Kang Je-gyu | |
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Born | December 23, 1962 South Korea |
Occupation | Film director |
Kang Je-gyu | |
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Hangul | 강제규 |
Hanja | 姜帝圭 |
Revised Romanization | Kang Je-gyu |
McCune–Reischauer | Kang Chegyu |
Kang Je-gyu (born December 23, 1962) is a South Korean film director.
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After graduating from ChungAng University, Kang received his first prize at the Korea Youth Film Festival and Korea Scenario Awards in 1991.[1]
Kang's most notable contributions to Korean cinema have been Shiri and Taegukgi. Shiri was the first big budget Hollywood-style action film made in Korea, which broke box office records and was partially responsible for the popularization of domestic films in the country. Taegukgi, directed five years later, again rewrote box office records, having been seen by over ten million people in South Korea alone.
After establishing his own production film company under his name, he merged it with Myung Film in 2005.[2]
In an interview for the BBC special Asian Invasion, Kang revealed that he wanted his next project to be a science fiction film. He said, "I have produced two movies about Korea. So now I'm preparing a new movie that is related to something more global--a problem that the whole world is facing right now."
After a 7 year hiatus, in 2011 Kang unveiled his film My Way, set during World War II with a star-studded pan-Asian cast and the highest budget to date for a Korean film.[3]