Sales agent also announces deals on One Step, The Age Of Shadows, The Wailing and Operation Chromite.
South Korean sales company Finecut has announced a raft of deals from the European Film Market (Efm) and Hong Kong Filmart led by Yunjin Kim-starrer House Of The Disappeared pre-selling to major Asian territories including Japan (New Select) and the Philippines (Viva Communications).
Other titles that Finecut has closed sales on include One Step, The Age Of Shadows, The Wailing, Operation Chromite, The Net, Misbehavior and The World Of Us.
Lim Dae-woong’s mystery thriller House Of The Disappeared, which also stars K-pop group 2Pm member Ok Taec-yeon, also pre-sold to Taiwan (Long Shong International), Vietnam (Red Pictures) and Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei (mm2 Entertainment). The film is still in post-production with a local release set for April 5.
Directed by Juhn Jai-hong (Poongsan, Beautiful), music drama One Step starring K-pop group 2NE1 member Sandara Park locked deals to Thiland...
South Korean sales company Finecut has announced a raft of deals from the European Film Market (Efm) and Hong Kong Filmart led by Yunjin Kim-starrer House Of The Disappeared pre-selling to major Asian territories including Japan (New Select) and the Philippines (Viva Communications).
Other titles that Finecut has closed sales on include One Step, The Age Of Shadows, The Wailing, Operation Chromite, The Net, Misbehavior and The World Of Us.
Lim Dae-woong’s mystery thriller House Of The Disappeared, which also stars K-pop group 2Pm member Ok Taec-yeon, also pre-sold to Taiwan (Long Shong International), Vietnam (Red Pictures) and Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei (mm2 Entertainment). The film is still in post-production with a local release set for April 5.
Directed by Juhn Jai-hong (Poongsan, Beautiful), music drama One Step starring K-pop group 2NE1 member Sandara Park locked deals to Thiland...
- 3/24/2017
- by hjnoh2007@gmail.com (Jean Noh)
- ScreenDaily
Seoul-based sales company Finecut has picked up music-themed drama One Step, starring K-pop singer Sandara Park, Han Jae-seok and Cho Dong-in.
Juhn Jaihong, whose credits include Poongsan and Beautiful, is directing the film with Kim Sujin (The Great Queen Seondoek) as music director.
Park, a member of K-pop band 2NE1, plays a woman who has lost her memories and suffers from synesthesia following a car accident. While dreaming, she hears a song which could be the key to her forgotten past.
Han plays a composer who offers to help her identify the song she is hearing, while Cho plays a rock guitarist who is secretly in love with her.
Park’s previous acting roles include 2015 web drama Dr Ian, for which she won best actress at the first KWeb Festival. Han is a TV actor who gained popularity through hit shows including All About Love and Taiwanese production Amor De Tapapaca. Cho won best...
Juhn Jaihong, whose credits include Poongsan and Beautiful, is directing the film with Kim Sujin (The Great Queen Seondoek) as music director.
Park, a member of K-pop band 2NE1, plays a woman who has lost her memories and suffers from synesthesia following a car accident. While dreaming, she hears a song which could be the key to her forgotten past.
Han plays a composer who offers to help her identify the song she is hearing, while Cho plays a rock guitarist who is secretly in love with her.
Park’s previous acting roles include 2015 web drama Dr Ian, for which she won best actress at the first KWeb Festival. Han is a TV actor who gained popularity through hit shows including All About Love and Taiwanese production Amor De Tapapaca. Cho won best...
- 3/2/2016
- by lizshackleton@gmail.com (Liz Shackleton)
- ScreenDaily
Looks like Justin is a big fan of K-Pop! After finishing his concert in Seoul, South Korea on Oct. 10, the Biebs partied with a group of Korean celebs and got very cozy with a couple female singers! So is Justin trying to keep his mind off of Selena Gomez while on tour in Asia?
Justin Bieber has been traveling to the far reaches of the world on his “Believe” tour, most recently making stops in Asia. And while in South Korea on Oct. 10, he appeared to make a bunch of new friends — and even flirt with a couple Korean pop singers in particular.
Justin Bieber Kisses K-Pop Singers
In a picture snapped by Korean-American jeweler Ben Baller, Justin is getting very close to Sandara Park, a member of the Korean pop girl group 2NE1, and even kissing her on the cheek!
“Last night in the VIP room with Justin & Dara #heartbreaker,...
Justin Bieber has been traveling to the far reaches of the world on his “Believe” tour, most recently making stops in Asia. And while in South Korea on Oct. 10, he appeared to make a bunch of new friends — and even flirt with a couple Korean pop singers in particular.
Justin Bieber Kisses K-Pop Singers
In a picture snapped by Korean-American jeweler Ben Baller, Justin is getting very close to Sandara Park, a member of the Korean pop girl group 2NE1, and even kissing her on the cheek!
“Last night in the VIP room with Justin & Dara #heartbreaker,...
- 10/12/2013
- by Andrew Gruttadaro
- HollywoodLife
The Associated Press, Teresa Cerojano
Manila, Philippines — How did Seoul become Asia's capital of cool?
Even here in the Philippines, once an undisputed bastion of American pop and Hollywood movies, South Korean pop music, soap operas and fashion are now all the rage.
"I want the same brown, but slightly blonde color, as Sandara's hair," says 22-year-old hotel worker Kins Wu, referring to girl band singer Sandara Park as she sifts through color samples at a Manila branch of a Korean hair salon.
The phenomenon, known as "Hallyu" in Korean, took off around the start of the millennium with TV soap operas that became huge hits with Asians of all ages. Then came K-pop music, with its flashy choreographed dance moves, now imitated by teenagers from Beijing to Bangkok.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak ranks the overseas success of "K-pop" among his country's top achievements, and the government operates a...
Manila, Philippines — How did Seoul become Asia's capital of cool?
Even here in the Philippines, once an undisputed bastion of American pop and Hollywood movies, South Korean pop music, soap operas and fashion are now all the rage.
"I want the same brown, but slightly blonde color, as Sandara's hair," says 22-year-old hotel worker Kins Wu, referring to girl band singer Sandara Park as she sifts through color samples at a Manila branch of a Korean hair salon.
The phenomenon, known as "Hallyu" in Korean, took off around the start of the millennium with TV soap operas that became huge hits with Asians of all ages. Then came K-pop music, with its flashy choreographed dance moves, now imitated by teenagers from Beijing to Bangkok.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak ranks the overseas success of "K-pop" among his country's top achievements, and the government operates a...
- 9/21/2011
- by www.huffingtonpost.com
- Huffington Post
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