lee Hae-yeong, who secured a spot as a new director with the work 'Like a Virgin'.
Cast
Sin Ha-gyoon 신하균 As Police officer, Jang-bae (경찰관, 장배)
Eom Ji-won 엄지원 As English Teacher, Ji-soo (영어강사, 지수)
Shim Hye-jin 심혜진 As Hanbok store owner, Soon-sim (한복집 주인, 순심)
Seong Dong-il 성동일 As Hardware store owner, Gi-bong (철물점 주인, 기봉)
Ryoo Seung-beom 류승범 As Fish cake (odeng) seller, Sang-doo
Baek Jin-hee 백진희 As High school girl, Ja-hye (여고생, 자혜)

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