- Source: So Yong Kim
So Yong Kim (born 1968) is an American independent filmmaker. She has made four feature films: In Between Days, Treeless Mountain, For Ellen, and Lovesong. So Yong Kim is a recipient of the New York Foundation’s Video Artist Grant, Puffin Grant, MacDowell Colony Media Fellow for the National Endowment for the Arts and the Sleipnir Nordik Arts Travel Grant. She has exhibited her installations and films/videos in Austin, Chicago, New York, London, Marseilles, Reykjavik, Milwaukee, Gothenburg, Osnabruck, and Tokyo.
Early life
She was born in Busan, South Korea, in 1968 and moved to Los Angeles, California to live with her mother at the age of 12. She studied painting, performance and video art at the Art Institute of Chicago, where she earned her MFA.
Career
In 2003, Kim produced the award-winning Icelandic feature Salt, directed by her husband and creative partner Bradley Rust Gray.
In 2006, Kim was featured on the list of the «25 Filmmakers to Watch» in Filmmaker Magazine.
In 2007, Kim received the Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival for her debut feature In Between Days. Loosely inspired by her own youth, the film was shot in Toronto and mostly improvised by its teenage cast members, whose awkward, raw romance and alienation from their surroundings were expressed through intimate digital photography. The film was acclaimed by the critics and won the Special Jury Prize at the 2007 Sundance Festival, together with the FIPRESCI International Critics’ Prize in Berlin, the LA Critics’ Prize and Best Film and Best Actress Prizes in Buenos Aires.
Treeless Mountain in 2008 followed the same dramatic thread, and was based on a story of abandonment and two little girls’ capacity for recovery, in a film that Village Voice called «one of the best films about childhood ever made». The script was supported by the Atelier at Cannes, the Sundance Institute’s Writers and Directors Labs and the Pusan Promotion Plan. Treeless Mountain won the Adelaide Film Festival's Feature Fiction Award in 2009.
In 2009, So Yong Kim also took part in the omnibus film Chinatown Film Project.
Kim's film For Ellen, starring Paul Dano, premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
In 2014, Kim released Spark and Light, a short film starring Riley Keough which was commissioned by fashion house Miu Miu as part of their ongoing series Women's Tales.
In 2016, Kim's film Lovesong premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. The film, about two best friends who fall in love, reunited her with Jena Malone (who appeared in For Ellen) and Riley Keough. Additionally, Kim's first foray into directing television began in 2016 with Queen Sugar, and she has since directed episodes of Transparent, American Crime, The Good Fight, Halt and Catch Fire, Vida, On Becoming a God in Central Florida, and Tales from the Loop. In 2016, Kim also directed the music video for Mitski's "A Burning Hill."
In 2021, she directed four episodes of the limited series, Dr. Death.
Personal life
Kim is married to Bradley Rust Gray since 1999. The couple have two children.
Filmography
See also
List of female film and television directors
List of LGBT-related films directed by women
References
External links
So Yong Kim at IMDb
2009 Bomb Magazine interview of So Yong Kim by Ryan Fleck
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kim So-hyun
- Kim Jong-un
- Kim Ji-eun
- Kim So-yeong
- Jung Yong-hwa
- Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born
- Miracle in Cell No. 7 (film 2013)
- Kim Il-sung
- Jang Ki-yong
- Kim Tae-hee
- So Yong Kim
- Wilderness (2023 TV series)
- Kim Ung-yong
- For Ellen
- Jim Yong Kim
- Lovesong (film)
- Roar (2022 TV series)
- Dr. Death (2021 TV series)
- Kim Yong-gun
- Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award