Disney+ has unveiled Korean spy thriller Tempest for its 2025 slate, and revealed Japanese anime Code Geass Rozé of the Recapture will arrive on the platform on June 21.
Tempest, which will be available exclusively on Disney+ worldwide and on Hulu in the United States. Set in modern-day Korea, it follows Munju, a high-flying diplomat and former ambassador to the U.S., as well as Sanho, an international special agent. Together, they set out to uncover the truth behind an attack that threatens the future stability of the Korean peninsula.
Tempest stars A-listers Gianna Jun (also known as Jun Ji-hyun), who has headlined Kingdom, My Love from the Star and Legend of the Blue Sea, as Seo Munju, and Gang Dongwon as Sanho. Gang also carries an executive producer credit on the show.
Tempest is directed by Kim Heewon, who helmed Queen of Tears, Little Women and Vincenzo. Korea’s...
Tempest, which will be available exclusively on Disney+ worldwide and on Hulu in the United States. Set in modern-day Korea, it follows Munju, a high-flying diplomat and former ambassador to the U.S., as well as Sanho, an international special agent. Together, they set out to uncover the truth behind an attack that threatens the future stability of the Korean peninsula.
Tempest stars A-listers Gianna Jun (also known as Jun Ji-hyun), who has headlined Kingdom, My Love from the Star and Legend of the Blue Sea, as Seo Munju, and Gang Dongwon as Sanho. Gang also carries an executive producer credit on the show.
Tempest is directed by Kim Heewon, who helmed Queen of Tears, Little Women and Vincenzo. Korea’s...
- 5/29/2024
- by Sara Merican
- Deadline Film + TV
Gang Dong-won once again stars in an adaptation of an Asian film, this time Soi Cheang's 2009 work “Accident”, with Lee Yo-sup's second directorial work “The Plot”.
Synopsis
Young-il leads a contract killing group that includes Jackie, Wol-cheon and Jeom-man. His job in the group is that of the designer. He designs murders into perfect accidental deaths, but he gets involved in an unexpected incident and struggles to survive while suspecting everyone around him to find out who is behind the accident after barely surviving.
In addition to Gang Dong-won, who seems to be taking on Louis Koo's role from the original, “The Plot” also stars Lee Mu-saeng, Lee Mi-seok, Lee Hyun-wook, Tang Joon-sang and Lee Dong-hwi, among others. It will be releasing in South Korean theatres on May 29th, 2024.
Synopsis
Young-il leads a contract killing group that includes Jackie, Wol-cheon and Jeom-man. His job in the group is that of the designer. He designs murders into perfect accidental deaths, but he gets involved in an unexpected incident and struggles to survive while suspecting everyone around him to find out who is behind the accident after barely surviving.
In addition to Gang Dong-won, who seems to be taking on Louis Koo's role from the original, “The Plot” also stars Lee Mu-saeng, Lee Mi-seok, Lee Hyun-wook, Tang Joon-sang and Lee Dong-hwi, among others. It will be releasing in South Korean theatres on May 29th, 2024.
- 5/2/2024
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
A scene from the Korean thriller Dr. Cheon And The Lost Talisman. Courtesy of Well Go USA Entertainment
The subtitled Korean export, Dr. Cheon And Lost Tallisman, is an action fantasy that’s long on special effects and short on character development. Dr. Cheon (Gang Dong-Won) is descended from a line of shamans, but uses his roots and secular education to provide fake exorcisms. For a fee, of course. His sidekick in the grift, Beom-choen (Huh Joon-ho), handles the tech simulations of supernatural activity to convince the suckers they’re actually getting the benefits of an occult remedy. Things change radically when a young woman, Yoo-gyeong, (Esom), hires them for their first real demonic possession – her kid sister. Some things happen that aren’t part of their act, opening new possibilities for their vocation.
Gradually we learn bits and pieces of their backstories, while the staged ritual they expected turns...
The subtitled Korean export, Dr. Cheon And Lost Tallisman, is an action fantasy that’s long on special effects and short on character development. Dr. Cheon (Gang Dong-Won) is descended from a line of shamans, but uses his roots and secular education to provide fake exorcisms. For a fee, of course. His sidekick in the grift, Beom-choen (Huh Joon-ho), handles the tech simulations of supernatural activity to convince the suckers they’re actually getting the benefits of an occult remedy. Things change radically when a young woman, Yoo-gyeong, (Esom), hires them for their first real demonic possession – her kid sister. Some things happen that aren’t part of their act, opening new possibilities for their vocation.
Gradually we learn bits and pieces of their backstories, while the staged ritual they expected turns...
- 2/28/2024
- by Mark Glass
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Netflix’s recent spate of international content showcases has continued today with an update on Korea.
Among the key updates for its 2024 Korea slate is Oldboy director Park Chan-wook (Oldboy) releasing his first project with Netflix at the end of this year, titled Uprising.
The film, directed by Sang-man Kim and written by Shin Chul, was previously known as War and Revolt, and is due in Q4. It is billed as a “gripping journey through the lives of two childhood friends turned adversaries.” Gang Dong-won, Park Jeong-min, Cha Seung-won, Kim Shin-rock, Jin Sun-kyu and Jung Sung-ill star. Park will co-write and co-produce.
Elsewhere, Netflix will launch new seasons of Gyeongseong Creature, Hellbound and Sweet Home as well as unscripted shows like Physical: 100 and Single’s Inferno. The second season of mega-hit Squid Game will also premiere, as announced last week.
Korea has become one of the Netflix’s biggest priorities,...
Among the key updates for its 2024 Korea slate is Oldboy director Park Chan-wook (Oldboy) releasing his first project with Netflix at the end of this year, titled Uprising.
The film, directed by Sang-man Kim and written by Shin Chul, was previously known as War and Revolt, and is due in Q4. It is billed as a “gripping journey through the lives of two childhood friends turned adversaries.” Gang Dong-won, Park Jeong-min, Cha Seung-won, Kim Shin-rock, Jin Sun-kyu and Jung Sung-ill star. Park will co-write and co-produce.
Elsewhere, Netflix will launch new seasons of Gyeongseong Creature, Hellbound and Sweet Home as well as unscripted shows like Physical: 100 and Single’s Inferno. The second season of mega-hit Squid Game will also premiere, as announced last week.
