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【资料】2009年《坡州》(李善均、瑞雨)中字已出

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发表于 2010-4-13 14:14 | 显示全部楼层
http://www.koreanfilm.org/kfilm09.html#paju

                               
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Paju

Paju is a small city located to the northwest of Seoul, quite literally a stone's throw from North Korea. These days it is being developed into a kind of artists' community, with the city government trying to attract book publishers and the like. But the film Paju takes place somewhat earlier, between the years of 1995 and 2003. The city we see in the film is a kind of in-between place, no longer rural but not yet urban, with the fast-paced development attracting gangster types and causing disturbance among long-term residents. For one of the film's main characters, it starts as a place of escape and eventually becomes his home. For another character, it is a childhood home, but the need for escape beckons.


                               
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Paju is about the complicated relationship between a young girl and her brother-in-law -- and by "relationship" I don't mean to imply that this is a love story. These are two people whose lives have been upended by freak accidents. The man, Joong-shik (Lee Seon-gyun), is burdened with guilt over a tragic event that took place at the home of his lover in 1995. Later he moves to Paju and marries a woman named Eun-su (Shim I-young). But her younger sister Eun-mo (Seo Woo), who lives with them, has an instinctive distrust of her new brother-in-law. Soon another freak accident will take place, which will lead to additional bouts of trauma, guilt, confusion, and eventually, suspicion.

It took seven years for director Park Chan-ok to complete this follow-up to her critically praised debut film Jealousy Is My Middle Name (2002), another slow-burning drama about people concealing inner emotional storms. Paju is recognizably the work of the same director, but it is broader in scale, more difficult, and, in my opinion, a greater accomplishment. It is without question one of the best Korean films of 2009.

In part, it is the film's willful obscurity that gives it its strength. The narrative is laid out in a patchwork of flashbacks and flash-forwards that replicate the jumbled manner in which the brain stores painful memories. Making sense of it all at first is a mental challenge, but the film gives back at least as much as you put into it. Personally I liked that the story's misunderstandings persist through to the end: this is not a film where all characters come around to accept the same interpretation of the events we have witnessed. Because each character carries a different understanding -- and no character possesses complete knowledge of what happened -- there is a layered complexity to the film's emotions.

Park is also quite skilled at structuring her story in a manner that suggests broader themes without pushing them into your face. The concept of home reappears throughout the film, notably in a plot thread about a group of displaced residents, led by Joong-shik, who fight against construction workers and hired thugs to prevent the demolition of an apartment complex. At the same time Eun-mo is fighting to keep her own home, not because she needs a place to stay but because it represents the memory of her deceased parents. For Joong-shik, the fight to save the apartment complex is grounded in his political beliefs, and the pitched battle that breaks out towards the film's end, with rocks and Molotov cocktails being hurled at bulldozers, recall Korea's political battles of recent decades. But eventually he faces a situation where his social ideals come into conflict with his personal feelings and responsibilities towards Eun-mo.

Paju's other key strength is the sheer cinematic pleasure of watching it. It is a beautiful film, not in a glossy colorful sense, but in the grainy quality of its foggy, unsaturated tones and shadows. Cinematographer Kim Woo-hyung, who has collaborated in the past with Im Sang-soo and Jang Sun-woo, deserves much of the credit for this. The acting is also top notch across the whole cast, with actress Seo Woo receiving particular notice for her performance. She is not a complete newcomer, having won a couple awards for her portrayal of the daughter in last year's Crush and Blush, but this is clearly her breakout role. The character of Eun-mo fits her like a glove, and given that this film is at its core a coming-of-age story, she projects an emotional vulnerability and independent-minded determination that represents what is most memorable about Paju. Seo will probably go on to make many more great films, but I suspect she'll always be best remembered for her performance in this one. (Darcy Paquet)

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发表于 2010-4-13 14:16 | 显示全部楼层
http://twitchfilm.net/reviews/2009/12/k-film-reviews-paju.php

                               
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[K-FILM REVIEWS] 파주 (Paju)


                               
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By X, Twitch
December 21, 2009 5:44 AM

