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Box Office: Set Me Free, Cart, Interstellar

By Korea Herald

Published : Nov. 14, 2014 - 21:10

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Set Me Free (Korea)

Opened Nov. 13
Drama. Directed by Kim Tae-yong

Seventeen-year-old Young-jae (Choi Woo-sik) lives in the “House of Isaac,” a group home sponsored by a Catholic church, with younger children who have nowhere else to go. Not knowing when he will be kicked out of the house because of his age, he pretends to be a good and pious boy before his foster parents. Though he steals donated goods from the church to sell to his friends, he also sings in the church choir, voluntarily does chores and studies to attend a seminary to become a priest.


Cart (Korea)

Opened Nov. 13
Drama. Directed by Boo Ji-young

The film depicts temporary employees of a mega supermarket chain who are facing unfair layoffs. They are ordinary women, including Sun-hee (Yum Jeong-ah), a mother of two, Hye-mi (Moon Jung-hee), a single mother, and Soon-rae (Kim Young-ae), a janitor. When their jobs are at risk, the three and junior manager Dong-jun (Kim Gang-woo) gather with other employees to fight against the company’s exploitative practices.


Interstellar (U.S.)

Opened Nov. 6
Sci-Fi. Directed by Christopher Nolan

Christopher Nolan’s new end-of-the-world space epic takes place at a time when humanity is facing extinction as a result of drought and famine. A mysterious wormhole is discovered in space that will enable mankind to survive. A group of explorers, which includes Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) and Amelia Brand (Anne Hathaway), is given the mission of saving humankind by finding an inhabitable new planet.


My Dictator (Korea)

Opened Oct. 30
Drama. Directed by Lee Hae-jun

On July 4, 1972, the North-South Joint Statement was adopted, creating the possibility of peaceful reunification of the Korean Peninsula. As a result, the first inter-Korean summit was planned to be held and then-South Korean president Park Chung-hee prepared to meet the North Korean leader Kim Il-sung for the first time. In the movie, the Korean CIA decides to stage an imaginary summit, and stand-in actor Sung-geun (Sol Kyung-gu) is selected to play the North Korean leader. Sung-geun is so swept up in his new role that he imitates all of Kim’s gestures and facial expressions. However, the summit is canceled and Sung-geun no longer has to play the role. Twenty years have passed, but Sung-geun still inhabits Kim Il-sung’s persona, to the frustration of his son Tae-sik (Park Hae-il). 


My Love My Bride (Korea)

Opened Oct. 8
Romance, Comedy. Directed by Im Chan-sang

A remake of the popular 1990 movie, “My Love My Bride” centers on a newlywed couple, poet Young-min (Jo Jung-suk) and art teacher Mi-young (Shin Min-ah). The couple tie the knot after being madly in love for four years, but the sweet honeymoon period is short-lived as they soon begin to face the realities of married life. Small troubles and misunderstandings pile up and they begin to wonder whether their marriage is worth saving.