Korea has become one of the Netflix’s biggest priorities,...
- 2/6/2024
- by Sara Merican
- Deadline Film + TV
Currently revelling in the success of recently-uploaded Don Lee-starring film “Badland Hunters” and already teasing the second season of “Squid Game,” Netflix has unveiled a major slate of Korean films and series for 2024.
In August last year, Netflix publicly committed to investing $2.5 billion on Korean content over the next four years. That reflected both Netflix’s position as the country’s leading streamer, with an estimated 6.5 million subscribers, and its adopted role as one of the biggest exporters of Korean film and TV content.
“We were able to make this [investment] decision because we have great confidence that the Korean creative industry will continue to tell great stories,” said the streamer’s co-chief Ted Sarandos at the time of the spending commitment.
The Tuesday reveal is a mix of: first-look images and updates for previously announced projects (including the retitled Park Chan-wook-produced film “Uprising” and the second season...
In August last year, Netflix publicly committed to investing $2.5 billion on Korean content over the next four years. That reflected both Netflix’s position as the country’s leading streamer, with an estimated 6.5 million subscribers, and its adopted role as one of the biggest exporters of Korean film and TV content.
“We were able to make this [investment] decision because we have great confidence that the Korean creative industry will continue to tell great stories,” said the streamer’s co-chief Ted Sarandos at the time of the spending commitment.
The Tuesday reveal is a mix of: first-look images and updates for previously announced projects (including the retitled Park Chan-wook-produced film “Uprising” and the second season...
- 2/6/2024
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
Netflix has unveiled a bumper slate of Korean films and series for the year ahead including a historical feature from Park Chan-wook and the return of the streamer’s biggest ever series, Squid Game.
Fresh details on more than 30 titles were revealed as part of Netflix’s ongoing showcase of what is to come in 2024, which has included upcoming slates from the US and Southeast Asia among others over the past week.
Leading the shows from South Korea is season two of Squid Game, the highly-anticipated follow up to the 2021 series that remains the platform’s most popular series of...
Fresh details on more than 30 titles were revealed as part of Netflix’s ongoing showcase of what is to come in 2024, which has included upcoming slates from the US and Southeast Asia among others over the past week.
Leading the shows from South Korea is season two of Squid Game, the highly-anticipated follow up to the 2021 series that remains the platform’s most popular series of...
- 2/6/2024
- ScreenDaily
On the heels of star-making roles in films like “Jeon Woo-chi: The Taoist Wizard” and “Secret Reunion,” Gang Dong-won has been one of the most prominent star actors in South Korean cinema which is the case with his turn in the role of Dr. Cheon in director Kim Seong-sik’s latest effort. Based on Fresh and Kim Hong-tae’s popular webtoon “Possessed” and serving as the opening chapter for its franchise, WellGo USA releases the new genre effort in theaters October 6.
Arriving in a small village, Dr. Cheon (Gang Dong-won) and his technical assistant Inbae (Lee Dong-hwi) are approached by Yoo-kyung (Esom), a young woman asking him to use his fabled Shamanistic powers to help her family. While initially turned off by her serious nature, the monetary payment brings them together to check out the requested case looking at the supposed possession of her younger sister where they live inside their house.
Arriving in a small village, Dr. Cheon (Gang Dong-won) and his technical assistant Inbae (Lee Dong-hwi) are approached by Yoo-kyung (Esom), a young woman asking him to use his fabled Shamanistic powers to help her family. While initially turned off by her serious nature, the monetary payment brings them together to check out the requested case looking at the supposed possession of her younger sister where they live inside their house.
- 10/9/2023
- by Don Anelli
- AsianMoviePulse
Following the announcement of the London Korean Film Festival’s (Lkff) upcoming 18th edition which gives special commemoration to the 40th Anniversary of the Korean Academy of Film Arts (Kafa), the festival is delighted to reveal its 2023 programme. At the BFI Southbank, the London Korean Film Festival will host the Opening and Closing ceremonies in celebration of the 140th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the UK and Korea.
The Festival runs from 2 November – 16 November 2023 with a programme of 40 films comprising the following strands: Cinema Now, Special Focus : 40th Anniversary of Kafa, Women’s Voices, Special Screenings and Korea Season.
A Normal Family by Hur Jin-ho will open the festival on the 2nd November at BFI Southbank with the director in attendance. The story is based on the celebrated Dutch novel Het Diner (The Dinner) by Herman Koch, which has sold over a million copies. The latest...
The Festival runs from 2 November – 16 November 2023 with a programme of 40 films comprising the following strands: Cinema Now, Special Focus : 40th Anniversary of Kafa, Women’s Voices, Special Screenings and Korea Season.
A Normal Family by Hur Jin-ho will open the festival on the 2nd November at BFI Southbank with the director in attendance. The story is based on the celebrated Dutch novel Het Diner (The Dinner) by Herman Koch, which has sold over a million copies. The latest...
- 10/6/2023
- by Adriana Rosati
- AsianMoviePulse
What do you do if you’ve been raised in a long, esteemed tradition of shamanism but, having watched your beloved grandfather perish in the line of work, you don’t want anybody to know that? Become a fake shaman, of course. Many of the skills required are the same. You’ll need to be well versed in magical lore, observant about the environment surrounding you, and good at figuring out what’s going on inside other people’s heads. Dr. Cheon (Gang Dong-won) even has a psychology degree. He justifies his lucrative scams, carried out with the help of technician-come-comedy-sidekick In-bae (Lee Dong-hwi), by noting that he is setting people’s minds at ease and resolving tensions within families. But he and In-bae are about to encounter a client whose situation necessitates rather more drastic action.
A supernaturally themed thriller which also delivers a healthy supply of laughs, this...
A supernaturally themed thriller which also delivers a healthy supply of laughs, this...
