Archive for the ‘Korea Industry News’ Category

411 Publishing Announces National & International Online Listings

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/411-publishing-announces-national-international-online-listings-2010-04-26?reflink=MW_news_stmp

LOS ANGELES, Apr 26, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) — 411 Publishing Co., the leader in providing qualified below-the-line production resources to the entertainment industry with their L.A. and New York 411 print and online directories, has added National and International sections to LA411.com (www.LA411.com) and NewYork411.com (www.NewYork411.com).

411’s National section will initially include over 1,300 qualified listings in over 100 categories from the top ten production states outside of the L.A. and New York areas. Each National listing has been vetted by 411’s editorial staff to meet their standard of only listing companies and individuals with credits on theatrically released films or on television or commercials that have aired on broadcast or cable networks.

Up until now, the location requirement for all 411 listings was limited to Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, Santa Barbara, San Bernardino, San Diego, or Ventura Counties and New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, or Philadelphia. The National section has been added to help producers find qualified production resources and below-the-line talent in states offering them the best tax incentives and location possibilities. There are currently over 33,000 qualified listings in the L.A. & NY 411 directories.

“While our number one goal has always been to nurture and support local below-the-line production companies, we’ve been asked repeatedly by our users to supply qualified production resources outside of Southern California and New York,” said 411 Publishing publisher Sean Killebrew. “As such, we have added national and international listings and will continue to listen to the community and expand our reach as necessary.”

In partnership with sister company KEMPS, 411 users can also search 50,000 film, television and commercial production companies in 115 countries worldwide. The information is updated daily to ensure reliability.

The new sections are accessible to users from either LA411.com or NewYork411.com.

About 411 Publishing:

For over 30 years, 411 Publishing has set the standard for business-to-business directories. 411 Publishing provides the entertainment industry with the best, most trustworthy production resources for film, TV, commercials, video and music video production. 411 Publishing is owned by Reed Business Information, the largest business-to-business publisher in the U.S. and a member of the Reed Elsevier Group plc (NYSE: RUK and ENL), a global publisher and information provider.

SOURCE: 411 Publishing Co.

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Asia watches on as region’s films head to Europe

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/asia-watches-on-as-regions-films-head-to-europe-1955038.html

Relaxnews

The Asian film

industry started its annual trek to Europe this week, first heading to a small festival in the north of Italy before it moves en masse to the biggest film festival there is each year - Cannes (http://www.festival-cannes.com) - which starts on May 12.

The Far East Film Festival (http:www.fareastfilm.com) in the township of Udine, about a two-hour train ride north of Venice, whets Europe’s appetite for Asian film with a showcase of commercial productions that have enjoyed box office success over the past 12 months in their home nations.

Asia’s various media keep a close watch on the event as a precursor to Cannes - the French festival which can take an unknown director and turn him or her overnight into a household name around the world.

“Udine attracts media coverage from all over Asia because people want to know how the region’s films are received in Europe. There is great cachet and of course sometimes great box office figures to be made,” says long-time Asian film industry watcher Stephen Cremin who recently started up the Film Business Asia (http://www.filmbiz.asia) website which tracks what is going on in that region’s cinema circles.

And while Asian box office smashes such as Hong Kong’s Bodyguards and Assassins and China’s The Founding of a Republic are being screened in Udine, the French seaside city of Cannes is preparing to host the latest releases from some of the biggest names in the region.

There are five Asian films this year vying for the top award at Cannes, and interest in the region is once again high, following on from the successes of last year when Filipino Brillante Mendoza received the award for best director for Kinatay, South Korea’s Park Chan-wook won the jury prize for Thirst, and China’s Mei Feng took home the best screenplay award for Spring Fever.

South Korea is leading the way this year with two films - Im Sang-soo’s The Housemaid, Lee Chang-dong’s Poetry - in the running for the main award at Cannes, and they will be joined by Japanese director Takeshi Kitano’s Outrage, Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, and China’s Wang Xiaoshuai with Chongqing Blues.

And Asia will be watching their every move. Photographers from the region’s main media outlets are sent to cover Cannes red carpet events and hundred of journalists file from the Croisette.