You'll never fully realize how beautiful fog can be until you see it from a balcony, as it embraces an entire valley in the early morning, like an ocean of white you'd love to swim in; It's as if, for a very fleeting moment, you could stare at creation from above the clouds. Of course, deep inside the situation is much different: visibility is close to zero, and all the ethereal sights you previously witnessed amount to now is hazy and disconcerting ambiguity - the sinister feeling that you're going somewhere, but you really have no idea where it is; you feel reluctance to continue, but then again it always beats staying put in this hell on earth. Narratively speaking, fog can be quite the powerful device, particularly if you use it with consistent and effective zeal. The moral and emotional fog of a good noir film, for instance, can be just as alluring and glamorous as the sexy cigarette smoke which pervades those frames like a lingering presence working in the background. The most comfortable way of using this narrative device is putting the viewer on top, as he stares at that endless fog down the valley from the balcony of that mountain cottage: they don't tell you what's inside that ambiguous sea of white, which in turn becomes a character of its own, something you approach detachedly (not necessarily from an emotional standpoint). But then you find films which toss you inside the fog, and that's when the experience becomes truly interesting, and all the more challenging. Like in Park Chan-Ok's 파주 (Paju), for instance.

Now a vibrant "new city" in Gyeonggi Province, status which the former county only gained in 1997, Paju had always been a very important center in the peninsula, even going back to prehistoric cultures. Along with Gaeseong (known as Gaegyeong back in Goryeo, and later Songdo during part of the Joseon dynasty) and Pyeongyang up north, the area was one of the most populated amongst all the eight provinces of Joseon, almost on par with administrative centers like Hanseong (Seoul) and other cities down south. Becoming Korea's military mecca after liberation, the city is now trying to establish itself as a cultural hub with the construction of the Paju Book City, over 1.5 million square meters of eco-friendly land completely devoted to the publishing industry, a cultural oasis for writers, critics and public alike. Exactly why Park chose this rapidly growing city for her long awaited-return to Chungmuro is not immediately clear, but in a way reminds of the same traits which led Lee Chang-Dong to choose Miryang in South Gyeongsang province for his 밀양 (Secret Sunshine): we're dealing with places that have a certain personality of their own, enough to make them an invisible companion, always looming behind the corner. In this case, it might certainly be the contradictions of a rapidly urbanizing area clashing with the strong cultural undercurrent which surrounds it - to again use the Lee Chang-Dong model, just like what Ilsan's all too rapid change meant for Han Suk-Gyu's character in his 초록물고기 (Green Fish). But more than such dilemma, Park uses Paju as that big white ocean of fog, enveloping the characters and their ambiguous emotions. It's without a doubt one of the most cerebral films of the year, in no small part because of such approach to storytelling - if the constant back and forth between past and present was not enough.

At the center of this story is the journey of guilt Joong-Shik (Lee Seon-Gyun) experiences, as his entire existence becomes dominated by ambiguous clouds of misfortune and guilt. His relationship with his first love-cum-older schoolmate's girlfriend turns into tragedy, when her infant daughter is severely injured as a result, wounds which hurt him even more than the poor kid. He then moves to Paju to escape from the repercussions of his student activism, where he meets and eventually marries Eun-Soo (Shim Yi-Young), despite the reservations of younger sister Eun-Mo (Seo Woo). Another tragedy strikes, and we find ourselves in 2003 (seven years later), with Joong-Shik still living in Paju, and Eun-Mo returning from years spent in India, journey which certainly didn't help dispelling her skepticism regarding Jung-Shik, particularly now that her suspicions about him even worsened.

Once again, you can blame Chungmuro's marketing gurus for purposely painting a rather misleading picture of what we were going to get in the finished product. Or maybe it was a smart move, if filling theaters was the one and only bottom line? The film only sold in the low six figures, but indie fare of this kind only gets 3~50,000 tickets at best, so call it a success, if you will. The idea which transpired from various trailers and music videos was that of a very dark melodrama about the "forbidden" love between a man and his sister-in-law in a maelstrom of moral ambiguity. From a pure business standpoint, it certainly would make sense to go that way, but if you let the marketing machine influence your expectations, you're likely to leave this experience with regrets and ennui, for Paju is most definitely a Park Chan-Ok film through and through, with all the strengths and weaknesses which come with the territory. We're dealing with layers upon layers of ambiguity, characters rarely expressing themselves in an explicit way, making the process of connecting the dots a bit like finding your way home amidst the fog (which Paju does indeed have copious amounts of, particularly in this film). The idea would be that of looking at the characters in a more detached way (from that cottage balcony, so to speak), but that is something you can only achieve with a second or third viewing, as you will be much too busy trying to find any visible narrative or emotional thread the first time in.