- 10/4/2023
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
"Things like these can't be destroyed by ordinary means." Cj Entertainment in Korea has debuted two new official trailers for a horror comedy action thriller called Dr. Cheon and Lost Talisman, also known as Dr. Cheon's Exorcism Lab: The Secret of Seolgyeong. The film is a supernatural satire based on a webcomic known as "Possession" originally published in 2014. It tells the story of Dr. Cheon, a fake exorcist who can't hear or see ghosts but solves all types of cases with his ghostly insight. He receives a contract for a powerful possession case that turns out to be a real encounter with a malevolent spirit. This isn't just a supernatural flick, there's tons of action and comedy as well. The film stars Gang Dong-won as Dr. Cheon, with Huh Joon-ho, Esom, Lee Dong-hwi, Kim Jong-soo, and Park Soi. This looks like it leans heavily on VFX, akin to something like...
- 9/17/2023
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
"A 'fake' exorcist who doesn't believe in spirits... encounters a real event – that will shake his world!" Cj Entertainment in Korea has unveiled a first look teaser trailer for a new horror comedy thriller titled Dr. Cheon and Lost Talisman, also known as Dr. Cheon's Exorcism Lab: The Secret of Seolgyeong. The film is a supernatural satire based on a webcomic known as "Possession" originally published in 2014. It tells the story of Dr. Cheon, a fake exorcist who can't hear or see ghosts but solves all types of cases with his ghostly insight. He receives a contract for a powerful possession case he's never seen before. Cj introduces it as: "A fake exorcist who doesn't believe in ghosts and a client who can see ghosts! The case is about to unfold..." The film stars Gang Dong-won as Dr. Cheon, with Huh Joon-ho, Esom, Lee Dong-hwi, Kim Jong-soo, and Park Soi.
- 9/11/2023
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
The Netflix co-ceo also met with director Park Chan-wook in Seoul
Netflix co-ceo Ted Sarandos is in Seoul to tout the streaming giant’s $2.5bn investment in South Korea, meet with production partners like Park Chan-wook and expound on economic ripple effects.
At an event attended by production partners and press at Seoul’s Four Seasons Hotel today (June 22), the streaming giant executive said: “Over the next four years, we will invest $2.5bn in Korea. That’s roughly twice as much as we’ve invested since we first launched our service here in 2016. And it includes funding for training programs...
Netflix co-ceo Ted Sarandos is in Seoul to tout the streaming giant’s $2.5bn investment in South Korea, meet with production partners like Park Chan-wook and expound on economic ripple effects.
At an event attended by production partners and press at Seoul’s Four Seasons Hotel today (June 22), the streaming giant executive said: “Over the next four years, we will invest $2.5bn in Korea. That’s roughly twice as much as we’ve invested since we first launched our service here in 2016. And it includes funding for training programs...
- 6/22/2023
- by Jean Noh
- ScreenDaily
During a three-day visit to Seoul, Netflix co-ceo Ted Sarandos said the streamer is fairly compensating producers and nurturing new talent, after calls from some local lawmakers and industry figures for more profit-sharing with creators.
Sarandos said emerging writers and directors are getting more breaks as a result of its investment, while global breakout shows like Squid Game had created thousands of jobs. “Between 2022 and 2025 for example, one in five of our titles made for Netflix will come from a first-time writer or first-time director,” he told a press conference in Seoul on Thursday (June 22).
South Korea has produced some of Netflix’s biggest global shows – including Squid Game, The Glory and Extraordinary Attorney Woo – and the streamer announced a $2.5Bn investment in Korean content in April.
However, local lawmakers have been voicing concerns about Netflix’s growing dominance in the local entertainment industry. In the wake of Squid Game’s success,...
Sarandos said emerging writers and directors are getting more breaks as a result of its investment, while global breakout shows like Squid Game had created thousands of jobs. “Between 2022 and 2025 for example, one in five of our titles made for Netflix will come from a first-time writer or first-time director,” he told a press conference in Seoul on Thursday (June 22).
South Korea has produced some of Netflix’s biggest global shows – including Squid Game, The Glory and Extraordinary Attorney Woo – and the streamer announced a $2.5Bn investment in Korean content in April.
However, local lawmakers have been voicing concerns about Netflix’s growing dominance in the local entertainment industry. In the wake of Squid Game’s success,...
- 6/22/2023
- by Liz Shackleton
- Deadline Film + TV
Picturehouse Entertainment are excited to announce the release of Broker on Digital on 22nd May and on Blu-ray Special Edition & DVD 5th June and to celebrate we have 3 Special Edition Blu-rays to give away!
On a rainy night in Busan, So-young (Lee ‘Iu’ Ji-eun) leaves her baby Woo-sung outside a ‘baby box’, a safe place set up in Korean churches for new mothers to leave unwanted infants. Instead, he’s picked up by Sang-hyun (Parasite’s Song Kang-ho) who runs an unofficial adoption brokerage and plans to find him a new home. So-young tracks down both Sang-hyun and his business partner Dong-soo (Gang Dong-won) and decides to join their pursuit (alongside a seven-year-old
stowaway from a nearby orphanage), but as they search for Woo-sung’s new family, the unlikely group evolves into something of a family themselves – unaware they’re being tailed by two detectives who are determined to stop them.
On a rainy night in Busan, So-young (Lee ‘Iu’ Ji-eun) leaves her baby Woo-sung outside a ‘baby box’, a safe place set up in Korean churches for new mothers to leave unwanted infants. Instead, he’s picked up by Sang-hyun (Parasite’s Song Kang-ho) who runs an unofficial adoption brokerage and plans to find him a new home. So-young tracks down both Sang-hyun and his business partner Dong-soo (Gang Dong-won) and decides to join their pursuit (alongside a seven-year-old
stowaway from a nearby orphanage), but as they search for Woo-sung’s new family, the unlikely group evolves into something of a family themselves – unaware they’re being tailed by two detectives who are determined to stop them.
- 6/14/2023
- by Competitions
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Park Chan-wook, the Korean filmmaker behind “Oldboy” and last year’s “Decision to Leave,” has joined as producer and co-writer of historical drama film “War and Revolt.” The film is Park’s first collaboration with Netflix, the global streaming platform that is market leader in Korea and which has been instrumental in the global success of Korean contemporary culture.
“War and Revolt” tells the story of two childhood friends, portrayed by Gang Dong-won and Park Jeong-min, who become adversaries. It is directed by Kim Sang-man (“Midnight F.M.”) from a script by Shin Chul and Park Chan-wook.