“South Korean media and general public, for example, are very much interested in Cannes, because many Korean films have been rewarded there over the last 10 years,” says Kim Do-hoon, who runs South Korea’s

pre-eminent film magazine cine21 (http:|www.cine21.com) “If a major film is selected from any Asian country, everything from the film trade media to gossip magazine will cover Cannes.”

And the rewards for those whose films are selected can be rich.

“Every Korean film director is anxious to go to Cannes,” says Kim. “In Korea, having a reputation as an artist whose films have screened at international film festivals is as important as a commercial success.

“Directors such as Park Chan-wook (Oldboy) became highly respected cultural figures in Korea which made them pick up jobs even as highly paid commercial models.”

The 63rd Cannes Film festival will run May 12-23.

MS

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Film locations trade show holds steady

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/apr/21/business/la-fi-ct-onlocation-20100421

Despite a decline in the industry, the 25th annual event in Santa Monica attracts about the same number of exhibitors and visitors as last year.

By Richard Verrier, Los Angeles Times

Hollywood is making fewer movies, film producers are having a tougher time getting financing and cash-strapped governments around the world are facing more pressure than ever to justify tax breaks given to the film industry.

In such a climate, you might think the Locations Trade Show in Santa Monica last week would have been a ghost town. Hardly.

The 25th annual event that ended Saturday drew 241 exhibitors from 30 countries and nearly 4,000 visitors, including producers, location scouts, vendors and bankers.

That’s nearly the same level of participation as last year — according to the Assn. of Film Commissioners International, which organizes the three-day trade show at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium.

“We’re deliriously happy with the attendance of exhibitors and foot traffic,” said Larry Brownell, executive director of the AFCI. “Compared to other industries, we’ve really held our own.”

Reflecting the more austere climate, there were a few notable absences, including film commissions from South Africa and China (organizers cited possible visa issues), and some of booths were smaller or less lavish than before. Six Canadian film commissions were represented this year, down from 14 last year, even though the provinces of Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia all have boosted their film incentives.

But there were several new foreign participants eager to tout their locations and new film programs. Some were coming for the first time, while others were making a return after several years absence. New attendees included Morocco, Austria, Jamaica, Croatia and even Abu Dhabi, the modern city in the United Arab Emirates.

One of the world’s largest oil producers, Abu Dhabi has been seeking to diversify into other industries, such as financial services, tourism and now film. Abu Dhabi, where the dramas “Syriana” and “The Kingdom” were partially shot, launched its film program this year and was eager to spread the word in Santa Monica.

“We have modern architecture and desert islands,” said David Shepheard, a former film commissioner in Britain who was hired to head the Abu Dhabi Film Commission. “Our message is: Abu Dhabi is a stable filmmaking hub in the Middle East.”

On the other side of the auditorium, Serbian Film Commission Executive Director Ana Ilic was busy promoting her country’s new film incentive program, which offers a rebate of up to 25% on production expenses; and scenic locales, from the banks of the Danube River to the bustling center of its capital, Belgrade.

“We have strong, long tradition of filmmaking and more versatile locations than anywhere else,” Ilic said. “We’re 15% cheaper than Romania and 20% cheaper than Hungary, and that’s without the incentives.”

There were also 32 U.S. states represented (including a sizable contingent from California), down from last year. Kentucky, Iowa, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina and Wisconsin were no-shows after participating in 2009, reflecting cuts in state marketing and travel budgets.

Still, major players such as New Mexico and Louisiana had large delegations. Louisiana, which recently increased its production rebate to 30% from 25%, had eight film offices represented. “The activity we’re getting is tremendous,” said Christopher Stelly, Louisiana’s film industry development director. “Everyone wants to learn about the incentive program.”

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AFCI Locations Trade Show

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3i3d82e5b0896238024e8360eeca9130bb

Savvy film, TV productions makes most of tax incentives

By Todd Longwell

In the upcoming Warner Bros. film “The Losers,” Puerto Rico portrays a wide variety of locales, including India, Bolivia, Chile, Miami and Los Angeles. But according to Puerto Rico film commissioner Mariella Perez-Serrano, it wasn’t the Caribbean commonwealth’s visual versatility that drew the comic book adaptation to its shores. It was its production incentive, which offers filmmakers a 40% transferable tax credit.

