MetaTheater(http://MetaTheater.live), a platform that globally distributes live staged performances, will be presenting the popular original musical “Blue Helmet: A Song of Meissa” through region-specific global streaming to 153 countries worldwide.
“Blue Helmet: A Song of Meissa” is a original dramatico-musical presented by Rok Army. Superstars with big global fandom such as K-pop group Exo’s Park Chanyeol and actor Jang Kiyong of high rated TV series, “Now, We Are Breaking Up” and “Search WWW” are starring in the leading roles, while the next generation of K-pop stars Kim Hyojin and Lee Seungjun of Onf are also cast in the musical.
Laman is a young man who was brought up with Korean culture through his contact with the Gaon Unit of the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces who were dispatched to Khamur. With a dream to become a K-pop star, Laman lives in Korea while looking for Meissa, someone he...
“Blue Helmet: A Song of Meissa” is a original dramatico-musical presented by Rok Army. Superstars with big global fandom such as K-pop group Exo’s Park Chanyeol and actor Jang Kiyong of high rated TV series, “Now, We Are Breaking Up” and “Search WWW” are starring in the leading roles, while the next generation of K-pop stars Kim Hyojin and Lee Seungjun of Onf are also cast in the musical.
Laman is a young man who was brought up with Korean culture through his contact with the Gaon Unit of the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces who were dispatched to Khamur. With a dream to become a K-pop star, Laman lives in Korea while looking for Meissa, someone he...
- 4/9/2022
- by Rouven Linnarz
- AsianMoviePulse
What sets “Seoul Searching” apart from other teen-oriented films is it is a story not only about personal wounds, but also of a nation’s deepest, lingering scars. Directed by Benson Lee, the movie, which won the the Best Narrative Feature Film at the 2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival and was also an official entry to the Sundance Film Festival, cleverly and pointedly lays down the cultural intricacies of identity, both of the self and the nation-state.
“Seoul Searching” is based on Lee’s real-life experience where young Koreans like him who grew up in other countries are made to rediscover and acquaint themselves with what it means to be Korean through a summer camp. It’s a program developed by the South Korean government after its citizens emigrated to other countries following the war between South and North Korea in the 1950s.
The movie takes us back to the...
“Seoul Searching” is based on Lee’s real-life experience where young Koreans like him who grew up in other countries are made to rediscover and acquaint themselves with what it means to be Korean through a summer camp. It’s a program developed by the South Korean government after its citizens emigrated to other countries following the war between South and North Korea in the 1950s.
The movie takes us back to the...
- 2/27/2022
- by Purple Romero
- AsianMoviePulse
Composers Atli Örvarsson, Mark Mothersbaugh and Mark Isham led the list of winners announced Monday for the annual BMI Film, TV & Visual Media Awards, with the three scorers picking up six, five and four trophies, respectively.
Örvarsson, the Icelandic composer, is now up to 29 BMI honors with the six he adds this week. His new shelf’s worth of awards came for work on “Chicago P.D.,” “Chicago Med,” “Chicago Fire,” “FBI,” “FBI: Most Wanted” and “Defending Jacob.”
Mark Mothersbaugh, of Devo as well as scoring fame, was five-times rewarded for “Dirty John,” “What We Do in the Shadows,” “The Willoughbys,” “The Croods: A New Age” and “Tiger King.”
Mark Isham’s four awards came for “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “Honest Thief,” “Little Fires Everywhere” and “Togo.”
“I’m not that much of an awards guy, but even I’m impressed — four BMI awards,” Isham said in a taped acceptance speech.
Örvarsson, the Icelandic composer, is now up to 29 BMI honors with the six he adds this week. His new shelf’s worth of awards came for work on “Chicago P.D.,” “Chicago Med,” “Chicago Fire,” “FBI,” “FBI: Most Wanted” and “Defending Jacob.”
Mark Mothersbaugh, of Devo as well as scoring fame, was five-times rewarded for “Dirty John,” “What We Do in the Shadows,” “The Willoughbys,” “The Croods: A New Age” and “Tiger King.”
Mark Isham’s four awards came for “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “Honest Thief,” “Little Fires Everywhere” and “Togo.”
“I’m not that much of an awards guy, but even I’m impressed — four BMI awards,” Isham said in a taped acceptance speech.
- 7/12/2021
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
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