Production is by Moho Film, the powerhouse indie behind Park’s “Decision to Leave,” “The Handmaiden” and the 2013 Bong Joon Ho-directed “Snowpiercer” film, in collaboration with Semicolon Studio.
Gang takes center stage as the enigmatic Cheon-young, a character whose remarkable martial prowess defies his humble origins as a slave. Struggling to break free from the chains of servitude,...
“War and Revolt” tells the story of two childhood friends, portrayed by Gang Dong-won and Park Jeong-min, who become adversaries. It is directed by Kim Sang-man (“Midnight F.M.”) from a script by Shin Chul and Park Chan-wook.
Production is by Moho Film, the powerhouse indie behind Park’s “Decision to Leave,” “The Handmaiden” and the 2013 Bong Joon Ho-directed “Snowpiercer” film, in collaboration with Semicolon Studio.
Gang takes center stage as the enigmatic Cheon-young, a character whose remarkable martial prowess defies his humble origins as a slave. Struggling to break free from the chains of servitude,...
- 6/7/2023
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
The director of ‘Oldboy’ and ‘Decision To Leave’ will also co-write the period feature.
South Korean auteur Park Chan-wook is to produce and co-write period thriller War And Revolt, marking his first collaboration with streaming giant Netflix.
The director of Oldboy and last year’s Cannes award-winner Decision To Leave has co-written the script with Shin Chul.
Set more than 400 years ago during Korea’s Joseon dynasty, the film will be directed by Kim Sang-man, known for 2010 action-thriller Midnight FM.
It will be produced by Park’s own Moho Film – the Seoul-based production company behind Decision to Leave, The Handmaiden...
South Korean auteur Park Chan-wook is to produce and co-write period thriller War And Revolt, marking his first collaboration with streaming giant Netflix.
The director of Oldboy and last year’s Cannes award-winner Decision To Leave has co-written the script with Shin Chul.
Set more than 400 years ago during Korea’s Joseon dynasty, the film will be directed by Kim Sang-man, known for 2010 action-thriller Midnight FM.
It will be produced by Park’s own Moho Film – the Seoul-based production company behind Decision to Leave, The Handmaiden...
- 6/7/2023
- by Michael Rosser
- ScreenDaily
Acclaimed South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook has set up his first project with Netflix. The director of Old Boy and last year’s stunning romantic noir Decision to Leave will co-write and produce the period thriller War and Revolt, set during Korea’s Joseon dynasty.
The film will be directed by Kim Sang-man, known for his well-received 2010 action thriller Midnight FM. Kim also is an accomplished art director, having done production work on Park’s landmark action drama Joint Security Area (2000) and I’m a Cyborg, But That’s Ok (2006).
War and Revolt is described as being set against the chaos of war, taking viewers on a gripping journey through the lives of two childhood friends turned adversaries.
A-list Korean actor Gang Dong-won (Broker, Peninsula) co-stars as the enigmatic Cheon-young, a character whose remarkable martial prowess defies his humble origins as a slave. Opposite Gang, Park Jeong-min (Deliver Us from Evil,...
The film will be directed by Kim Sang-man, known for his well-received 2010 action thriller Midnight FM. Kim also is an accomplished art director, having done production work on Park’s landmark action drama Joint Security Area (2000) and I’m a Cyborg, But That’s Ok (2006).
War and Revolt is described as being set against the chaos of war, taking viewers on a gripping journey through the lives of two childhood friends turned adversaries.
A-list Korean actor Gang Dong-won (Broker, Peninsula) co-stars as the enigmatic Cheon-young, a character whose remarkable martial prowess defies his humble origins as a slave. Opposite Gang, Park Jeong-min (Deliver Us from Evil,...
- 6/7/2023
- by Patrick Brzeski
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Song Kang-ho is easily one of the most globally recognized Korean actors working today. His lead role in the Academy Award-winning 2019 film "Parasite" earned him international acclaim, but I have been a fan of his for years. He often plays likable characters that make questionable choices, as he did in Bong Joon-ho's earlier films, "Memories of Murder" and "The Host." And thankfully, he also steals the show in Hirokazu Kore-eda's newest film, "Broker."
His character, Sang-hyun, runs a dry-cleaning service by day and brokers illegal adoptions for abandoned children by night. Being a broker earns him and his partner, Dong-soo (Gang Dong-won), a small fee. At the same time, the pair try to make sure the babies end up in good homes and provide them with a better life than they would have in an orphanage. Sang-hyun also struggles with parenting his own daughter, who lives with her mother.
His character, Sang-hyun, runs a dry-cleaning service by day and brokers illegal adoptions for abandoned children by night. Being a broker earns him and his partner, Dong-soo (Gang Dong-won), a small fee. At the same time, the pair try to make sure the babies end up in good homes and provide them with a better life than they would have in an orphanage. Sang-hyun also struggles with parenting his own daughter, who lives with her mother.
- 12/28/2022
- by Shae Sennett
- Slash Film
This review originally ran May 26, 2022, in conjunction with the film’s world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival.
The Palme d’Or can be a blessing and curse, a gold-plated sword of Damocles hanging over the heads of filmmakers lucky enough to claim it. After the first waves of shock and joy recede, and their subsequent year-long victory lap reaches the finish line, those same filmmakers are left alone with one troubling thought: What’s next?
Director Hirokazu Kore-eda offers a fine case study in how that question might trip someone up. In so many ways, his win for 2018’s “Shoplifters” showed the system working as intended. Kore-eda had been to Cannes many times before; he directed a mature work that built on and streamlined earlier themes; he led viewers on a twisty road that led to a strong emotional payoff. He earned it.
If the coronation opened new doors for the Japanese director,...
The Palme d’Or can be a blessing and curse, a gold-plated sword of Damocles hanging over the heads of filmmakers lucky enough to claim it. After the first waves of shock and joy recede, and their subsequent year-long victory lap reaches the finish line, those same filmmakers are left alone with one troubling thought: What’s next?
Director Hirokazu Kore-eda offers a fine case study in how that question might trip someone up. In so many ways, his win for 2018’s “Shoplifters” showed the system working as intended. Kore-eda had been to Cannes many times before; he directed a mature work that built on and streamlined earlier themes; he led viewers on a twisty road that led to a strong emotional payoff. He earned it.
If the coronation opened new doors for the Japanese director,...