“These days, it’s all about the money,” Perez-Serrano says.

When it comes to incentive programs, there’s a lot of money to be had. In the past eight years, film and TV tax credits and rebates have proliferated, with one region leapfrogging over the other to offer a better deal. Today, there are significant production incentives in 44 U.S. states — up from five in 2002 — and a broad selection of countries around the globe, from Canada to New Zealand.

Faced with this wide variety, filmmakers have become savvy shoppers. Today, more than ever, they’re aware that the program offering the biggest raw percentages doesn’t always prove to be the best deal in the final audit.

“There are creative needs, financial needs, quality-of-life issues, travel time,” says Susan Croome, head of the British Columbia Film Commission. “The things they look at are different from show to show.”

One of the primary factors that drove Universal’s direct-to-DVD sequel “Death Race: Frankenstein Lives” to shoot in Cape Town, South Africa, this year was the travel requirements for its large cast of cars.

“We needed to import a lot of cars that were built in the U.S. that were not really registered, because they’re basically props,” producer Mike Elliott says. “South African custom officials recognized quickly what we were trying to do and guaranteed they’d be able to clear them for us in a couple of days, which they did. Other places we were considering shooting wanted as much as a month or even six weeks to clear the vehicles, and we just didn’t have time.”


Cape Town, South Africa

On top of that, “Death Race” needed a locale with decayed urban environments in which to stage its centerpiece demolition derby. A number of states in the northeastern U.S. have locations that fit the bill physically, and many come with attractive incentive programs, such as Michigan’s refundable 40%-42% tax credit. But they also tend to have regulations that make racing and wrecking cars more challenging, so Elliott looked to Central and Eastern Europe, where government restrictions tend to be more lax.

“The best locations we saw anywhere for this film were in Romania,” he notes. “There are gigantic, closed-down factories and steel plants on the same scale as the Northeast, but it would have been winter, and it’s hard to race cars around in the snow and the rain. It’s the same reason we couldn’t look at Montreal, where the first film was shot.”

In addition to warm weather, South Africa boasts a base 15% rebate on qualified expenditures, which “Death Race” was able to increase to 25% by structuring itself as a German/South African co-production.

Hawaii’s production incentive is relatively small by today’s standards, offering a refundable tax credit of 15% on Oahu and 20% on neighbor islands (Kauai, Lanai, Maui, Molokai and the Big Island). Worse, the total payout is capped at $8 million per production, paltry when one considers that “Avatar” earned $44.7 million by utilizing New Zealand’s 15% tax rebate program. Yet Hawaii was able to beat other tropical locales, including top contender Puerto Rico, to land the Disney sequel “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides,” which is scheduled to shoot on Oahu and Kauai in the summer.

“From what I understand, creatively people wanted to be here,” says Georja Skinner, administrator and film liaison for the Hawaii Film Office. “It’s closer to Burbank, with direct flights.”

Hawaii also has a substantial production infrastructure, with an experienced crew base bolstered by the presence of another Disney project, ABC’s “Lost,” which is conveniently wrapping its six-season run as “Pirates” ramps up preproduction. And the Aloha state tends to escape direct hits from hurricanes, an important consideration given that sets for the previous two “Pirates” sequels were destroyed when Hurricane Wilma blew through the Bahamas in October 2005.

But the tipping point in bringing “Pirates” to Hawaii might have been the potential for promotional cross-pollination with another venture.

“There’s a new Disney resort that will be opening here in 2011 around the time the film (premieres), called the Aulani Resort,” Skinner explains. For both Disney and Hawaii, “there are opportunities to promote the destination where the film was shot.”

Such cross-pollination, however, is rarely what matters most.

Typically, producers are more concerned with other things — like basic issues such as the currency exchange rate, the wages paid under local union agreements and, crucially, whether the government offering the incentive can pay in a timely fashion, a factor that might have influenced producers considering Michigan as a locale.

The initial enthusiasm that greeted the announcement of Michigan’s generous incentive in April 2008 was subsequently dampened by rumors that the state is slow to pay. But that may have been caused by misunderstanding of how the program works, according to Ed Spiegel, president of the payroll company Cast & Crew Services, which also offers incentive consulting for its clients.

