Sentences with phrase «jee woon»

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS «The Age of Shadows» («Miljeong»), Kim Jee woon, South Korea (North American Premiere) «All I See Is You,» Marc Forster, Thailand (World Premiere) «American Honey,» Andrea Arnold, USA (North American Premiere) «American Pastoral,» Ewan McGregor, USA (World Premiere) «Asura: The City of Madness,» Kim Sung - soo, South Korea (World Premiere) «Barakah Meets Barakah» («Barakah yoqabil Barakah»), Mahmoud Sabbagh, Saudi Arabia (North American Premiere) «Barry,» Vikram Gandhi, USA (World Premiere) «Birth of the Dragon,» George Nolfi, USA / China / Canada (World Premiere) «The Birth of a Nation,» Nate Parker, USA (International Premiere) «Bleed for This,» Ben Younger, USA (Canadian Premiere) «Blue Jay,» Alex Lehmann USA (World Premiere) «Brimstone,» Martin Koolhoven, Netherlands / Germany / France / Belgium / Sweden / United Kingdom (North American Premiere) «BrOTHERHOOD,» Noel Clarke, United Kingdom (International Premiere) «Carrie Pilby,» Susan Johnson, USA (World Premiere) «Catfight,» Onur Tukel, USA (World Premiere) «City of Tiny Lights,» Pete Travis, United Kingdom (World Premiere) «The Commune» («Kollektivet») Thomas Vinterberg, Denmark / Sweden / Netherlands (North American Premiere) «Daguerrotype» («Le Secret de la chambre noire»), Kiyoshi Kurosawa, France / Japan / Belgium (World Premiere) «A Death in the Gunj,» Konkona Sensharma, India (World Premiere) «Denial,» Mick Jackson, USA / United Kingdom (World Premiere) «Elle,» Paul Verhoeven, France (North American Premiere) «Foreign Body» («Jassad Gharib, Corps Etranger») Raja Amari, Tunisia / France (World Premiere) «Frantz,» François Ozon, France / Germany (Canadian Premiere) «The Handmaiden» («Agassi»), Park Chan - wook, South Korea (World Premiere) «Harmonium» («Fuchi ni tatsu»), Kôji Fukada, Japan / France (North American Premiere) «I Am Not Madame Bovary,» Feng Xiaogang, China (World Premiere) «The Journey,» Nick Hamm, United Kingdom (North American Premiere) «King of the Dancehall,» Nick Cannon, USA / Jamaica (World Premiere) «La La Land,» Damien Chazelle, USA (Canadian Premiere) «The Limehouse Golem,» Juan Carlos Medina, United Kingdom (World Premiere) «Manchester by the Sea,» Kenneth Lonergan, USA (Canadian Premiere) «Mascots,» Christopher Guest, USA (World Premiere) «Maudie,» Aisling Walsh, Canada / Ireland (Canadian Premiere) «Neruda,» Pablo Larraín, Chile / Argentina / Spain / France (World Premiere) «Nocturnal Animals,» Tom Ford, USA / United Kingdom (North American Premiere) «The Oath,» Baltasar Kormákur, Iceland (World Premiere) «Orphan» («Orpheline») Arnaud des Pallières, France (World Premiere) «Paris Can Wait,» Eleanor Coppola, USA (World Premiere) «Paterson,» Jim Jarmusch, USA (North American Premiere) «The Salesman,» Asghar Farhadi (North American Premiere) «Salt and Fire,» Werner Herzog, Germany / USA / France / Mexico (North American Premiere) «Sing,» Garth Jennings, USA / France (World Premiere) «Souvenir,» Bavo Defurne, Belgium / Luxembourg / France (North American Premiere) «Things to Come» («L'Avenir»), Mia Hansen - Løve, France / Germany (Canadian Premiere) «Toni Erdmann,» Maren Ade, Germany (Canadian Premiere) «Trespass Against Us,» Adam Smith, United Kingdom (World Premiere) «Una,» Benedict Andrews, United Kingdom (Canadian Premiere) «Unless,» Alan Gilsenan, Canada / Ireland (World Premiere) «The Wasted Times» («Luo Man Di Ke Xiao Wang Shi»), Cheng Er, China
«The Age of Shadows (Miljeong)» (Kim Jee woon) After taking an English language detour with the dismal «The Last Stand,» Jee soon returns to Korea with this period thriller that may debut at Venice first.

