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Song Hae sung

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Years active
  
1991-present

Name
  
Song Hae-sung

McCune–Reischauer
  
Song Hae-song


Hangul
  
송해성

Role
  
Film director



Born
  
October 11, 1964 (age 59) (
1964-10-11
)
Seoul, South Korea

Education
  
Hanyang University - Theater and Film

Occupation
  
Film director, screenwriter

Awards
  
Grand Bell Award for Best Director, Blue Dragon Film Award for Best Director

Nominations
  
Grand Bell Award for Best New Director

Movies
  
Boomerang Family, Failan, A Better Tomorrow, Maundy Thursday, Rikidozan: A Hero Extraordinary

Similar People
  
Yoon Je‑moon, Youn Yuh‑jung, Jin Ji‑hee, Park Hae‑il, Jo Han‑sun

Revised Romanization
  
Song Hae-seong

Song Hae-sung (born October 11, 1964) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter.

Contents

Career

Song Hae-sung made his feature film debut in 1999 with the time-traveling romance Calla, starring Song Seung-heon and Kim Hee-sun. But he didn't become more widely known until the success of his second film, Failan (2001). Starring Choi Min-sik and Cecilia Cheung, the film is about a hoodlum who finds purpose in life after discovering true love, and it won praise from audiences and critics alike for its sympathetic portrayal of the weakness and deep flaws lingering behind the façade of bravado of Korean men. It earned Song two best director honors, from the 2001 Blue Dragon Film Awards and the 2002 Grand Bell Awards, cementing him as a major force in Korean cinema.

His ambitious follow-up in 2004 was Rikidozan, a biopic on Rikidōzan, a legendary ethnic Korean pro-wrestler who became a national hero in Japan in the 1950s, starring Sol Kyung-gu in the title role. Despite its underwhelming box office, Song received his second Grand Bell Award for best director in 2005.

In 2006, he made a film adaptation of Gong Ji-young's bestselling novel Our Happy Time. Starring Lee Na-young and Kang Dong-won, Maundy Thursday focuses on the relationship between a suicidal woman and the man she visits on death row. A melodrama less about love than about compassion, the film was a hit, attracting more than 3 million viewers to become the seventh most popular domestic film of 2006.

Though he flatly refused when first approached to direct a remake of John Woo's Hong Kong noir classic A Better Tomorrow, Song eventually decided to make a South Korean version revolving around brotherhood and North Korean defectors. A Better Tomorrow (also known as Invincible, 2010) starred Song Seung-heon, Joo Jin-mo, Kim Kang-woo, and Jo Han-sun, and director Song described the film as a drama more than an action film, "propelled by the emotional interaction between the characters, and the action is there to heighten and express the dramatic tension."

He adapted another novel in 2013, Cheon Myung-gwan's Aging Family, about a grown-up trio of loser siblings who embark on a series of misadventures after moving back into their mother's home. Song said the image that crossed his mind while making the film was a bowl of bean paste stew adorned with five spoons, symbolizing a troubled but loving family. Casting Youn Yuh-jung, Yoon Je-moon, Park Hae-il, Gong Hyo-jin and Jin Ji-hee in the ensemble comedy (based on a work by Cheon Myeong-kwan Boomerang Family, Song joked that it was a "low-budget family Avengers."

Filmography

  • Susanne Brink's Arirang (1991) - scripter
  • The Story Inside the Handbag (1991) - assistant director
  • The Rules of the Game (1994) - assistant director
  • Born to Kill (1996) - screenplay, assistant director
  • Calla (1999) - director
  • Raybang (2001) - actor
  • Failan (2001) - director, screenplay
  • Rikidozan (2004) - director, screenplay, script editor
  • Maundy Thursday (2006) - director
  • A Better Tomorrow (2010) - director
  • Boomerang Family (2013) - director, screenplay
  • References

    Song Hae-sung Wikipedia