“People are saying, ‘So-and-so hasn’t been paid yet; it’s been six months,’ ” Spiegel says. “Well, if you’re a corporate taxpayer and you filmed a movie in 2008, your corporate tax return isn’t due until March 2009, and most of them are going to file a six-month extension. It’s not a rebate state where you just submit the (paperwork) to a department and they cut a check right there.”

Failure to heed the fine print in Australian incentive regulations nearly cost the producers of Summit Entertainment’s “Knowing” upward of $10 million. The standard rebate for foreign productions shooting Down Under is only 15%, but co-writer/director Alex Proyas figured that, since he and the majority of the cast and crew were native Aussies, it would qualify as a homegrown production, entitling it to a 40% rebate. Then last year, after the $50 million film was completed, Screen Australia, which administers the rebate, announced it was only granting it a 15% credit, arguing that to get the full 40% a film needed to be created “from inception” by Australians. “Knowing,” which had been developed by a series of other writers and directors before Proyas got involved, didn’t qualify.

After Proyas went public with his complaints about the decision, the film was quietly granted the full 40% rebate.

Filmmakers also have to beware of content restrictions. In May, the Texas Film Commission refused to approve incentives for “Waco,” a proposed film about the 1993 raid on David Koresh’s Branch Davidian compound, because it was deemed in violation of a 2007 provision in the incentive law barring payments to movies that “portray Texas or Texans in a negative light.” Utah’s incentive has a similar clause.

The producers of “Waco” decided to take their project elsewhere, but some aren’t above altering their story lines to take advantage of an incentive.


“Justified”

“What I’ve heard of from network executives is they can write a show about New York that’s shot in Toronto, but they can also have the writers change a show that’s written about New York and move its story to Boston,” says Stuart Suna, president of Silvercup Studios in Long Island City, which has been home to such TV shows as NBC’s “30 Rock” and HBO’s “The Sopranos.”

A studio is more likely to leave the story line intact and move the show wherever it can get the best deal. ABC’s New York-set “Ugly Betty” shot its pilot in the Big Apple in 2006, moved to Los Angeles for its first season, then in 2008 picked up and moved back to New York (and Silvercup) for its third season to take advantage of the state’s then-new 30% tax credit.

The loss of “Betty” finally pushed the California legislature to pass a production incentive package last year. It includes a 25% tax credit for “relocating” TV series, which helped draw the new Kentucky-set FX Western drama “Justified” to Santa Clarita, Calif., for its first season order, after shooting its pilot in and around Pittsburgh.

“They could’ve gotten the look they wanted in Georgia or Louisiana,” says Amy Lemisch, director of the California Film Commission. “They could’ve stayed in Pittsburgh. But they came here.” She adds, “Nine times out of 10, the producers would rather shoot here, because we have the crews and the infrastructure.”

Ironically, after years of moving around the world chasing the best deal, producer Elliott has come to the conclusion that the best place to shoot a really cheap film is, indeed right here in Hollywood, incentive or no incentive.

“Just hire a bunch of film students,” he says.

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Int’l producers to get their shot at PGA event

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3id51767e5e16b0979822d108e23e09b86

Five will be invited to attend first film co-prod’n showcase

By Gregg Kilday

The Producers Guild of America will offer five international film producers the opportunity to meet with their U.S. counterparts at its inaugural International Film Co-Production Showcase.

CoProShow, as the project market will be dubbed, will take place in connection with the PGA’s second annual Produced by Conference, set for June 4-6 at the Fox Studios in Los Angeles.

“The CoProShow is the first international feature film project market to take place in Hollywood, and we couldn’t ask for a more exciting venue to launch,” said Stu Levy, chair of the PGA’s international committee. “A producer’s job inevitably must consider an increasingly interconnected world, and the PGA is dedicated to being a gateway for international producers to the U.S. market.”

Interested producers must submit by April 30 a screenplay synopsis for a feature-length project under development. It then will be reviewed by a panel of U.S. producers, and five finalists will be invited to attend the PBC weekend event.