And that might not be the most rewarding of experiences, truth to be told. Paju is a clever, mature film which deals with very real and significant issues by taking off all the unnecessary frills and just presenting them raw, crude and bare. But unless you approach its storytelling with that fog (emotional and in terms of character development) in mind, a lot of this is going to feel like the countless smarmy indie projects which scrape the bottom of Chungmuro's barrel every year, more concerned about manifesting their uniqueness and alleged artistic merit than actually banking on fundamentals, good acting and clever ideas. Particularly one big revelation at the end, if taken out of that context, will come completely out of the blue. Some Korean critics smartly suggested that the film never really gave us any hint leading to that moment, and that the screws all start to fit together only when post-mortem rumination begins. That, of course, is the effect of approaching this work from "inside the fog," trying to follow narrative paths which Park never really wants you to trail. The idea is, it all works and somewhat makes sense if you see Joong-Shik's behavior as a journey of guilt, some form of atonement its very ambiguous destination. The same goes for Eun-Mo and the way she reacts to his behavior. If the trailers had suggested we were dealing with a sort of romance noir on the pitfalls of seeking the prohibited, then maybe the first, inevitable impact wouldn't have been such a crash landing.

But Paju does improve with repeated viewings, that ambiguity morphing from the film's most daunting shortcoming into what is possibly its biggest, maddeningly flawed charm. And if you ignore marketing and think about Park's debut film, the interesting (but, again, flawed) 질투는 나의 힘 (Jealousy is My Middle Name), then you'll be surprised of how similarly structured the two works are - ambiguity, characters obsessed with aspirations they can't fulfill, but still throwing themselves into the fray, be it darkness or fog. The biggest dilemma, then, becomes this reliance on ambiguity itself, which is also at the core of many a film noir's success or failure: it's great to have moral and emotional ambiguity dominating your characters, as it can only make them more humane and realistic, but if you only bank on that, then it probably will not work. It's as if you were looking for Harry Lime the entire film, knowing that you'd be served with one of the greatest entrances in all of cinema. And then a cat plays its game, and the lights shine on a passerby with a cuckoo clock hovering over his head, signaling the film's final moments as you stand unimpressed. Joong-Shik's behavior is understandable, the way he is portrayed (if seen through the aforementioned thematic "lenses") is perfectly coherent, as is the reaction Eun-Mo shows, perfectly consistent with what her character does throughout the film. But where are the spices, the fire? There are moments when the film seems just about to explode, to move onto the next level and truly live up to its potential, but such instances are quite rare. It's as if Park was content on delivering that finely crafted setup, drenching her characters in ambiguity and then scattering the pieces of this narrative puzzle about. It's the kind of film you respect and admire, but alas one with little energy and charm, perhaps because it's too concerned with the fog to care about what's moving inside.

If anything, the film will be remembered for one performance in particular. The entire cast is quite fine, from the usual marvelous job of character actors like Lee Dae-Yeon to the criminally underrated Kim Bo-Kyung - of 기담 (Epitaph) and 하얀거탑 (The White Tower) fame; from the incredibly promising Kim Ye-Ri (one of Chungmuro's newfound jewels, along with Baek Jin-Hee) to the returning Lee Gyung-Young; Lee Seon-Gyun does a respectable job in his familiar way (as in, he's always above average, but you also feel a certain 2% is missing), but it's young Seo Woo who completely steals the show. Saying she was the only choice for this kind of role would be kind of reductive (leaving out names with too much star power like Son Ye-Jin, there is a good chance that Gong Hyo-Jin, Jung Yoo-Mi and Cha Su-Yeon would have been equally good or better, for instance), but she's one of the very few young actresses in Korea who can project an air of maturity and also play much younger roles without mugging for the camera. After her exploits in 미쓰 홍당무 (Crush & Blush) and this year's 탐나는 도다 (Tamra, the Island), this role reinforces the suspicion that she might eventually grow into one of her generation's finest actresses, if she keeps balancing mainstream with more eclectic fare such as this.

