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Kim Jee woon

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Years active
  
1998-present

McCune–Reischauer
  
Kim Chiun

Shows
  
Cheongdam-dong Alice

Revised Romanization
  
Gim Ji-un

Siblings
  
Ji-suk Kim, Kim Ji-won

Hanja
  
金知雲

Role
  
Film director

Hangul
  
김지운

Name
  
Kim Jee-woon


Kim Jee-woon Kim JeeWoon to Bring Ed Brubaker39s Coward to Cinemas


Born
  
July 6, 1964 (age 59) (
1964-07-06
)
Seoul, South Korea

Occupation
  
Film director Screenwriter

Education
  
Seoul Institute of the Arts

Awards
  
Blue Dragon Film Award for Best Director

Movies
  
I Saw the Devil, The Last Stand, The Good - the Bad - the Weird, A Tale of Two Sisters, A Bittersweet Life

Similar People
  
Choi Min‑sik, Song Kang‑Ho, Lee Byung‑hun, Bong Joon‑ho, Im Soo‑jung

Korean director kim jee woon s hollywood debut the last stand opens thursday


Kim Jee-woon (Hangul: 김지운; born July 6, 1964) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kim Jee-woon has a history of successfully tackling a wide range of film genres, garnering a cult following among fans of Asian cinema.

Contents

Kim Jee-woon Kim Jeewoon Indiewire

Cinema diverse director s talk by kim jee woon


Summary

Kim Jee-woon Kim Jiwoon Will Head Back to Korea For LiveAction Remake

Kim started out directing theater but has worked with increasing levels of success in cinema, showing accomplished acting and a detailed stylization in his films. Kim also pays careful attention to the release of his films on DVD and goes to greater than usual lengths to package them with extensive documentary materials and revealing commentary tracks.

Kim Jee-woon Director Kim JeeWoon Talks THE LAST STAND Collider

Kim is growing substantially both as a director and a visual stylist as demonstrated by two of his most recent films A Tale of Two Sisters and A Bittersweet Life both of which were received as critical and commercial successes.

Kim Jee-woon Jeewoon Kim Pictures Premiere Of Lionsgate Films39 quotThe

In 2010 Kim directed the thriller I Saw the Devil, the cast of which includes Choi Min-sik (which he worked with previously on his film The Quiet Family) and Lee Byung-hun (who he worked with previously on The Good, the Bad, the Weird and A Bittersweet Life).

Kim's next film was his US debut, featuring the return of Arnold Schwarzenegger to lead acting roles, The Last Stand, for Lionsgate Films. The film also starred Johnny Knoxville, Forest Whitaker, Peter Stormare, and Daniel Henney.

After his US debut, Kim will return to Korea and begin production of his latest project called "Inrang" based upon Mamoru Oshii's anime "Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade".

The Quiet Family

In 1998, Kim directed and wrote his first feature film, The Quiet Family (1998), a horror/drama/comedy about a family who owns a mountain inn whose guests continue to commit suicide. The film was his first collaboration with actors Choi Min-sik (who he would later collaborate with in I Saw the Devil) and Song Kang-ho (who he would later collaborate with in The Foul King and The Good, the Bad, the Weird). The film won Best Live Action film at the 1999 Fantasporto festival, and Best Director and Best Film at the Malaga International Week of Fantastic Cinema. It was also nominated for Best Film at the 1998 Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival.

The Foul King

In 2000, Kim directed and wrote his second feature film, The Foul King (2000), re-uniting again with Song Kang-ho. The film follows an unproductive and incompetent bank clerk (played by Song Kang-ho) who escapes his demanding, alpha-male boss by entering the pro-wrestling ring and fighting under a pseudonym, "The Foul King." The two worlds eventually end up colliding, however. The film won Best Director at the 2001 Milan International Film Festival, and an Audience Award at the Udine Far East Film Festival.

Coming Out (short film)

In 2001, Kim directed and wrote a short film entitled Coming Out (2001). The film is about vampires, among other things, and Kim wrote and directed Coming Out as part of a project to distribute three digital short films online. It was also commissioned by venture group Media 4M, and the project also included shorts by Jang Jin and Ryu Seung-wan. Coming Out was shot with a Canon XL-1 camcorder during a time when digital filmmaking in South Korea was still in its infancy, and went on to inspire many other digital productions. It was shown at the Fantasia Festival, and the Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival in 2001 and the Thessaloniki International Film Festival in 2005. Coming Out was also included as a special feature on the UK DVD release of The Quiet Family and a review at DVDActive praised it as "delicate, cerebral and contemporary cinema at its most profound."