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Tight Budgets Effect Worldwide Film Production

http://www.hollywoodtoday.net/2010/02/09/tight-budgets-effect-worldwide-film-production/

Cash-Strapped Studios Slash Films from New Zealand to Canada

By: Valerie Milano

HOLLYWOOD,CA–Ovum, a global analysis and consulting firm, reports that in a recent survey the tighter budgets of 2010 will have a direct effect on contact center outsourcing providers across North America, New Zealand, Australia and Western Europe. Only 1 in 5 businesses felt their budgets would grow.

According to Peter Ryan, Lead Analyst, based in Canada, “This placed tremendous pressure on enterprises that maintain in-house contact centers, as limited cash on hand means that they are unable to invest in new and leading-edge technology, and agent management will be compromised in terms of investing in ongoing training or increased staff incentives. These will result in the erosion of the end-user relationship over the long-term”.

With this in mind, the role of contract center outsourcers has changed since 2008 when the recession began. Today businesses are looking for partners who can develop new sales opportunities and maintain customer loyalty.

Outsourcers offering a superior level of service will go beyond the standard service call. Creating sales by offering add-ons and upsales of additional products and services increases sales while encouraging customers to stay rather than seek other providers will reduce the actual cost of the contract service center and increase profitability.

Although budgets will remain tight, taking advantage of all the tools in the box can result in improved sales and happy, loyal end-users.

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Korean Film Craze Lures Nepalis

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2009/11/117_56309.html

By Anil Giri
Korea Times Correspondent

KATHMANDU ― Films are one way to express the culture, life, human relations, religion and values of a particular country. One can get an idea about a particular country from a film, which one may not get from reading dozens of books.

Korean films are becoming immensely popular across the globe. Previously, filmgoers in Nepal had Hollywood and Bollywood, but the current movie craze is popularly known as Kollywood.

The Nepali film market is small and mostly produces low budget films. It was traditionally influenced by the Indian movie industry. Now the emphasis has entirely shifted to Korean movies. “My Sassy Girl”, one of the most successful Korean movies, has become the latest source of inspiration for the Nepali film industry.

“My Small World”, the Nepali version of “My Sassy Girl”, has been the country’s biggest hit at the box office in 2009.

Not only Korean box office hits but also smaller-scale Korean movies are equally popular here. “The market for Korean films has gone up by 200 percent. It has overtaken both the Hollywood and Bollywood markets here,” said Ramesh Dhakal, who sells Korean, Indian, Hollywood, and other movies in Kathmandu. Due to modern technology like DVDs, watching movies at home is far easier than having to go to the movie theater.

Similarly, Korean fashion, clothing and hairstyles are popular in Nepal among the younger generation, due to the influence of Korean movies.

A recently released Nepali film, “I Have a Friend” was highly successful but the key to the film’s success was Korean movie “A Millionaires’ First Love.”

“It was an experiment to see what the public’s reaction would be if I took my inspiration from a foreign movie. The trial was successful as moviegoers liked my film,” said the film’s director, Sudarshan Thapa.

The impact of Korean movies on Nepali films is growing. Despite the fact that most Nepali moviegoers do not understand the Korean language, the market is surging. “It was just 3 years ago that Korean movies started to become popular here,” said another seller, Ganesh Ghimire. Most of the merchants felt that Korean movies began growing in popularity from 2007 and that the market is skyrocketing in Nepal as it continues to prosper worldwide.

The interest in Korean cinema began following an agreement between the countries to send laborers from Nepal to Korea on a regular basis. Knowledge of the Korean language was a prerequisite for the workers and demand for films in the language surged. The majority of the training centers used movies to teach the language. A trend was established and even those who did not understand Korean began to ask for the movies.

Even the demand for films that aren’t new releases is high. Requests for the eight-year-old “My Sassy Girl”, six-year-old “A Millionaires’ First Love” and “Taegukgi,” released five years ago, are continuous. Romance movies are more popular than any other genre.

After the enormous success of “My Sassy Girl”, the impact of the industry began to grow. Other film industries in Asia began to imitate the film and distribute similar movies on a large scale. The arrogant and proud woman in “My Sassy Girl” was in stark contrast to the portrayal of other female characters in Asian cinema. This was the major factor that compelled filmmakers and directors to emulate it.

Another reason for the success of Korean films in Nepal is their regular appearance at film festivals. Last year four Korean films were chosen to appear at a four-day festival in Kathmandu, further portraying elements of Korean life, culture and society. Although Korea and Nepal are far apart geographically their cultural, social and religious lives have much in common.

