Park Gok-ji

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Park Gok-ji
Born (1965-02-28) 28 February 1965
Other names Park Kok-ji
Occupation Film editor
Years active 1987–present
Spouse(s) Park Heung-sik
Korean name
Hangul 박곡지
Revised Romanization Bak Gok-ji
McCune–Reischauer Pak Gok-chi

Park Gok-ji (born 28 February 1965) is a South Korean film editor. She is the wife of film director Park Heung-sik with whom she has several children, and used her influence within the local industry to aid the production of his second film, The Railroad.[1] Park and her colleague Jeong Jin-hee won Best Editor at the 5th Korean Film Awards for A Dirty Carnival,[2] and received a further nomination for Best Editor at the 1st Asian Film Awards.[3]

Filmography as editor

  • The Scent at the Edge of the World (1991)
  • General's Son II (1991)
  • Like Music, Like Rain (1992)
  • The Marriage Life (1992)
  • General's Son III (1992)
  • May Our Love Stay This Way (1992)
  • Seopyeonje (1993)
  • The 101st Proposition (1993)
  • The Woman and the Man (1993)
  • The Man with Breasts (1993)
  • No Emergency Exit (1993)
  • Deep Scratch (1994)
  • A Very Special Transformation (1994)
  • 301, 302 (1995)
  • Declaration of Genius (1995)
  • A Hot Roof (1995)
  • Bellybutton Bus (1995)
  • The River Flows to Tomorrow (1996)
  • The Ginko Bed (1996)
  • Seven Reasons Beer is Better Than Love (1996)
  • Come To Me (1996)
  • Born to Kill (1996)
  • The Day a Pig Fell into the Well (1996)
  • Jungle Story (1996)
  • Corset (1996)
  • The Adventures of Mrs. Park (1996)
  • Crocodile (1996)
  • Inch'Alla (1997)
  • Lament (1997)
  • Mister Condom (1997)
  • Do the Right Thing (1997)
  • Poison (1997)
  • Threesome (1997)
  • Baby Sale (1997)
  • No. 3 (1997)
  • Habitual Sadness 2 (1997)
  • The Contact (1997)
  • Maria and the Inn (1997)
  • Wind Echoing in My Being (1997)
  • The Hole (1997)
  • The Boy's Spear (1997)
  • Saturday, 2 p.m. (1998)
  • Scent of a Man (1998)
  • Kazoku Cinema (1998)
  • Dr. K (1999)
  • Shiri (1999)
  • Rush (1999)
  • Calla (1999)
  • Fin de Siecle (1999)
  • Lies (2000)
  • Promenade (2000)
  • Vanishing Twin (2000)
  • Pisces (2000)
  • The Legend of Ginko (2000)
  • Friend (2001)
  • Failan (2001)
  • Turtle Hero (2001)
  • Say Yes (2001)

References

  1. "Gyeongui Line". The Dong-A Ilbo, 3 May 2007. Retrieved on 14 May 2009.
  2. "5th Korean Film Awards, Winners" (Korean). MBC. Retrieved on 14 May 2009.
  3. Yi Ch’ang-ho. "Inaugural Asian Film Awards’ Korean Selections". Korean Film Council, 31 January 2007. Retrieved on 14 May 2009.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.