Not exact matches

Director: Jee - woon Kim Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Eduardo Noriega, Johnny Knoxville, Jamie Alexander Running Time: 107 minutes Certificate: 15 Synopsis: When the leader of a drug cartel escapes...
The legendary 1980's action hero Arnold Schwarzenegger will make his long - awaited return to the big - screen with THE GOOD, THE BAD, THE WEIRD director Jee - woon Kim's upcoming actioner, THE LAST STAND.
The great Peter Stormare is in talks to appear opposite Schwarzenegger in Korean Director Jee - woon Kim's (A TALE OF TWO SISTERS) Hollywood debut.
The East Asian nation has a good shot at their first nod with their flashy Warner Bros. spy thriller «The Age of Shadows,» directed by Kim Jee - woon.
Another Korean auteur tackled the Japanese colonial period this year, but in this case in a straightforward and direct manner: Kim Jee - woon's resistance action - drama Mil - jeong (The Age of Shadows), a clear Jean - Pierre Melville homage, particularly to the sublime L'armée des ombres (Army of Shadows, 1969).
Call Me by Your Name (Luca Guadagnino, 2017) Downsizing (Alexander Payne, 2017) Dunkirk (Christopher Nolan, 2017) Logan Lucky (Steven Soderbergh, 2017) Miljeong (The Age of Shadows, Jee - woon Kim, 2016) Molly's Game (Aaron Sorkin, 2017) Muškarci ne plaču (Men Don't Cry, Alen Drljević, 2017) Okja (Bong Joon - ho, 2017) The Shape of Water (Guillermo del Toro, 2017) Sweet Country (Warwick Thornton, 2017) Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (Martin McDonagh, 2017) Wonder Wheel (Woody Allen, 2017)
Director, co-writer and co-producer Kim Jee - woon is one of the country's best filmmakers (of the gangster picture A Bittersweet Life and the outstanding horror film A Tale of Two Sisters, sloppily remade here as The Uninvited) and brings his double - barreled love of Italian - made spaghetti Westerns to the fray.
by Walter Chaw Essentially a remake of Kim Jee - woon's A Bittersweet Life shot through with oodles of late -»80s John Woo gunplay, stuntman - turned - director Chad Stahelski's John Wick is, damnit, really just so much fun.
Following the disappointment of Kim Jee - woon's The Last Stand and the lukewarm reception of Park Chan - wook's meticulous chamber piece Stoker, Bong Joon - ho has created with Snowpiercer the most accomplished overseas work of any Korean filmmaker to - date.
A great running gag in Kim Jee - woon's neo-noir A Bittersweet Life is that nobody in the Korean criminal underworld carries a gun.
After directing hit films A Tale of Two Sisters; The Good, The Bad, The Weird; and I Saw the Devil, Korean director Kim Jee - woon makes his American debut with The Last Stand (watch the new trailer here).
The ensemble piece is an assemblage of international cast and crew, including Kim Jee - woon, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rodrigo Santoro, Peter Stormare, Luis Guzman and Eduardo Noriega.
Action icon Arnold Schwarzenegger makes his much - anticipated return to the big screen in Korean director Kim Jee - woon's hard - hitting US directorial debut, THE LAST STAND.
Coming two years after Kim Jee - woon's 2008 Korean spaghetti western The Good, the Bad, the Weird, Daniel Lee's historical action epic 14 Blades offers another instance of mainstream Asian cinema attempting to give Western genre tropes a distinctly Eastern flavor.
It's like Kim Jee - woon's I Saw the Devil in that way — Yakusho even looks a great deal like Choi Min - sik, though the character he plays here is both avenging angel and serial killer.