- 12/27/2022
- by Ben Croll
- The Wrap
Director Hirokazu Kore-eda earned an Oscar nomination with his 2018 family drama, "Shoplifters." His film pulled heartstrings organically, subtly, and unforgettably. The director's humor resonated with audiences around the world, and his earlier films also manage to feel both meditative and packed to the brim at once. So when I heard Kore-eda was making a road film with some incredible South Korean actors, including Song Kang-Ho of "Parasite" and Bae Doona of "The Host," I was overjoyed.
"Broker" stars the K-pop idol Iu (real name: Lee Ji-eun) as a young woman who leaves her baby in front of a baby box. The baby is then abducted by two men, portrayed by Song Kang-ho and Dong-won Gang, who plan to illegally facilitate an adoption. The mother comes back for her child and encounters the baby brokers, and, wanting to make sure her baby has a better life than she did, she decides...
"Broker" stars the K-pop idol Iu (real name: Lee Ji-eun) as a young woman who leaves her baby in front of a baby box. The baby is then abducted by two men, portrayed by Song Kang-ho and Dong-won Gang, who plan to illegally facilitate an adoption. The mother comes back for her child and encounters the baby brokers, and, wanting to make sure her baby has a better life than she did, she decides...
- 12/27/2022
- by Shae Sennett
- Slash Film
Among the most difficult tasks a film could possibly tackle, surely “making the audience fall in love with the people who sell babies for cash” would have to be somewhere near the top of the list. It’s easy to feel the ice dripping down the audience’s collective back throughout the early minutes of South Korean film Broker, determined in our collective judgment against these guys. Even as the characters get in the odd joke, Japanese writer-director-editor Hirokazu Kore-eda’s script never lets us forget who and what these people are.
But Kore-eda is a sorcerer of human emotion. Through tender, attentive observation and a fair dose of sentimentality, Broker’s protagonists become the bedrock of a strange little family, an odd band of misfits we root for, even as a sense of dread tugs at the heart. A forlorn story injected with so much love and far more comedy than one might expect,...
But Kore-eda is a sorcerer of human emotion. Through tender, attentive observation and a fair dose of sentimentality, Broker’s protagonists become the bedrock of a strange little family, an odd band of misfits we root for, even as a sense of dread tugs at the heart. A forlorn story injected with so much love and far more comedy than one might expect,...
- 12/26/2022
- by David Crow
- Den of Geek
Broker Review — Broker (2022) Film Review, a movie written and directed by Hirokazu Koreeda and starring Song Kang-ho, Dong-won Gang, Bae Doona, Ji-eun Lee, Lee Joo-young, Im Seung-soo, Park Hae-joon, Ryu Kyung-Soo, Dong-hwi Lee, Lee Moo-saeng, Ji-yong Park, Sae-byeok Song and Kim Sun-young. Broker, directed by Hirokazu Koreeda, asks a lot of hard questions [...]
Continue reading: Film Review: Broker (2022): Hirokazu Koreeda’s Moving Film Skillfully Shows Audiences the Complexities of its Intriguing Premise...
Continue reading: Film Review: Broker (2022): Hirokazu Koreeda’s Moving Film Skillfully Shows Audiences the Complexities of its Intriguing Premise...
- 12/18/2022
- by Thomas Duffy
- Film-Book
Broker Trailer — Hirokazu Kore-eda‘s Broker / Beurokeo (2022) US movie trailer has been released by Neon. The Broker trailer stars Song Kang-Ho, Gang Dong-Won, Bae Doona, Iu, and Lee Joo-Young. Crew Hirokazu Kore-eda wrote the screenplay for Broker. Plot Synopsis Broker‘s plot synopsis: “A baby box is a small space, where parents can leave behind their babies [...]
Continue reading: Broker (2022) US Movie Trailer: Song Kang Ho Finds & Places Abandoned Babies with Families...
Continue reading: Broker (2022) US Movie Trailer: Song Kang Ho Finds & Places Abandoned Babies with Families...
- 12/3/2022
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
Neon has released the trailer for "Broker," a film from Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda who won the Palme d'Or for "Shoplifters," making his Korean language debut. "Broker" is the story of Sang-hyun (Song Kang-Ho) who runs a laundry, but moonlights on the side with Dong-soo (Gang Dong-Won) who works at a "baby box" facility where young women drop off unwanted children. Together, they sell these babies to childless couples. One young mother, So-young (Lee Ji-eun) returns to check on the baby she left, and they all set off on a journey to them a good home.
"Broker" was a 2022 official selection for the Cannes Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, and the Toronto International Film Festival. Kore-eda, who wrote and directed the film, came up with the idea after hearing about children who were left in such boxes and created a story around the brokers and the connection between mothers and children,...
"Broker" was a 2022 official selection for the Cannes Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, and the Toronto International Film Festival. Kore-eda, who wrote and directed the film, came up with the idea after hearing about children who were left in such boxes and created a story around the brokers and the connection between mothers and children,...
- 12/2/2022
- by Jenna Busch
- Slash Film
"Let's never forget today." Neon in the US has revealed their own official US trailer for the film Broker, the latest film from acclaimed Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda. This premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, then it later screened at the Telluride, Toronto, San Sebastian, Vancouver, and Zurich Film Festivals. This is the first time Kore-eda has made a film in Korea in the Korean language, and it has many connections to Parasite - the film stars Song Kang-Ho (!!) and was shot by cinematographer Kyung-pyo Hong. The film is about a group of Koreans who collect babies left inside of Baby Boxes, and then (illegally) find adoptees for them since the official adoption program is so complex and annoying. The cast features Song Kang-Ho with Gang Dong-Won, Bae Doona, Iu, and Lee Joo-Young. Broker won the Best Actor prize in Cannes for Song Kang-Ho, who deserves every single award on...
- 12/1/2022
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Exclusive: Gang Dong-Won, the South Korean actor whose credits include the Train to Busan sequel Peninsula and most recently the Hirokazu Kore-eda-directed Broker, which premiered in competition at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, has signed with Range Media Partners.
He continues to be repped by CAA.
