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yunjin kim Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Tarantino Teases 'Kill Bill 3' - Here's Five People Who Should Star

Filed under: RumorMonger », Fandom », DIY/Filmmaking », Newsstand », Quentin Tarantino », Remakes and Sequels »


The energetic Quentin Tarantino was out and about promoting Inglourious Basterds in Italy, and seeing as he was in the homeland of his hostess spaghetti western, he teased everyone by promising Kill Bill 3. Again. Bad Taste reports that while on Italian talkshow Parla Con me, he prompted his hostess, Serena Dandini, to ask him whether there would be a continuation of the Bride's saga. When I say prompted, I mean it literally. "You didn't ask me whether there will be a third installment, a Kill Bill Vol 3!" Dandini obliged him by asking, and Tarantino said "Yes! The Bride will fight again ... I want ten years to pass between the second one and the third one. Two reasons. I think Uma [Thurman] and I needed a ten year break because the first one was so hard. The second one is that I love the character a lot. I just really really love her. And I think she deserves ten years of peace. ... I put her through a lot in those first two movies, and I wanted her to have a nice, peaceful life for ten years. I want her to put up her sword, and have some peace. And in ten years, something will happen to make her fight again."

Tarantino has been teasing us with a continuation for awhile now (usually themed around the daughter of Vernita Green), so it's hard to get too excited. It's also awfully hard to make predictions as to who or what would cause the Bride to fight again as she did leave most of her enemies in pieces. But we can cast our votes as to who we would like to see as the Bride's villains. Here's five of the people I'd like to see in a Tarantino flick, and I hope some of you have even cooler suggestions ...

Cinematical Seven: Asian-American Actors Ready to Break Out

Filed under: Fandom », Cinematical Seven », Lists », Cinematical Indie »

Clockwise from upper left: Daniel Wu, Grace Park, Ken Leung, Maggie Q, Yunjin Kim, Sung Kang, Roger Fan


Justin Lin's Finishing the Game brought the point home strongly: Too often, Asian-American actors are relegated to bit parts (the food delivery guy, gangster #3, mysterious prostitute) simply because of their race. Of course, it can be argued persuasively that all actors of color are denied opportunities because of their appearance. As independent film producer Karin Chien pointed out in a television interview, though, people will say: "What about Jackie Chan? Or what about Jet Li? ... Asian cinema is a completely different thing altogether. It's a bit difficult, as an Asian-American producer, to fight for the cause of Asian-American films when we are grouped together with Asian cinema."

This list is an attempt to identify just a few of the Asian-American actors who have not yet crossed over to broad, mainstream recognition but who caught my eye this year. (Among others, you won't find Lucy Liu, John Cho or Kal Penn here; they're all folks that have established varying degrees of stardom.) It's also intended to serve as a starting point for Cinematical readers to name other talented Asian-American performers: Who do you like, who should be better known, who is ready to break out as a star?

Roger Fan

Fan made an impression in Justin Lin's Better Luck Tomorrow as the class leader who lured Ben (Parry Shen) into a life of crime. Before that, he played parts like Student #2 (Party of Five), Hood #1 (Blue Haven) and Student #15 (ER). His next two parts after BLT were not much bigger: Executive #1 (Stuck on You) and News Anchor #1 (D.E.B.S.). With his performance as Bruce Lee-imitator Breeze Loo, who lives in a delusional dream world in which he's a much bigger star, Fan brought a human touch to his comedy. In person, Fan is so funny he can make you spit; at a post-screening Q&A in Dallas, he had the crowd in stitches. Fan's comic genius deserves a much bigger stage -- and more starring roles.

It's Time for a New View on 'Seven Days'

Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Thrillers », Deals », Newsstand », Remakes and Sequels »

No, this isn't a remake of the remake of The Ring, which was once titled Seven Days. (Although these days, a move like that wouldn't surprise me.) In step with the current trend, this English-language remake is coming from a fresh film from South Korea. In fact, they should have just waited a week to share this news -- the original just opened there on Wednesday. The Hollywood Reporter has announced that Seven Days has been picked up by Summit Entertainment for a Hollywood remake. The original (which feels strange to type since the film is currently on the screen) stars Lost's Yunjin Kim "as a lawyer who must free a convicted killer in just one week or else see her kidnapped daughter murdered." Where's Alan Shore when you need him?

Summit is feeling pretty confident about this -- they've made the deal for a low six figures, and they plan to begin filming in 2008. Now, either Summit expects the strike to end soon, or they are going to tap some non-WGA writer. Or, maybe a direct translation? Now that would be interesting. On the acting side of things, considering the fact that Kim has a career stateside, I imagine there's a chance she could reprise this role for the remake as well, kind of like Penelope Cruz revisiting Abre los Ojos with Vanilla Sky. Whatever the case, we'll have to see how the strike pans out, and just when this flick actually gets cast and heads into production.

 
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