Depending upon how you will approach Paju, it might turn into a rewarding - if inherently flawed - experience, but there's also a good chance it might prove to be a rather unnerving journey. Seeing it from a detached point of view will allow you to connect the dots and decode this fragmented and insidiously ambiguous tale of guilt and forbidden desire, but it's that exact detachment which robs the film of any energy, and limits any emotional involvement it might have produced. That's an inevitable risk you have to take when going for such narrative trappings. It's like throwing yourself inside the fog, and after a challenging journey finding that the view on that cottage balcony wasn't all that special...

[ 本帖最后由 Kit09 于 2010-4-13 14:31 编辑 ]

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发表于 2010-4-13 14:38 | 显示全部楼层
http://www.filmfestivalrotterdam.com/profe.../dutch-courage/

Dutch courage

                               
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The personal and political overlap in Park Chan-Ok's haunting drama Paju, which opens the festival this year. The director talks to Edward Lawrenson

Park Chan-Ok's most vivid memory of shooting Paju, the haunting drama that opens this year's IFFR, is of getting lost on the way to the set. Filming in the South Korean city from which her second feature takes its name, she was en route to her location when a thick fog descended: "The navigation system kept saying the set was nearby, but I couldn't see anything outside to tell which street was which. The director of photography was with me at the time, and he even suggested that we just leave the car and walk."

The incident was telling, Park continues, "not because were were anxious about being late, but because it felt mysterious and a bit out of touch with reality." This sense of strangeness and disorientation enriches the atmosphere of Park's film. Revolving around the relationship between political activist Joong-Shik (Lee Sun Kyun) and his younger sister-in-law Eunmo (Seo Woo), the movie is a subtly textured character study. Using flashbacks to follow her lead couple over a seven-year time span, Park's style is intricate and elliptic, an approach -- she suggests -- that stimulates her audience's curiosity.

At the heart of this is the growing tension between Joong-Shik and Eunmo, and the young woman's suspicion that Joong-Shik was responsible for the death of her sister in a gas explosion. The couple are stalked by events from their past in other ways too: Joong-Shik is on the run from police after the young son of a former lover was injured while in his care, and Eunmo is still struggling to come to terms with her sister's death.

Talking about the couple at the centre of her film, Park comments: "I think people in general are rather mysterious. There's always something about them that you can't quite grasp. Paju weaves in the death of Eunmo's sister, which basically creates something to chase after, something that's palpable. When I look back on it, I think I was inspired by some of the novels I had read by Raymond Chandler, Haruki Murakami or Karel Capek. Their characters chase after a particular question, but somehow, the results become distorted, and the whole chase becomes meaningless."

As well as being an evocative portrait of these two troubled individuals (beautifully played by Lee and Seo), the film also provides a lively and atmospheric picture of its eponymous setting. Fleeing from Seoul, Joong-Shik ends up in Paju, a city near the border with North Korea, and becomes involved in the attempts by a group of squatters to resist the commercial development of a downtown neighbourhood. Depicting the violent struggle between Joong-Shik's band of activists and construction workers, the film reflects some of the political tensions to have erupted recently around the pace and scale of property development in Park's homeland.

"Korean society is quite dynamic", she explains. "There's always construction going on, things being built, torn down, built again. In the past, development in Paju was postponed due to the possibility of war, but ever since relations between North and South have become quite amiable, development is in progress throughout the city. Recently, there's been a lot of press about the serious conflict over the demolition in Yongsan, a particular district in Seoul. It was a serious incident that ultimately led to the deaths of six people. These kinds of tragedies should hopefully stop occurring, but it doesn't seem like there will be a solution to the cycle any time soon."