Related Story Range Media Partners Signs Emmy-Nominated 'Blade' Scribe Stacy Osei-Kuffour Related Story Danny Treibatch Joins Range Media Partners Digital Department As A Partner Related Story Range Media Partners Hires Thomas Daley As Co-President Of International Division
In Kore-eda’s first Korean-language film, Gang plays one of a pair of men who scheme to sell abandoned babies to new families. Things escalate when ahead of their latest attempt, the abandon child’s mother opts to join them on their excursion.
Deadline’s Todd McCarthy...
He continues to be repped by CAA.
Related Story Range Media Partners Signs Emmy-Nominated 'Blade' Scribe Stacy Osei-Kuffour Related Story Danny Treibatch Joins Range Media Partners Digital Department As A Partner Related Story Range Media Partners Hires Thomas Daley As Co-President Of International Division
In Kore-eda’s first Korean-language film, Gang plays one of a pair of men who scheme to sell abandoned babies to new families. Things escalate when ahead of their latest attempt, the abandon child’s mother opts to join them on their excursion.
Deadline’s Todd McCarthy...
- 10/7/2022
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Click here to read the full article.
Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda is famous for his films’ small details, vivid characters and delicate but relatable stories. With Broker, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, he decided to both stick to his strengths and make a change. It is the director’s first Korean-language movie, but it tells another Kore-eda story about social outcasts who come together to form a makeshift family. Broker began years ago; Kore-eda developed the idea for the story at the same time he was writing Shoplifters, which later won Cannes’ Palme d’Or in 2018. He quickly assembled a star-studded cast of Korean actors — Sang Kang-ho, Gang Dong‑won, Bae Doona and Iu — and continued from there.
Last week, Kore-eda, who has just started developing his next project in Japan, attended the Venice Film Festival to receive Ente dello Spettacolo’s Besson Prize, ahead of Broker’s Italy release on Oct.
Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda is famous for his films’ small details, vivid characters and delicate but relatable stories. With Broker, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, he decided to both stick to his strengths and make a change. It is the director’s first Korean-language movie, but it tells another Kore-eda story about social outcasts who come together to form a makeshift family. Broker began years ago; Kore-eda developed the idea for the story at the same time he was writing Shoplifters, which later won Cannes’ Palme d’Or in 2018. He quickly assembled a star-studded cast of Korean actors — Sang Kang-ho, Gang Dong‑won, Bae Doona and Iu — and continued from there.
Last week, Kore-eda, who has just started developing his next project in Japan, attended the Venice Film Festival to receive Ente dello Spettacolo’s Besson Prize, ahead of Broker’s Italy release on Oct.
- 9/13/2022
- by Gianmaria Tammaro
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Zurich Film Festival has unveiled the first seven titles from its Gala Premieres section, a showcase of some of the year’s hottest auteur films. The films include the star-studded drama “The Banshees of Inisherin” by Oscar-winning director Martin McDonagh, the European premiere of the German film adaptation “All Quiet on the Western Front,” directed by Edward Berger, and the world premieres of Sönke Wortmann’s “Der Nachname” and “Die Goldenen Jahre” by Barbara Kulcsar.
Artistic director Christian Jungen said: “In recent years, the Zurich Film Festival has established itself as a springboard into the awards season. Of the last 10 winners of the Oscar for Best Film, six screened at the festival. This year, we will again present international auteur films that will later play a role in the Oscar race to the more than 120,000 visitors and the 600 accredited media.”
The complete program of the festival will be published on Sept.
Artistic director Christian Jungen said: “In recent years, the Zurich Film Festival has established itself as a springboard into the awards season. Of the last 10 winners of the Oscar for Best Film, six screened at the festival. This year, we will again present international auteur films that will later play a role in the Oscar race to the more than 120,000 visitors and the 600 accredited media.”
The complete program of the festival will be published on Sept.
- 8/11/2022
- by Leo Barraclough
- Variety Film + TV
“Broker,” the unconventional family drama which appeared in competition at last month’s Cannes Film Festival, topped the box office in South Korea on Wednesday, its opening day.
“Broker” grossed 1.10 million, enough to depose crime actioner “The Roundup” from the top spot that it had enjoyed for the past three weeks and which had made it the highest performing film this year.
According to data from the Kobis tracking service operated by the Korean Film Council, “Broker” played on 1,590 screens and sold 145,000 tickets for Wednesday screenings. Its cumulative total of 1.15 million includes some 44,000 of previews earned on 14 screens.
The feat by a local art-house film gives further support to the notion that cinema attendance is rebounding in Korea. The country was formerly the world’s fourth biggest theatrical market, thanks to high per-capita rates of attendance.
The Korean theatrical industry, however, was moribund through much of 2020 and 2021 due to Covid restrictions,...
“Broker” grossed 1.10 million, enough to depose crime actioner “The Roundup” from the top spot that it had enjoyed for the past three weeks and which had made it the highest performing film this year.
According to data from the Kobis tracking service operated by the Korean Film Council, “Broker” played on 1,590 screens and sold 145,000 tickets for Wednesday screenings. Its cumulative total of 1.15 million includes some 44,000 of previews earned on 14 screens.
The feat by a local art-house film gives further support to the notion that cinema attendance is rebounding in Korea. The country was formerly the world’s fourth biggest theatrical market, thanks to high per-capita rates of attendance.
The Korean theatrical industry, however, was moribund through much of 2020 and 2021 due to Covid restrictions,...
- 6/8/2022
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
Hirokazu Kore-eda is one of the great contemporary masters of filmmaking. Works such as Shoplifters, which won the Palme d’Or in Cannes in 2018, and Like Father, Like Son, which garnered the Jury Prize in 2013, are evidence of his mastery. So there was a lot of excitement at the prospect of seeing his latest film in Cannes. Sadly, Broker not only does not live up to our expectations, but it also positively shatters them. Perhaps the reason for this disappointment can be found in the film’s language: set in South Korea and in Korean, this is the Japanese director’s second foray into foreign-language film, following his substandard The Truth. Maybe Kore-eda simply doesn’t travel well.
Broker is a tale about abandoned babies, baby trafficking, adoption and families. A common theme Kore-eda returns to is the subject of what family really means. As Shoplifters so brilliantly showed, sometimes...
Broker is a tale about abandoned babies, baby trafficking, adoption and families. A common theme Kore-eda returns to is the subject of what family really means. As Shoplifters so brilliantly showed, sometimes...