According to a source at the Korean embassy, the film festival’s organizers in Kathmandu have invited more Korean films to appear.

“This film festival is expected to serve as a good chance to gain further insight into Korea ― its language, lifestyles, politics, society, and culture. I hope this will help all the viewers better understand the country, thus contributing to fostering the friendly relationship between the people of the two countries,” said Hang Sungmog, Ambassador to Korea, during the opening of the festival.

Why are Korean films becoming so popular? Simple: Korean films are based on ordinary subject matter, and feature strong plots and perfect acting.

This impression is shared by most Nepali film directors. Western movies are distancing themselves from common human behavior and sensitivity towards life. Therefore, youths are attracted to the plot sensitivity that is depicted in a very exact manner in Korean films. Usha Lama, a diehard fan of Korean movies said, “Korean movies are very simple and easy to understand and are not artificial. Most of them are like our daily lives.”

Film director Thapa hailed the presentation of Korean movies, saying that most of them are very sentimental. “Most of the stories comes from the young generation and revolves around their lives, which really touches the hearts and sentiments of today’s youth,” said Thapa.

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Pusan West shines light on Korean cinema

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-korea24-2009nov24,0,4402565.story

Contemporary filmmakers such as ‘Thirst’s’ Park Chan-wook stop at the inaugural film festival at Chapman University to talk about the new wave of South Korean film.

The Korean filmmaker Kim Jee-woon admires the oeuvre of Quentin Tarantino and readily acknowledges that “Kill Bill” influenced Kim’s own recent film, the stylishly sanguine “A Bittersweet Life.” Kim also cites Brian De Palma’s gangster classic “Scarface” in shaping his film’s frenzied final shoot-out.

But like many contemporary Korean directors who came of age while ingesting Hollywood genre films, Kim strives to maintain a degree of independence from the L.A. dream factory. Although Hollywood has courted him since the breakout success of “The Good, the Bad, the Weird,” his 2008 convention-tweaking “kimchi Western” set in 1930s Manchuria, the director shows a certain cautiousness toward the way the U.S. film industry does business.

“Hollywood films seem to solve every problem with money. That’s why Hollywood is looking to international filmmakers for creativity,” Kim said through an interpreter during an interview over the weekend at Chapman University’s inaugural Pusan West festival of Korean film.

“Korean people like to see their own stories,” Kim continued. “But specifically I think Korean films are as good as Hollywood films, as well-made and commercially [viable].”

Kim’s remarks about the useful creative tensions between East and West filmmaking traditions underscored a major theme of Pusan West. A three-day showcase of screenings, panels and Q&A sessions, the festival was a joint venture between South Korea’s prestigious Pusan International Film Festival and Chapman’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts, which organized and hosted the event at its home base in the city of Orange.

It provided a rare U.S. platform for some of Korea’s most accomplished, internationally lauded young directors, including Kim and Park Chan-wook, who attended a screening of his latest work, the vampire-existentialist thriller “Thirst,” and received the festival’s career-achievement award.

Representing an earlier generation was Lee Doo-yong, one of the first Korean filmmakers to gain outside prominence. A screening of a largely restored version of Lee’s 1980 political detective story, “Last Witness,” which had been cut to ribbons by government censors when it originally premiered, helped wrap up the festival on Sunday evening.

The festival offered evidence of why Korean cinema in recent years has emerged as one of Asia’s most dynamic and varied, reflecting renewed global interest in a nation that has survived repeated foreign invasions and Cold War partitioning.

Screenings ranged from gangster epics and horror films to a documentary (Lee Chung-ryoul’s anthropomorphically astute “Old Partner,” about an aging farmer’s desperate reliance on his battered ox), a playful love-triangle comedy (Kim Dong-won’s “Drifting Away) and an omnibus film about artistic obsession (Park Jin-sung’s “Evil Spirit; VIY”), as well as Bong Joon-ho’s “Mother,” Korea’s official entry in this year’s Academy Award for best foreign film.

“If you want to get tuned into contemporary Korean cinema, you can do it in three days,” said Bob Bassett, professor and dean of the Dodge College of Film and Media Arts.