Jee - woon and screenwriter Park Hoon - jung study the psyches of both the hero and the villain with equal interest, which makes I Saw the Devil one of the most character - driven tales of revenge ever made.
The team behind You're Next and The Guest, director Adam Wingard and writer Simon Barrett, are on board to write and direct the American remake of the 2010 Kim Jee - woon revenge thriller.
One of the greatest serial killer films ever made, Kim Jee - woon's I Saw the Devil is a bonafide masterpiece.
Directed by Korean filmmaker Kim Jee - woon, the movie not only reintroduces Schwarzenegger as an older, wiser action hero, but it harkens back to earlier films like «Commando,» when you could get away with being silly as long as it was fun.
The movie is far from Jee - woon's best work, but it's a mostly enjoyable U.S. debut that will hopefully inspire audiences to track down some of his previous films.
Kim Jee - woon is a Korean director who has been able to make dark and gruesome films («I Saw the Devil»), chilling tales («A Tale of Two Sisters») and of course, a couple of fun ones, including his Western - style flick «The Good, The Bad, The Weird,» and the Arnold Schwarzenegger comeback film «The Last Stand.»
Doomsday Book is a collaboration between Korean directors Jee - woon Kim (The Good, The Bad, The Weird, A Bittersweet Life, I Saw the Devil) and Pil - Sung Yim (Hansel and Gretel).
If you missed Arnold Schwarzenegger's return to the big screen, you're not alone; lots of folks missed Kim Jee - woon's American film debut with The Last Stand.
Its horror and thriller films are bursting with creativity, originality and a unique voice in a flooded international market, set apart by works such as Bong Joon - ho's «The Host,» Jang Cheol - soo's «Bedevilled» and Kim Jee - woon's «I Saw the Devil.»
** 1/2 / **** Image A Sound A - Extras B - starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Johnny Knoxville, Rodrigo Santoro screenplay by Andrew Knauer directed by Kim Jee - woon
Korean director Kim Jee - woon is turning to crime, coming on board to helm the movie adaptation of Ed Brubaker's «Coward.»
Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Eduardo Noriega, Jaimie Alexander, Rodrigo Santoro, Peter Stormare, Johnny Knoxville, Luis Guzman, Genesis Rodriguez, Sonny Landham, Christiana Leucas, Zach Gilford Small role: Harry Dean Stanton Director: Kim Jee - woon Screenplay: Andrew Knauer Review published January 26, 2013
The Last Stand Directed by: Kim Jee - woon Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Johnny Knoxville Rating: Not Yet Rated Release Date: January 18, 2013 TRAILER SCORE: 8/10 Thoughts by TSR: He warned us he'd be back.
The Last Stand marks the American directorial debut from Korean filmmaker, Jee - woon Kim.
The Age of Shadows I Saw the Devil / The Good the Bad and the Weird's Kim Jee - woon's latest is this espionage thriller set in 1920s Japan - occupied Korea.
I'm really hyped for the next Kim Jee - woon's film...
At the Movies Solid commercial shows, all seen at commercial venues: 45 Years (Andrew Haigh, 2015) Miljeong (Age of Shadows, Kim Jee - woon, 2016) Beasts of No Nation (Cary Jo Fukunaga, 2015) Down Under (Abe Forsythe, 2016) Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016) Hunt for the Wilderpeople (Taika Waititi, 2016) Julieta (Pedro Almodovar, 2016) La La Land (Dominic Chazelle, 2016) Hrútar (Rams, Grímur Hákonarson, 2016) Shanghai (Dibakar Banerjee, 2012) Snowden (Oliver Stone, 2016) Spear (Steven Page, 2015) Spotlight (Tom McCarthy, 2015) Trumbo (Jay Roach, 2015)
Less explicitly concerned with the present is Kim Jee - woon's The Age of Shadows which, like many other recent Korean blockbusters, is haunted by the afterlives of the Japanese occupation.
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