- 5/28/2022
- by Jo-Ann Titmarsh
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
*full disclosure: a Blu-ray screener of this film was provided by Well Go USA. Director: Sang-ho Yeon. Writers: Sang-ho Yeon and Ryu Yong-jae. Train to Busan Presents: Peninsula or the simpler Peninsula takes place four years after a viral pandemic. Shot in Incheon, South Korea, this third film in the series is set squarely in the action genre. As a rag-tag group of mercenaries try to retrieve some U.S. cash, gangsters roam the car strewn city streets. Very much a comic styled actioner, Peninsula also wears its influences on its sleeves, with nods to films like: I Am Legend (2007), Fury Road (2015), Land of the Dead (2005) and others. There is even a moral message here of redemption, with protagonist Jung Seok (Dong-Won Gang) given a second chance. And, Peninsula is as it should be - very entertaining! The comic book style of the film can be seen in its: lighting,...
- 11/16/2020
- by noreply@blogger.com (Unknown)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
Stars: Dong-Won Gang, Jung-hyun Lee, Re Lee, Hae-hyo Kwon, Min-Jae Kim, Gyo-hwan Koo, Do-Yoon Kim, Ye-Won Lee | Written by Sang-ho Yeon, Ryu Yong-jae | Directed by Sang-ho Yeon
When Train to Busan arrived on the movie scene it was just what the zombie sub genre needed. A focus on a father protecting his daughter from an onslaught of zombies on a train brought heart and was instantly loved by many horror fans. With Peninsula, can lightening strike twice? The answer is… it depends on what you are wanting from the movie!
Four years after the zombie outbreak, a small group of Koreans return to their homeland to track down a truck containing 20 million US dollars. When things inevitably go wrong, Jung Seok (Dong-Won Gang) finds a chance to right a wrong from his past.
If you go into Train to Busan Presents: Peninsula expecting more of the same from the previous film,...
When Train to Busan arrived on the movie scene it was just what the zombie sub genre needed. A focus on a father protecting his daughter from an onslaught of zombies on a train brought heart and was instantly loved by many horror fans. With Peninsula, can lightening strike twice? The answer is… it depends on what you are wanting from the movie!
Four years after the zombie outbreak, a small group of Koreans return to their homeland to track down a truck containing 20 million US dollars. When things inevitably go wrong, Jung Seok (Dong-Won Gang) finds a chance to right a wrong from his past.
If you go into Train to Busan Presents: Peninsula expecting more of the same from the previous film,...
- 10/28/2020
- by Paul Metcalf
- Nerdly
Peninsula is a follow-up to the 2016 film Train to Busan. This latest title also follows the animated film Seoul Station. This sequel takes place in South Korea, again. Now, the entire country has turned into something toxic. The soldier Jung-seok is tasked with finding survivors. But, the landscape is filled with millions of the dying or undead. With a small cast, Peninsula stars: Dong-won Gang and Jung-hyun Yeon. To be distributed in the U.S. by Well Go USA, there is no specific release date as of now. The film's first trailer is a good one. The clip shows soldiers confronting deserted city streets, until shadows begin to move under the rubble. Now, these survivors will have to get mobile, if they hope to outlast the undead. The film's first trailer is action packed, hosting lots of gory scenarios. Only a couple of release dates have been announced. Peninsula will release in France,...
- 4/2/2020
- by noreply@blogger.com (Unknown)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
One of the films IndieWire was most anticipating for the 2020 Cannes Film Festival before its postponement was “Peninsula,” Yeon Sang-ho’s sequel to his 2016 zombie blockbuster “Train to Busan.” The South Korean filmmaker told Screen Daily this week his sequel is a bigger budgeted and more ambitious look at the zombie world he first created in the original film, which dazzled the worldwide box office with $92 million. “The scale of ‘Peninsula’ can’t compare to ‘Train To Busan,’ it makes it look like an independent film,” Yeon said. “’Train To Busan’ was a high-concept film shot in narrow spaces whereas ‘Peninsula’ has a much wider scope of movement.”
“Peninsula” stars Gang Dong-won as a former soldier who has managed to escape zombie-infested South Korea. The soldier is sent on a mission back into Korea to retrieve something valuable, but his return trip is complicated after he meets non-infected survivors who need saving.
“Peninsula” stars Gang Dong-won as a former soldier who has managed to escape zombie-infested South Korea. The soldier is sent on a mission back into Korea to retrieve something valuable, but his return trip is complicated after he meets non-infected survivors who need saving.
- 3/24/2020
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Illang: The Wolf Brigade
Stars: Woo-sung Jung, Dong-won Gang, Hyo-Joo Han, Ye-ri Han, Minho Choi, Jun-ho Heo, Jin-ho Choi, Moo Yul Kim, Eun-soo Shin, Chul-Hyung Im, Hong-In | Written by Kim Jee-Woon, Jun Chul-Hong, Lee Ji-Min | Directed by Kim Jee-Woon
In the year 2029, South and North Korea agree to set up a unified government. They have prepared for the unification for the past 5 years. Meanwhile, demonstrators, supporting and opposing the unification, become more fierce. A terror organization known as Sect” appears. They are against unification. A special police force is formed in response, while a powerful government intelligence agency is also against unification.
Illang: The Wolf Brigade, directed by Kim Jee-woon and based on the 1999 anime Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade which was directed by Hiroyuki Okiura and written by Mamoru Oshii, has so much potential at its fingertips but loses it all in a meandering tale of social malevolence and melodrama...
Stars: Woo-sung Jung, Dong-won Gang, Hyo-Joo Han, Ye-ri Han, Minho Choi, Jun-ho Heo, Jin-ho Choi, Moo Yul Kim, Eun-soo Shin, Chul-Hyung Im, Hong-In | Written by Kim Jee-Woon, Jun Chul-Hong, Lee Ji-Min | Directed by Kim Jee-Woon
In the year 2029, South and North Korea agree to set up a unified government. They have prepared for the unification for the past 5 years. Meanwhile, demonstrators, supporting and opposing the unification, become more fierce. A terror organization known as Sect” appears. They are against unification. A special police force is formed in response, while a powerful government intelligence agency is also against unification.