Pusan West, which drew a mix of students, faculty and a few curious outsiders, also served as a kind of coming-out party for Dodge College’s burgeoning global ambitions. The school operates a satellite campus in Singapore and has exchanges with colleges in Seoul and Taipei, Taiwan.

Bassett credits Nam Lee, a former Korean journalist who’s now a Dodge assistant professor of film studies, with helping to bring the festival about through her longtime personal connections with the Pusan International Film Festival, staged annually in South Korea’s second-largest city.

Like Argentina, Spain and other countries that have experienced cultural renaissances following years of dictatorship, South Korea has witnessed a vibrant new wave of filmmaking after the democratization of recent years, Nam said. Young Korean filmmakers now in their 30s and 40s “were blessed with this freedom, so they were the lucky generation, in my mind,” she said.

While the festival celebrated this recent artistic outburst, some suggested it also served as a reminder for Korean filmmakers to keep holding up a mirror to the issues besetting their complex country.

“There is no longera limit on any themes or any issues like that,” said Lee Doo-yong, the veteran director. “This challenge of exposing the shameful things and problems with our society should continue as well.”

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State loans shift structure of Korean film industry

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2911423

It was August 2008, and the film production company KM Culture was struggling to find investment for a new movie. The project had been in pre-production for three years and had a strong script, but investors were hesitant.

The company finally found hope in a “cultural content” loan provided by the Korea Export Insurance Corp.

Although the criteria for the application were stricter than private investors would have demanded, KM Culture was able to secure 2 billion won ($1.7 million) from the KEIC, a large part of the film’s 9 billion won production cost.

That movie was the sports drama Take Off, the smash hit released earlier this year that attracted 8.4 million viewers, making it the sixth most successful film in Korean history by number of tickets sold.

It’s become a key success story for how government support can benefit Korea’s cultural industries.

The profit of the average Korean film has fallen in recent years, and as audiences turned back to Hollywood blockbusters over Korean films, investors started to avoid local moviemakers. That’s when state-run financial institutions including the Export-Import Bank of Korea and the Korea Export Insurance Corp. stepped in, providing loans since last year.

“The government thought it was more effective to provide financial support to produce better movies rather than protectionist measures,” said Yang Choong-mo at the Ministry of Strategy and Finance, referring to the screen quota that requires theaters to show local films. Since last year the government has poured 34 billion won into the film industry.

“The screen quota is important, but more importantly we need money to make films,” said Lee Nam-hee, an executive at KM Culture.

The new paradigm is changing the way the profits are distributed too. Previously, most of the profits went to distributors and investors, leaving the production company with a small amount. The producers enjoy a bigger share using government loans.

“As the profit is returned to the production company it makes it that much easier for it to work on its next film,” said Chung Jae-hee, an executive at Taewon Entertainment.

Chae Sang-jin at the Exim Bank added the loans also make producers more frugal. “Because the production company must pay back the loan, it makes the company more cautious when spending.”

The system is also helping with film exports. “As the loan conditions includes export, the production companies keep factors to help the film go abroad in mind,” said Son Ji-mo, on the global sales team at the KEIC.

By Choi Hyeon-chul

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Local film industry weathers recession

http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/NEWKHSITE/data/html_dir/2009/07/14/200907140048.asp

It seems the film industry has emerged as one of the few recession-proof industries while the economy struggles to regain its footing. The stats are out, showing that Korean films recorded their best ever performance, with a 4.7 percent increase in revenue from ticket sales compared to a year earlier.

An estimated 72 million Koreans went to the movies in the first six months of this year raking in about 477 billion won ($370 million) in revenue. Although attendance fell short of 2006’s record-setting figure of 77.4 million, profits during the first half of this year saw a conservative increase from 473 billion won that year.

This was due to theater chains heavily implementing discounts through deals with credit card companies and holding special promotions which shaved the prices off tickets.

According to a recent report released by the Korean Film Council, the market share for Korean films saw a 7.5 point jump from last year’s 37.2 percent.

Light, broad-minded fare like the Cha Tae-hyun comedy “Speed Scandal” and “Secret Couple” scored big with audiences, while films dealing with topical subject matters, such as the homosexuality in “A Frozen Flower,” also met with success.

