Park Hae-il | |
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Hangul | 박해일 |
Hanja | 朴海日 |
Revised Romanization | Bak Hae-il |
McCune–Reischauer | Pak Hae-il |
Park Hae-il (born January 26, 1977) is a South Korean actor.
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Park Hae-il began appearing in theatre productions ever since childhood, and he first established himself on stage rather than on the screen. In 2000 he was awarded the Best New Actor award in the theatre category of the Baeksang Art Awards for his role in the play Cheongchun-yechan (Ode to Youth). His film debut was in a minor role of Yim Soon-rye's Waikiki Brothers, however he left a major impression in his second film Jealousy Is My Middle Name, in which he played a conflicted young man who develops a fascination/hatred for his boss, who has stolen two women from him. The film won the top prize at the Pusan festival in 2002, and was released commercially the following spring.[1]
Throughout his career Park has been cast in two different types of roles: innocent-looking, boyish characters, or else men who hide a dark streak under a nice-looking exterior. After Jealousy, Park would take on his darkest role of all in the acclaimed smash hit Memories of Murder, where he portrayed a man suspected of committing serial murder. Yet the following year he was just as effective appearing in a romantic role opposite Jeon Do-yeon in time-travel drama My Mother, the Mermaid.[1]
In 2005 he once again played characters of completely opposite temperament. In Rules of Dating he plays a dirty-minded, scheming high school instructor who sets his mind on a pretty student teacher played by Kang Hye-jung,[2] while in The Boy Who Went to Heaven he plays a young boy who suddenly finds himself an adult one day, ala Tom Hanks in Big.[1]
2006 saw him return to work with acclaimed director Bong Joon-ho in the big-budget monster movie The Host which went on to become the best-selling Korean film of all time.[1]
Murder mystery Paradise Murdered was a surprise hit in 2007, with Kyu Hyun Kim of Koreanfilm.org calling Park "an inspired choice for the ostensible protagonist, projecting fatigued compassion and cold calculation in equal measure, his obsidian pupils glistening with streaks of chilling obsession."[3]
In 2008 he starred in the period drama Modern Boy, a dramatic love story set in 1930s Gyeongseong or old Seoul, when Korea was under Japanese colonization (1910–45). Park played the role of a rich, hedonistic playboy who cannot care less that his country was colonized, then falls head over heels in love with a beautiful and mysterious independence fighter (Kim Hye-soo).[4][5]
After small supporting roles in Shim's Family,[6] and Good Morning, President,[7] Park joined the ensemble cast of A Million. In the isolated seaside, desert and forests of Perth, Australia, eight participants take part in a reality TV show but discover that they must literally survive to win the prize of 1 million dollars.
In 2010 Park headlined Kang Woo-suk's blockbuster mystery thriller Moss, playing a young man who comes to a rural village after hearing about his father’s death and later becomes embroiled in its hidden secrets.[8] Park's casting was received enthusiastically by fans of the source material, Yoon Tae-ho's hugely popular online graphic novel series.[9]
Heartbeat explores a familial love battle of wills, as Yeon-hee (played by Yunjin Kim of Lost fame) whose daughter is in desperate need of a heart transplant, tries to convince a brain-dead patient's son (Park) to sign off on the transplant, but he refuses and instead investigates his mother's fall.[10] He then appeared in the low-budget indie End of Animal, because he found the script "very interesting."[11]
Park next starred in Arrow: The Ultimate Weapon, a fictional tale set in the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910), which follows Nam-i (Park) on his search for younger sister Ja-in and her fiance Seo-gun after they are kidnapped by Chinese Qing Dynasty soldiers during an invasion. As he slays enemy soldiers with his bow and arrow, he is confronted by Jushinta, an enemy commander also well known for his archery prowess. Arrow made headlines in 2011, selling to distributors from six countries at the Cannes film market[12][13] and topping the local box office during its theater run.[14] Park won Best Actor honors at the prestigious Grand Bell Awards and Blue Dragon Film Awards.[15][16]
Park married his longtime girlfriend Seo Yoo-seon on March 11, 2006;[17][18] they have son. Seo has written an episode of KBS Drama Special titled Ji-hoon, Born in 1982.[19]