Shin Sang-ok Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Quickhits: Shin Biopic, Singing Nemo, Apocalypto Moved, Macy to Road Freaking Hogs
Filed under: Animation », Comedy », Music & Musicals », Casting », Deals », Disney », RumorMonger », Family Films », Newsstand », Remakes and Sequels »
Odds and ends to brighten/darken/muddle your Tax
Day:- William H. Macy has become the latest misguided actor to be persuaded by what must be an unimaginably large paycheck to appear in Wild Hogs, the John Travolta/Tim Allen/ Martin Lawrence buddy flick about suburban men who decided to recapture their youth by forming an informal motorcycle gang. The hilarity is nearly overwhelming, isn't it?
- Continuing the trend of completely illogical movies making the transition to the stage, a musical version of Finding Nemo is in the works. (And I mean really in the works. There are sets being built.) The fact that the movie takes place almost entirely underwater will, I'm sure, not be a problem at all. And there's no need for concern -- according to Disney representatives, the show will be a "dazzling production that combines puppets, dancers, acrobats and animated backdrops." So there. It opens later this year at Disney's Animal Kingdom -- get those plane tickets now. [via Luxo]
- Barrie Osborne (who produced the Lord of the Rings series, among copious other films) is already in talks to make a movie about the life of Korean director Shin Sang-ok, whose death we reported last week. While this seems to be happening obscenely fast, the real question is why it's taken this long -- I mean, the guy was kidnapped by Kim Jong-Il, for the love of God. To make movies for him! Variety reports that Osborne got Shin's approval to make a biopic several years ago, but the production obviously failed to movie ahead at the time.
- Disney has pushed black the release date for Mel
Gibson's latest obscure foreign language epic, Apocalypto, from August to December of this year. While the company
insists the change is due to some ever-popular production delays (the weather has been bad, apparently), the move
conveniently changes the film's competition from The Ant
Bully, which is likely to open big just because parents will take their kids, and potential box office bonanza
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of
Ricky Bobby to We Are Marshall (mmm ... movies
about tragic, real-life events) and The
Holiday, which I know nothing about, apart from the fact that it apparently involves Jude Law. God bless production delays.
RIP: Shin Sang-ok
Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Newsstand », Obits », Cinematical Indie »

Little-known in the West, Korean director Shin Sang-ok was one of the driving forces behind the rise of the now-thriving Korean film industry. Trained in Japan, Shin returned to Korea after World War II, when the national industry was in its fledging stages, and started his own wildly prolific production company just a few years later, leading Korean film into its Golden Age. Though none of his work is available in the US, it is held in high regard at home, where he is "one of those rare ... directors [receiving both] popular and critical acclaim."
If Shin's name is known abroad at all, it's for what happened later in his career when, while working in Hong Kong in 1978, he was kidnapped by representatives of North Korean president (and massive movie fan) Kim Jong-Il, who wanted the director to revitalize hid own country's flagging film industry. Shin escaped eight years later while on a trip abroad, and actually spent some time in Hollywood (producing forgettable fare under the name Simon Sheen) before returning to South Korea in 2000.
Shin was 80 when he died, and had been suffering from liver problems.