Honoured to be opening the IFFR -- "It's amazing" she tells the Tiger -- Park is in fact a Rotterdam regular. Paju is a former CineMart project: "We were able to confirm the international potential of the film," she recalls. And in 2003, Park won a Tiger for her debut Jealousy is My Middle Name. "Despite receiving the award, it still took a while for me to get funding for my second film," she says. "Who knows? Maybe it might not have even worked out if I hadn't received the Tiger Award."

Above all the Tiger Award is welcomed by Park as "a sort of reassurance for me not to give up my own ideology or philosophy, if you will, when it comes to film-making. It gave me the courage that I needed to continue making movies. To have your film be appreciated by audiences in your own country feels different from having foreign audiences appreciating your film. It's sort of like having your parents tell you you're pretty and then hearing the same compliment from others. That's what it felt like for me when I received the Tiger Award."


http://www.youtube.com/v/_CZfD-3hCQ0
Interview with Park Chan-Ok (English subbed): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CZfD-3hCQ0

導演在訪談中說了她的<坡州>要說的是  ...And Paju is about a difficult relationship between a man and many women in his life.
[ 坡州是說一個男人在他人生中出現的多個女人的複雜關係 ]

==============================
http://twitchfilm.net/reviews/2009/12/k-film-reviews-paju.php

Lee Sun Kyun & Seo Woo Commit to Paju
Lee Sun Kyun (Romantic Island) and Seo Woo (Crush and Blush) are the leads in Paju, being directed by Park Chan Ok (Jealousy is My Middle Name). Park been preparing for this film since he thought of the storyline seven years ago. Paju is the name of a city in Korea. The movie will show the city as being mysterious and full of fog.

According to TPS Company, Paju is about Choi Eun Mo (Seo Woo) who had a lonely childhood growing up without her parents. When Eun Mo falls in love with her brother-in-law, Kim Joong Sik (Lee), she decides to go away to avoid seeing him. However, they meet again after her sister dies. Eun Mo struggles between her feelings for Joong Sik and her suspicions that he’s somehow involved in her sister’s death. Joong Sik hides the truth along with his feelings.

This role will show a different side of Lee Sun Kyun from the gentle image viewers are accustomed to, as the character is very complex and mysterious. Seo Woo is relatively new to the industry; she debuted in 2007 and won three Best New Actress awards in 2008 for Crush and Blush. Film creators said that Seo Woo’s youthful appearance yet mature expression made her perfect for the part, which shows Eun Mo go from a 15-year-old girl to a woman in her early twenties.

Filming for Paju began on February 16 and will continue for about three months. The movie will premiere in the latter half of 2009.

Source: http://tv.media.daum.net/news/ge ... ewsen/v8874099.html

[ 本帖最后由 Kit09 于 2010-4-18 22:24 编辑 ]

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发表于 2010-4-13 14:58 | 显示全部楼层
原帖由 wendy0608 于 2010-4-13 12:33 发表

Dear Kit,
我在第一幕就发现了,本打算影评里留着说的。我看到李景荣就在想,这位已经出来了么。前些年不是传说他因为诱奸未成年少女被判刑, 这位果然很有黑社会的气质。

时间过的真快……

Wendy
...

Dear Wendy

那我就等你對坡州的看法了
這套電影就如故事發生之地 - 坡州
層層濃霧把人物的性格忽隱忽現
姐夫和妹妹之間的牽絆 似有若無

妹妹歸來時是一個夜霧籠罩的晚上 像等待她來發掘真相
妹妺離去時是充滿陽光的早上 一切事物卻仍是藏在看不見的濃霧中

坡州的霧仍忠心的,牢牢的把秘密守著

k

[ 本帖最后由 Kit09 于 2010-4-13 14:59 编辑 ]

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发表于 2010-4-19 00:36 | 显示全部楼层
大叔这回演了这么悲情的个大叔……
开篇看到火花里的那个演员,小意外下:这么快就出现了…唉,当年我妈因为那个角色还是很喜欢他的

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发表于 2010-4-27 16:41 | 显示全部楼层
这部片子看下来很沉闷很压抑,也很晦涩。是不是所有得奖的片子都这么难懂呢?
[img][/img]

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发表于 2010-10-6 01:20 | 显示全部楼层
原帖由 Kit09 于 2010-4-11 23:13 发表
就在最後那一段 到底妹妹給誰打了電話?
依後面妺妺離去時 在舊居黑幫嘍囉大聲說他們會信守諾言 應該是指她家的房子可以保存下來
這是之前他們談的交換條件 條件就是她要把姐夫從反對清拆小組拉下來
加上她後來的 ...

