Most Popular
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Trump picks ex-N. Korea policy official as his principal deputy national security adviser
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S. Korea not to attend Sado mine memorial: foreign ministry
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Toxins at 622 times legal limit found in kids' clothes from Chinese platforms
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[Weekender] Korea's traditional sauce culture gains global recognition
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BLACKPINK's Rose stays at No. 3 on British Official Singles chart with 'APT.'
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Gyeongju blends old with new
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Over 80,000 malicious calls made to Seoul call center since 2020
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Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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‘Snowpiercer’ wins several U.S. critics’ awards
South Korean director Bong Joon-ho’s English debut film “Snowpiercer” won a series of awards from associations of American movie critics, the film’s South Korean distributor said Wednesday.“Snowpiercer” received the best sci-fi film award from the Phoenix Film Critics Society, composed of movie critics working in Arizona on Wednesday, last week, CJ E&M said. On Friday, the film’s writer-director Bong and cowriter Kelly Masterson took home the best screenplay award from the Utah Film Critics Asso
Dec. 25, 2014
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‘Interstellar’ draws 10m viewers in Korea
Hollywood space epic “Interstellar” cleared the 10 million viewer mark at the Korean box office on Christmas Day, becoming the third film to achieve the feat this year after Disney animation “Frozen” (10.29 million) and Korean period action flick “Roaring Currents” (17.61 million).Christopher Nolan’s sci-fi film on Thursday joined the 10 million viewership club within 50 days of its release, its distributor Warner Bros. Korea said. Only two other imported films, “Avatar” (13.30 million) and “Fro
Dec. 25, 2014
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Korean films exceed 100 million viewers for third year in a row
Domestic films have sold 100 million tickets in movie theaters this year for the third year running, according to the state-run Korea Film Council. This year, Korean films garnered 100.19 million viewers as of Tuesday, which indicates every Korean has watched an average of two local films on the silver screen in a country of 50 million people. Local films have earned a total of 763.2 billion won ($695.3 million) in box office revenue this year. People line up at a cinema chain in Yongsan-gu, Se
Dec. 23, 2014
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Korean films top 100 mln viewer mark for 3rd year
The annual number of viewers of South Korean movies has exceeded the 100 million mark for the third consecutive year, a government office compiling official box-office data said Tuesday. Homegrown films had attracted 100.19 million viewers as of midnight, which means that an average of two of such films were seen by a person in a country with 50 million people in 2014, the Korean Film Commission said.Leading the success was "Roaring Currents," an epic film that drew an all-time record of 17.6 mi
Dec. 23, 2014
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‘Hobbit’ goes out on top with $90.6 million 5-day debut
NEW YORK (AP) ― While Hollywood continued to wrestle with the fallout of the Sony hacking scandal, the weekend box office offered the solace of a moviegoing truism: Hobbits sell. Peter Jackson’s final installment of his six J.R.R. Tolkien adventures, “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,” debuted with $56.2 million over the weekend and $90.6 million since opening Wednesday, according to studio estimates Sunday. For an industry reeling from the cancellation of “The Interview” and terrorist
Dec. 22, 2014
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9 films advance in Oscars shortlist for best foreign film
LOS ANGELES (AP) ― The list of contenders for best foreign film got a bit smaller Friday as the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences announced the nine features that will advance to the next round of voting. Included are Ruben Ostlund’s patriarchy-skewering avalanche film “Force Majeure” from Sweden, Andrey Zvyagintsev’s “Leviathan,” about a property dispute in a small Russian coastal town, and Pawel Pawlikowski’s Polish drama “Ida,” about a young woman with dreams of being a nun who dis
Dec. 21, 2014
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Coelho says Sony hack threatens all
GENEVA (AP) ― Brazilian author Paulo Coelho says the Sony hack threatens us all if society doesn’t enforce important values: our individual and collective freedom of expression and an unwavering refusal to negotiate with anonymous terrorists. The best-selling author said in an interview Friday with The Associated Press that he was prepared to make himself an example ― even if it meant inviting criticism and potential threats ― if Sony Pictures had taken him up on his $100,000 offer for the right
Dec. 21, 2014
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‘Sniper’ brings Eastwood back, a lot closer to the bull’s eye
The acting drops away from Bradley Cooper’s performance as “deadliest American sniper” Chris Kyle. Cooper bulked up, kept a pinch between his lower lip and jaw and became a man of few drawled words, the perfect Clint Eastwood hero in Eastwood’s film “American Sniper.”The director, who has seemed distracted if not downright bored with his recent films ― “Jersey Boys” was sort of a post-orangutan low ― returns to form with a clean kill of a movie, an unfussy combat film that only drifts in a third
Dec. 19, 2014
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Box Office: The Tailors, The Hobbit, Ode to My Father
The Tailors (Korea)Opening Dec. 24Drama. Directed by Lee Won-suk“The Tailors” is the story of two tailors: Jo Dol-seok (Han Suk-kyu), the head of Sanguiwon, the office in charge of royal attire in the Joseon era (1392-1910), and Lee Gong-jin (Gosu), a rebellious, skilled young designer who sets his fashion career in motion by designing the most outrageous and artistic hanbok of the time. When Dol-seok, an orthodox designer, becomes jealous of Gong-jin’s talent, their friendly competition escalat
Dec. 19, 2014
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‘The Interview’ jeopardizes overseas movie villains
