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Revision as of 03:41, 6 December 2015

Doomsday Book
Korean theatrical poster
Directed byKim Jee-woon
Yim Pil-sung
Written byYim Pil-sung
Lee Hwan-hee
Kim Jee-woon
Jang Jong-ah
Produced byChoi Hyeon-muk
Kim Myeong-eun
Oh Yeong-hun
StarringRyoo Seung-bum
Kim Kang-woo
Song Sae-byeok
CinematographyJo Sang-yun
(A Brave New World)
Kim Ji-yong
(The Heavenly Creature)
Ha Seong-min
(Happy Birthday)
Edited byIm Seon-gyeong
(A Brave New World)
Mun Se-gyeong
(The Heavenly Creature)
Nam Na-yeong
(Happy Birthday)
Production
companies
Zio Entertainment
TimeStory Group
Distributed byLotte Entertainment
Release date
  • April 5, 2012 (2012-04-05)
Running time
115 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
BudgetUS$5 million
Box office₩704,635,000

Doomsday Book (Korean인류멸망보고서; RRInryu myeongmang bogoseo; lit. "Report on the Destruction of Mankind") is a 2012 South Korean science-fiction anthology film directed by Kim Jee-woon and Yim Pil-sung. It tells three unique stories of human self-destruction in the modern high-tech era, while displaying an alternative form of genuine humanity and compassion. A Brave New World is a political satire about a viral zombie outbreak; The Heavenly Creature philosophizes on whether a robot can achieve enlightenment; and in Happy Birthday a dysfunctional family bonds in the midst of an apocalypse.[1][2][3]

It won the top prize at the 2012 Fantasia Festival. The jury honored it with the Cheval Noir Award for best film for "its intelligence and originality."[4]

Production

Doomsday Book was originally conceived as a three-part anthology film to be directed by Kim Jee-woon, Yim Pil-sung, and Han Jae-rim.[5][6] Filming began on May 21, 2006, but shortly after Kim and Yim had shot their segments, financing fell apart and the film was put on hold. Han's third segment titled "The Christmas Gift" (a SF musical retelling of O. Henry's short story, about a woman's primal desires emerging when confronted with her last chance to survive after witnessing the end of the world) was never shot, and the two thirds remained unreleased.

But in 2010 with backing from new investor TimeStory, shooting restarted quietly with Yim and Kim collaborating on a new third installment to the trilogy with Yim as the lead director and Kim in more of a "guest director" role.[7][8][9]

It was pre-sold to six countries at the Berlin Film Market and screened at the Cannes Film Festival.[10]

Synopsis

A Brave New World

(Korean멋진 신세계; RRMutjin Sinsegye)

Left alone after his parents go abroad on a holiday with his sister, geeky research scientist Yoon Seok-woo (Ryoo Seung-bum) disposes of the accumulated rubbish in the family flat, which includes a rotten apple. Via the waste disposal system, the apple enters the food chain via recycled feed for cows. Seok-woo and his date, Kim Yoo-min (Go Joon-hee), end up eating the toxic beef during a barbecue one evening, and soon they and the rest of the population become flesh-eating zombies.[11]

Directed by Yim Pil-sung. Written by Yim Pil-sung, Lee Hwan-hee. Also starring Kim Roi-ha (as Seok-woo's father), Lee Kan-hee (as Seok-woo's mother), Hwang Hyo-eun (as Seok-woo's sister), Ma Dong-seok (as a disorderly student), Jung Woo (as Joong-dong), Choi Deok-moon (as cook), Kim Mu-yeol (as Ji-ho), Bong Joon-ho (as Lee Joon-ho), Park Ho-young (as Park Ho-young), and Yoon Je-moon (as Joo Je-moon).