Memories segment in Three

Kim next wrote and directed the "Memories" segment in the omnibus film, Three (also known as Three Extremes II), also featuring segments directed by Peter Chan and Nonzee Nimibutr. The segment starred Kim Hye-soo.

A Tale of Two Sisters

In 2003, Kim wrote and directed A Tale of Two Sisters (2003), which won a number of awards at a number of film festivals including the Fant-Asia Film Festival (most popular film), Best Actress (Su-jeong Lim), Best Director and Best Film at the Fantasporto, Best Picture at Screamfest Horror Film Festival, Grand Prize and the Youth Jury Grand Prize at the Gerardmer Film Festival, and acting awards for Su-jeong Lim and Jung-ah Yum at the Blue Dragon Film Awards and the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival. The film was later remade into the 2009 U.S. film The Uninvited, starring Emily Browning, with Kim being credited with an original story/writer credit.

A Bittersweet Life

In 2005, Kim wrote and directed A Bittersweet Life (2005), his first collaboration with actor Lee Byung-hun (who he would later work with in The Good, the Bad, the Weird and I Saw the Devil). The film was an ultra-stylish and ultra-violent gangster and mobster picture that was both a critical and commercial success in South Korea. Lee Byung-hun won Best Actor at the Baeksang Arts Awards and Hwang Jung-min won a Best Supporting Actor award at Korea's Grand Bell Awards. Kim also won the "Action Asia Award" at the 2006 Deauville Asian Film Festival.

The Good, The Bad, The Weird

In 2008, Kim wrote and directed The Good, the Bad, the Weird (2008), his tribute to spaghetti westerns, westerns and western action films. He would re-team again with Song Kang-ho (who played "The Weird") as well as Lee Byung-hun (who played "The Bad") in the film. The film takes place in 1930s Manchuria and chronicles the struggles of the three main characters in trying to find a piece of treasure. The film won an Achievement in Cinematography Award from the 2008 Asia Pacific Screen Awards, won Best Supporting Actor for Jung Woo-sung (the "Good") at the 2009 Asian Film Awards, and won Best Director and Best Special Effects at the 2008 Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival.

I Saw The Devil

In 2010, Kim directed, based on a screenplay from Hoon-jung Park, I Saw the Devil (2010), re-uniting with actors Choi Min-sik and Lee Byung-hun. The film won a number of awards, including Best Director and Best Film at Fantasporto, Special Jury Prize, Audience Award, Critics Award at the Gerardmer Film Festival, Best Lighting at the Grand Bell Awards, Best Foreign Language film from the Austin Film Critics Association and Best Editing from the 2011 Asian Film Awards.

Doomsday Book

In 2012, Kim directed and wrote the segment known as "The Heavenly Creature" about a robot who achieves enlightenment in a Buddhist temple, in 2012 omnibus film Doomsday Book (Yim Pil-sung directed the other two segments). The film won Best International Film at the Fantasia Festival and a Special Award at the Toronto After Dark Film Festival.

The Last Stand

In 2013, Kim made his U.S. feature directorial debut with the action film, The Last Stand, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Johnny Knoxville, Forest Whitaker, Daniel Henney, and more.

The X

In 2013, Kim premiered his short, The X, in the Gala Presentation category at the Busan International Film Festival.

The Age of Shadows

On August 3, 2015, it was announced that Warner Bros. would finance and distribute its first ever Korean-language 1930s set drama Secret Agent, and the $8.62 million budgeted film would also be produced by Grimm Pictures. The project and script was developed by Lee Jin-sook, which Kim Jee-woon would direct and the cast would be Song Kang-ho and Gong Yoo. A trailer was released on July 14, 2016, revealing the new title as The Age of Shadows.

Future projects

In October 2013, it was announced that Kim is set to direct the movie adaptation of Ed Brubaker's pulp crime comic Coward.

Kim currently filmed his latest film In-rang (2018) which is remake of 1999 anime film Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade

References

Kim Jee-woon Wikipedia