But the talk of the town this year has not been about “Oldboy” director Park Chan-wook’s vampire yarn “Thirst” nor Bong Joon-ho’s critically heralded thriller “Mother.”

It was the unprecedented success of “Old Partner,” a low-budget documentary about an old man and his dying ox, that the film industry was talking about. Its emergence shook the domestic film industry, causing them to take notice of the highly lucrative potential of the long-neglected “indie” market.

The film was produced with a paltry budget of 100 million won but raked in more than 19 billion won, becoming the most profitable Korean film in history. The film opened in just 20 theaters and through word of mouth, the film attracted a total figure of more than 2.9 million.

However, some industry insiders feel the film’s sensational box office run won’t do much in changing production trends within the filmmaking community.

“Old Partner was an exceptional case and I don’t think the film’s success will push production companies to rush out there to finance low-budget independent films, but it definitely raised some eye-brows and put the spotlight on a side of the film industry that a lot of folks have disregarded,” said KOFIC’s Han Seung-hee.

The two highly publicized and hyped domestic films by the auteur duos of Park Chan-wook and Bong Joon-ho also took home modest box office loot with “Thirst” attracting a little more than 2 million and “Mother” bringing in just fewer than 3 million.

Although the two films didn’t make the splash they set out for, overseas distribution looks to become another source of revenue stream where avant-garde cinema has a bigger draw than in the domestic market.

Currently, the black comedy “Running Turtle” starring Kim Yun-seok is looking more like it might have sturdy enough legs to become another sleeper hit. The film opened June 11 and has thus far collected 2 million in ticket sales.

With these domestic films posting good numbers, have Korean films taken back their command of the industry from the Hollywood? Hardly.

Since the government reduced the screen quota regulation in 2006, Hollywood films have maintained their foothold in the Korean film market.

Although market share of American films decreased from 54.4 percent last year to 45.1 percent this year, there is still another half of the year left and Hollywood has more to unleash onto domestic movie screens. This is only the beginning, as the current market share for North American films is the result of two Hollywood blockbusters, “Terminator: Salvation” and “Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen.” The fourth Terminator film recorded a mammoth 57.2 percent box-office share, while the Transformers sequel posted a staggering 78.9 percent.

“Revenge of the Fallen” attracted 3.45 million in just seven days after its opening on June 24. It currently stands to become the year’s biggest box office draw, just as the first film was in 2007.

The Michael Mann-helmed John Dillinger crime saga “Public Enemies,” starring Johnny Depp as the notorious American crime-wave era robber and Christian Bale as the FBI agent hot on his heels, will open in August. That same month will bring another set of Hasbro toys - and the cartoon series - to life in the Stephen Sommers-directed G.I. Joe.

The big-budget actioner will see Hallyu-star Lee Byung-hun make his Hollywood debut as a ninja assassin. Speaking of which, Korean continental superstar Rain will make his official debut in North America headlining the Wachowski Brothers’ “Ninja Assassin,” directed by James McTiegue.

Finally, Quentin Tarantino’s long-anticipated World War II film “Inglourious Basterds,” starring a near unrecognizable Brad Pit will open later this year.

Korean films going up against these heavyweights can only hope domestic movie-goers show them some love too.

To be fair, the domestic line-up isn’t looking too shabby either. A slew of promising films are ready to roll out this summer and beyond.

“The Five Sense of Eros,” an omnibus film with an all-star cast directed by five of Korea’s most promising directors, along with the comedy “National Team” starring Ha Jung-woo about a rag-tag group of would-be ski-jumpers are the most notable as of now.

But the big budget disaster film “Haeundae,” starring an ensemble cast including Sul Kyoung-gu, Ha Ji-won, Park Joong-hoon and Uhm Jung-hwa is the one to watch. Budgeted at a 1.6 billion won, it is the priciest domestically financed Korean film of all time.

For more serious fare, a film based on the true accounts of the No Gun Ri massacre during the Korean War is set to open later this year. Korean films outlining the country’s tumultuous past have often translated into box office bounty in recent years.

With so many films from both sides grappling for the wallets of Korean movie-goers, it will surely be interesting to see who comes out the winner by the end of the year.

But for moviegoers, this year will truly be a good year at the movies.

By Song Woong-ki


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