比较赞同这个
这片子很隐晦,有深度,真的很好看那

黑帮老大那里
没怎么看懂

双方是彼此相爱的,但是又不能再一起,真的有点点小心痛

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发表于 2010-10-24 09:46 | 显示全部楼层
《唐山大地震》入围6项提名 笑傲亚太电影大奖

                               
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韩国电影《诗》的女主角尹政姬与《坡州》女一号瑞雨入围第四届亚太电影大奖最佳女主角候选名单。

  据韩国媒体报道,亚太电影大奖(APSA)主办方10月18日公布了入围该影展所有奖项的大名单,来自15个国家的30部影片榜上有名。其中尹政姬主演的李沧东导演新作《诗》,以及瑞雨主演的朴灿玉导演的《坡州》将争夺影后桂冠。

韩国电影《诗》一共入围了最佳影片奖、最佳剧本奖、最佳女演员奖、最佳导演奖等四个奖项。而《坡州》则将向最佳影片奖、最佳女演员奖两项大奖发起挑战。
终的获奖作品及获奖者名单将于12月2日在澳大利亚的昆士兰州黄金海岸公布。亚太电影大奖是CNN国际新闻网络、联合国教育科学暨文化组织和国际电影制作协会联盟共同举办,以电影的优秀程度和反映当地文化起源为评分标准。

【电影网】 www.m1905.com 独家稿件,转载请注明来源。
...

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发表于 2010-12-17 04:39 | 显示全部楼层

获得亚太电影奖 the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema (NETPAC) award

http://10.asiae.co.kr/Articles/n ... 2010120310352176128

Meanwhile, Director Park Chan-ok of Korean film "Paju" won the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema (NETPAC) award, given to emerging filmmakers in the business and to nurture new and rising talent in within the Asian region.
===============
Director of Korean film "Paju" wins award at film fest in Australia


                               
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Poster of Korean film "Paju" [Myung Film Co. Ltd]

Director Park Chan-ok of film "Paju" has won the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema (NETPAC) at the 4th annual Asia Pacific Screen Awards (APSA).

According to the film's distributor Myung Film on Thursday, "Paju" on Monday received APSA's NETPAC Development Prize, given to emerging filmmakers in the business and to nurture new and rising talent in within the Asian region.

APSA was first established in 2007 as a cultural initiative of the Queensland State Government in Australia. The ceremony brings together cinematic excellence and cultural diversity in the Asia-Pacific region as well the only awards program to broadcast documentary series.

"Paju", which stars Korean actor Lee Sun-kyun and actress Seo Woo, is about a forbidden love between a woman and her late sister's husband.

The romantic drama, which opened in local theaters in October of last year, has won various accolades at other film festivals such as the NETPAC Award at the 14th Pusan International Film Festival, the Special Jury Prize at 13th Deauville Asian Film Festival, as well as competing at the 9th annual Tribeca Film Festival and becoming the first Korean production to open the International Film Festival Rotterdam.

Actor Lee Sun-kyun also won the award for best male actor for his role in "Paju" at Spain's Las Palmas de Gran Canaria International Film Festival held in March.

Director Park Chan-ok debuted in 2002 with the award-winning "Jealousy Is My Middle Name" and "Warm Swamp."



Reporter : Lucia Hong luciahong@
Editor : Jessica Kim jesskim@
<ⓒ10Asia All rights reserved>
发表于 2011-1-11 15:53 | 显示全部楼层
这片儿不错,静下心看看还是有所收获的
坡州雾城  这个小城发生的很多事情都是模糊不清的
恩慕 姐夫两人之间隔了太多东西 爱情也没法实现 更多的是遗憾
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