Park Kwang-su
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Park Kwang-su | |
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Hangul: |
박광수
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Hanja: |
朴光守
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Revised Romanization: | Bak Gwang-su |
McCune-Reischauer: | Pak Kwang-su |
Park Kwang-su is a Korean filmmaker. He was born in Sokcho, Gangwon province in South Korea on January 22, 1955 and grew up in Busan, South Korea. Park joined the Yallasung Film Group as a student of Fine Arts at Seoul National University. Upon graduation, he founded and led the Seoul Film Group which was dedicated to renewing Korean film culture and closely tied to the student protest movement. The Seoul Film Group was a significant part of the independent film movement and a strong voice speaking out against the military dictatorship. Park studied film at the ESEC film school in Paris, then returned to Korea to work as an assistant director to Lee Chang-Ho. He made his own first feature in 1988 and in 1993 became the first Korean filmmaker to found his own production company.
Park is considered the leader of the "New Korean Cinema" movement and one of Korea's most distinguished filmmakers. His films have garnered critical acclaim and he has received numerous domestic and international awards for his films.
[edit] Filmography
- 1982 Kedeuldo Urichorom (They, Like Us)
- 1983 Changnim ui Kori (Boulevard des aveugles)
- 1988 Chilsu wa Mansu (Chilsu and Mansu)
- 1990 Kedeuldo Urichorom (Black Republic)
- 1991 Berlin Report
- 1993 Gesom e Kado Shipta (To the Starry Island)
- 1995 Areumdaun Chongnyun Jeon Tae-il (A Single Spark)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Park Kwang-Su at the Internet Movie Database
- Interview with Park Kwang-Su at CineKorea (archived)