LOS ANGELES (AP) ― Hollywood loves its overseas villains. Evil forces from Russia, China and North Korea have tirelessly menaced our big-screen heroes in recent years. But, in the wake of the dramatic cancellation of “The Interview,” an entire species of movie baddies might be in danger of extinction. One film already bit the dust. “Pyongyang,” an adaption of a graphic novel set in North Korea, was given the ax Wednesday after distributor Fox abandoned the project and producer New Regency was fo
Dec. 19, 2014
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Children’s cartoons deadlier than films for adults
LONDON (AFP) ― Children’s cartoons depict death more often than films for adults, and their main characters are more than twice as likely to be killed off, according to research released on Tuesday.The study found the main characters in children’s cartoons were two and a half times as likely to die as protagonists in films for adults, and were almost three times as likely to be murdered ― often in violent ways.Important characters overall die in two-thirds of cartoons aimed at children, compared
Dec. 18, 2014
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‘Selma’ stars on poignancy and parallels of movie
NEW YORK (AP) ― At Sunday’s premiere of “Selma” in New York, the cast acknowledged parallels between their film about the African-American civil rights movement and recent protests nationwide, calling attention to the deaths of unarmed black males at the hands of police. “You can look out your window and you can see people protesting and you can look at the film and it looks similar,” said Oprah Winfrey, who is a producer on the film and has an acting role as well. “People are wearing different
Dec. 17, 2014
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‘Gone with the Wind’ premiere sparked tension
ATLANTA (AP) ― Seventy-five years after the premiere of the movie “Gone with the Wind,” research is shedding light on the racial tensions that existed at the time between the producer and city of Atlanta officials. Emory University film studies professor Matthew Bernstein has conducted extensive research into the archives of the film’s producer, David O. Selznick. His findings illustrate some of Selznick’s concerns with the city’s treatment of the film’s black stars at the Dec. 15, 1939 premiere
Dec. 16, 2014
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Gray-haired lovers become cinema hit
A documentary about a couple who have been married for 76 years is storming the box office, with more than 1 million tickets sold so far, a rare feat for an indie-film in Korea. “My Love, Don’t Cross That River,” directed by Jin Mo-young, nabbed the top spot on Korea’s box office chart over the weekend, beating out blockbusters “Exodus” and “Interstellar.”The film has attracted a total of 1.06 million viewers since it premiered on Nov. 26, according to the state-run Korea Film Council. It seems
Dec. 15, 2014
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North Korea criticism fuels ‘Interview’ box office hopes
LOS ANGELES (AFP) ― The obvious question is: Where is Kim Jong-un’s sense of humor?It’s hard to understand why North Korea is taking “The Interview” ― a madcap comedy about a fictional CIA plot to kill the elusive leader ― so seriously.The film ― starring American comic actors Seth Rogen and James Franco, and due in theaters on Christmas Day ― is full of scatological humor and sexual jokes.It’s basically a cross between a slapstick James Bond and a “Hangover” movie, aimed squarely at an audience
Dec. 15, 2014
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Chicken pox keeps Jolie from ‘Unbroken’ promotions
LOS ANGELES (AP) ― Angelina Jolie is reluctantly calling in sick for “Unbroken” promotional duty. Universal Pictures said Friday that Jolie is suffering from “a mild bout of chicken pox” that will keep her from making public appearances in the coming days to support the film, which she directed. “Unbroken,” about former Olympian Louis Zamperini, is set to premiere in Los Angeles on Monday. Universal said Jolie’s children and her husband, Brad Pitt, will represent her at the premiere. The studio
Dec. 14, 2014
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Box Office: Ode to My Father, The Theory of Everything, Five Eagle Brothers
Ode to My Father (Korea)Opening Dec. 17Drama. Directed by Yoon Je-kyoon“Ode to My Father” is the story of Deok-soo (Hwang Jung-min), a man who lived through Korea’s tumultuous 1950s and 1960s. When the Korean War breaks out, Deok-soo is separated from his younger sister and his mother and becomes the breadwinner of the family. From a young age, he takes all kinds of difficult and odd jobs to provide for his mother and his other siblings. In search for opportunities, he travels the globe, working
Dec. 12, 2014
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‘Exodus’ plagued by casting, script issues
To what do we owe the second coming of the biblical epic? A genre that was once as moldy as stale communion wafers has been reborn this year, first with Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah” and now with Ridley Scott’s “Exodus: Gods & Kings.” The resurrection is partly to capitalize on the faith-based moviegoing audience and partly because the Bible offers stories suited to this blockbuster era, offering both spectacle and name-brand familiarity. More than 50 years after “The Ten Commandments” sandals are b
Dec. 12, 2014
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Korean film on 16th-century victory against Japan hits China
Chinese moviegoers are set to be thrilled by a South Korean all-time super-hit movie featuring a famous 16th-century naval victory against Japanese invaders as "Roaring Currents" debuted in China on Friday. Starring Choi Min-sik, known for his lead role in the 2003 thriller "Old Boy," the epic film "Roaring Currents" depicts a famous victory by Admiral Yi Sun-sin of the Joseon Dynasty in the Battle of Myeongryang in 1597. Admiral Yi saved the Korean dynasty from the brink of collapse during the
Dec. 12, 2014
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Korean docu film tops box office over Hollywood blockbusters
A South Korean documentary film about love and separation by death of an elderly couple topped the latest daily box-office chart, beating big-budget Hollywood films, a box-office tracker said Friday."My Love, Don't Cross That River" hit the record, collecting 65,613 moviegoers in 465 theaters across the country on Thursday, according to the Korean Film Council (KOFIC). The film's accumulated number of attendance was 420,120.Released on Nov. 27, the film by director Ji Mo-young became the first l
Dec. 12, 2014