Illang: The Wolf Brigade, directed by Kim Jee-woon and based on the 1999 anime Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade which was directed by Hiroyuki Okiura and written by Mamoru Oshii, has so much potential at its fingertips but loses it all in a meandering tale of social malevolence and melodrama...
- 8/2/2019
- by Jak-Luke Sharp
- Nerdly
Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade International Trailer Jee-woon Kim‘s Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade / In-rang: The Wolf Brigade (2018) international movie trailer stars Woo-sung Jung, Hyo-Joo Han, Dong-won Gang, Ye-ri Han, and Jun-ho Heo. Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade: The Wolf Brigade‘s plot synopsis: “Taking place sometime in the future, In-rang follows the story of the special police [...]
Continue reading: Jin-roh: The Wolf Brigade (2018) International Movie Trailer: North & South Korea Form a Joint Police Force...
Continue reading: Jin-roh: The Wolf Brigade (2018) International Movie Trailer: North & South Korea Form a Joint Police Force...
- 7/2/2018
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
Haunters aka Choneung Ryukja
Directed and Written by Min-suk Kim
South Korea, 2010
Fantasia imdb
The best superhero movie this year is not Captain America or Thor or Green Lantern or X-Men: First Class; it features no costumes, no secret origins and amazingly, no exposition.
The obvious comparison for this film is M. Night Shyamalan’s Unbreakable, but where that film ends Haunters begins, skipping the traditional secret origin and in fact any explanations for the super-powers on display.
Cho-In (Dong-won Kang) is your Mr. Glass analogue. Like Elijah Price he is crippled, but with a prosthetic leg instead of Osteogenesis Imperfecta. He has the strange ability to mentally control anyone that he can see. We get a very cursory introduction to Cho-In as a young boy, not to explain how he got his powers, but to show us his incredibly screwed up childhood: when Cho-In used his powers to save...
Directed and Written by Min-suk Kim
South Korea, 2010
Fantasia imdb
The best superhero movie this year is not Captain America or Thor or Green Lantern or X-Men: First Class; it features no costumes, no secret origins and amazingly, no exposition.
The obvious comparison for this film is M. Night Shyamalan’s Unbreakable, but where that film ends Haunters begins, skipping the traditional secret origin and in fact any explanations for the super-powers on display.
Cho-In (Dong-won Kang) is your Mr. Glass analogue. Like Elijah Price he is crippled, but with a prosthetic leg instead of Osteogenesis Imperfecta. He has the strange ability to mentally control anyone that he can see. We get a very cursory introduction to Cho-In as a young boy, not to explain how he got his powers, but to show us his incredibly screwed up childhood: when Cho-In used his powers to save...
- 8/6/2011
- by Michael Ryan
- SoundOnSight
Writer/director Min-suk Kim’s Haunters is a South Korean flick currently featured at the New York Asian Film Festival. The original Korean title of the film, Psychic, makes much more sense than what it eventually settled with, as Haunters really doesn’t have much to do with the plot line. Kim’s previous 2008 screenplay for The Good, The Bad, The Weird was pretty strong, but the same scope of work doesn’t shine through on Haunters.
After an abusive childhood of being imprisoned and blindfolded, Cho-in (Dong-won Kang) has to rely on a wooden prosthetic leg. Along with being physically abused, both his parents attempted to kill him. But Cho-in was born with an amazing supernatural gift. He can use mind control on anyone within his line of sight. After freeing himself from the binds of his parents, he survives the streets by using his powers of persuasion to...
After an abusive childhood of being imprisoned and blindfolded, Cho-in (Dong-won Kang) has to rely on a wooden prosthetic leg. Along with being physically abused, both his parents attempted to kill him. But Cho-in was born with an amazing supernatural gift. He can use mind control on anyone within his line of sight. After freeing himself from the binds of his parents, he survives the streets by using his powers of persuasion to...
- 7/16/2011
- by Joshua Blackburn
- The Film Stage
To summarise the plot of Woochi: The Demon Slayer in anything approaching a succinct style is incredibly difficult. At just over two hours, and a little flabby at that, Woochi manages to contain enough plot for a number of blockbuster fantasy action adventures rather than just one. Beginning far, far in the past the film sets up the central character of Jeon Woo-chi (Dong-won Kang), an arrogant and mischievous wizard, and a number of auxiliary characters before flying forwards in time to a point where a number of them are still alive whilst a couple have been transported via magical paintings. That’s just scratching the surface though as there are also the villainous animal demons/goblins, an ultimately villainous character (who shall not be revealed here), three wizards in religious ‘disguise’, a dog-in-human skin sidekick, an intertemporal love interest, a film within the film and so, so much more.
- 4/26/2011
- by Craig Skinner
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Synopsis
Ji-won Song (Dong-won Kang) is a North Korean resident spy, is contacted by an agent “Shadow” and begins a mission to assassinate a traitor. Hot-tempered South Korean intelligence agent Han-kyu Lee (Kang-ho Song) gets to know such plot from a liaison and attempts to prosecute “Shadow” without permission but fails. As a result Han-kyu resigns from the agency. 6 years later, he operates an investigation agency and come across Ji-won once again. Wanting the bounty for bringing in a Ji-won, Han-kyu offers him a partnership to keep him close. Ji-won assumes that Han-kyu is still the agent and agrees to get rid of his false accusation of a traitor. As they work and live under one roof, they maintain a tight-rope tension but an unusual friendship.
[via Filmsmash & AsianMediaWiki]...
Ji-won Song (Dong-won Kang) is a North Korean resident spy, is contacted by an agent “Shadow” and begins a mission to assassinate a traitor. Hot-tempered South Korean intelligence agent Han-kyu Lee (Kang-ho Song) gets to know such plot from a liaison and attempts to prosecute “Shadow” without permission but fails. As a result Han-kyu resigns from the agency. 6 years later, he operates an investigation agency and come across Ji-won once again. Wanting the bounty for bringing in a Ji-won, Han-kyu offers him a partnership to keep him close. Ji-won assumes that Han-kyu is still the agent and agrees to get rid of his false accusation of a traitor. As they work and live under one roof, they maintain a tight-rope tension but an unusual friendship.
[via Filmsmash & AsianMediaWiki]...
- 12/29/2009
- by Ulrik
- Affenheimtheater
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