- Source: Moby Dick (2011 film)
Moby Dick (Korean: 모비딕; RR: Mobidik) is a 2011 South Korean thriller film written by Park In-je and Park Shin-kyu, directed by Park In-je, and starring Hwang Jung-min, Jin Goo, Kim Min-hee and Kim Sang-ho.
Plot
In winter 1994, an explosion occurs at the fictional Balam Bridge on the outskirts of Seoul and is attributed to terrorists. Social affairs reporter Lee Bang-woo (Hwang) begins to investigate the case when an old friend, Yoon-hyuk (Jin), hands him some secret documents and claims that the explosion was committed intentionally by the government. Lee teams up with fellow journalists Sung Hyo-kwan (Kim Min-hee) and Son Jin-ki (Kim Sang-ho) to pursue the truth. Their investigation reveals what seems to be a secret group that operates the government, and they begin to unravel a string of conspiracies that become far deadlier than they anticipated.
Cast
Hwang Jung-min as Lee Bang-woo
Jin Goo as Yoon-hyuk
Kim Min-hee as Sung Hyo-kwan
Kim Sang-ho as Son Jin-ki
Han Soo-yeon as Seo Eun-sook
Kim Min-Jae as Kim Yong-sung
Lee Geung-young as Professor Jang
Jung Man-sik as Nam Seon-soo
Jo Hee-bong as Im Jik-sa
Bae Seong-woo as President Maeng
Ahn Gil-kang as Detective Ma
Kim Bo-yeon as Director Jo
Production
The film is the feature directing debut of Park In-je, grand prizewinner of the 2003 Mise-en-Scene Genre Film Festival. Park was working on a screenplay about a reporter when he came across an account of Private Yun Seok-yang, a soldier at the Defense Security Command of Korea’s Armed Forces. In 1990 Yun deserted his camp, carrying a floppy disk that contained a list of national leaders, including former presidents, religious leaders, politicians, and social activists, that the DSC had been illegally investigating; he made a declaration of conscience and revealed the contents of the disk at a press conference. Moby Dick, loosely based on Yun’s story, follows a journalist’s attempts to investigate a secret organization that controls the government. The title Moby Dick alludes to Herman Melville's novel Moby-Dick by conjuring up an overwhelming entity whose size makes it impossible to see all at once; Moby Dick was also the name of a café near Seoul University that was used by the DSC to investigate ordinary citizens. Starring actor Hwang Jung-min interviewed bureau-level reporters to help prepare for his role.
The film was shot during the coldest winter in South Korea in 30 years. Shooting began in mid-October 2010 and ended in February 2011, with the cast and crew enduring the cold for five months.
Reception
The film was released on June 9, 2011, to generally positive reviews for its 90s-era settings, moody cinematography, and cast performances. It grossed around $3 million at the South Korean box office.
Accolades
References
External links
Moby Dick at IMDb
Moby Dick at HanCinema
Moby Dick on Rotten Tomatoes
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Moby Dick (film 2011)
- L'Art d'aimer
- New York Film Critics Circle Awards 1956
- Amerika Serikat
- Kim Bo-yeon
- National Board of Review Awards 1956
- Lee Hee-joon
- Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
- Jung Man-sik
- Jin Goo
- Moby Dick (2011 film)
- Moby Dick (2010 film)
- Moby Dick (1956 film)
- Adaptations of Moby-Dick
- Ishmael (Moby-Dick)
- Moby Dick (2011 miniseries)
- Moby Dick (disambiguation)
- Moby Dick (1998 miniseries)
- Captain Ahab
- Moby Dick (cantata)