The Heavenly Creature

(Korean천상의 피조물; RRChunsangui Pijomul)

Park Do-won (Kim Kang-woo), a young technician employed by robotics corporation UR International, is called out to check an RU-4 robot named In-myung (voiced by Park Hae-il) employed at a Buddhist monastery. In-myung has become Buddhist and claims to have achieved enlightenment; the monks want to know whether he really is one or is just a robot with a technical glitch. Do-won gives In-myung a clean bill of technical health but says he is unqualified to do any more. Later, UR chairman Kang (Song Young-chang), and his team led by research executive Min (Kim Seo-hyung), arrive at the monastery to decommission In-myung, on the grounds that he is an old series. Do-won and Bodhisattva Hye-joo (Kim Gyu-ri) then try to save the robot from its imminent demise.[11]

Written and directed by Kim Jee-woon. Original story by Park Seong-hwan. Also starring Jo Yoon-hee (as Ji-eun),[12] Lee Bong-gyu (as Monk Joo-ji), and Jung Jae-jin (as Spiritual Leader).

Happy Birthday

(Korean해피 버스데이)

Young Park Min-seo (Jin Ji-hee) secretly orders a replacement 8 Ball from a strange website so her pool-obsessed father (Lee Seung-joon) and nerdy uncle Hwan (Song Sae-byeok) won't notice she's damaged it. She throws the original ball out of the window and it drops down a hole in the street. Two years later, South Korea is threatened by an asteroid that looks exactly like a giant version of the 8 Ball. In their underground shelter, the family tries to cancel the order via the extraterrestrial website. Ten years later, the adult Min-seo (Bae Doona)[13] and her family emerge from their shelter.[11]

Directed by Yim Pil-sung. Written by Yim Pil-sung, Jang Jong-ah. Original story by Park Su-min. Also starring Yoon Se-ah (as Min-seo's mother), Ryu Seung-soo (as male newscaster), Lee Young-eun (as female newscaster Lee Eun-kyung), John Kim (as former NASA researcher), Kevin Lee (as Ministry of Science and Technology resource person), Oh Jae-min (as male home shopping channel host), Kim Ok-jin (as female home shopping channel host), Jung Chul (as home shopping model 1), Jo Seung-min (as home shopping model 2), Nam Yoon-young (as home shopping model 3), Go Joon-hee (as weather girl), Lee Kyung-ho (as signs scholar), and Lee Sang-joon (as Galaxy courier).

Awards and nominations

2012 Fantasia Festival[4]

  • Cheval Noir Award

2013 Asian Film Awards[14]

  • Nomination - Best Visual Effects - Kwak Tae-yong, Hwang Hyo-kyun, Im Jung-hoon

References

  1. ^ "Doomsday Book". M-Line Distribution. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  2. ^ "Human Extinction Report suspenseful trailer released". StarN News. 16 March 2012. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  3. ^ Choi, Eun-hwa (5 April 2012). "Preview: The End of Mankind is Near in Doomsday Book". enewsWorld. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  4. ^ a b Hong, Lucia (13 August 2012). "Doomsday Book scoops up top prize at Fantasia International Film Festival in Canada". 10Asia. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  5. ^ "K-Film News & Box Office: 2006, May 4". Twitch Film. 4 May 2006. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  6. ^ "K-Film News & Box Office: 2006, May 22". Twitch Film. 22 May 2006. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  7. ^ Brown, Todd (27 January 2012). "First Image From Yim Pil-Sung And Kim Jee-Woon's THE DOOMSDAY BOOK". Twitch Film. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  8. ^ "Korea's M-Line opens Doomsday Book". Screen International. 11 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  9. ^ Son, Jin-ah (13 April 2012). "Human Extinction Report Behind photos from filming sets revealed". StarN News. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  10. ^ Hong, Lucia (29 March 2012). "Kim Jee-woon, Yim Pil-sung's Doomsday Book pre-sold to 6 countries". 10Asia. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  11. ^ a b c Elley, Derek (24 October 2012). "Doomsday Book". Film Business Asia. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  12. ^ Oh, Seol-Hye (10 April 2012). "Human Extinction Report Cho Yoonhee's amazing transformation". StarN News. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  13. ^ Son, Jin-ah (16 April 2012). "Human Extinction Report Bae Doona's unique costume". StarN News. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  14. ^ Shackleton, Liz (16 January 2013). "Mystery, Gangster head Asian Film Awards nominations". Screen International. Retrieved 2013-01-25.