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Box Office: Jupiter Ascending, Big Hero 6, Gangnam 1970

By Korea Herald

Published : Jan. 30, 2015 - 21:25

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Jupiter Ascending (U.S., Australia)


Opening Feb. 5
Adventure, SF. Directed by Andy and Lana Wachowski

The Wachowski brothers, credited with the hit movies “The Matrix” and “Cloud Atlas,” are delivering another mind-boggling sci-fi thriller, “Jupiter Ascending.” When Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis), a miserable Chicago-born janitor, encounters Caine Wise (Channing Tatum), a genetically engineered military man, she finds out that she is a royalty and destined to rule the Earth. She is the only person who can save the Earth from the hands of the alien Balem Abrasax (Eddie Redmayne). Korean actress Bae Doo-na will makes her second appearance in a Wachowski film, after “Cloud Atlas” in 2012.


Big Hero 6 (U.S.)

Opened Jan. 21
Animation, Action, Comedy. Directed by Don Hall, Chris Williams

Inspired by the Marvel comic of the same name, “Big Hero 6” is an animation produced by the Walt Disney Animation Studios, the creator of “Frozen” and “Tangled.” Set in the fictional city of San Fransokyo -- a futuristic hybrid of San Francisco and Tokyo -- the story centers on a 14-year-old robotics prodigy named Hiro (Ryan Potter). Together with his fluffy, lovable, rubber-skinned robot Baymax and a group of friends, he fights against evil to save the world. Daniel Henney, a Korean-American actor, provides the voice for Hiro’s brother Tadashi.


Gangnam 1970 (Korea)

Opened Jan. 21
Action, Drama. Directed by Yoo Ha

The final installment of director Yoo Ha’s “street series” trilogy, this noir action flick is set against the backdrop of an exploding real estate market in Seoul’s Gangnam district in the 1970s, a turbulent era when the military strongman Park Chung-hee ruled the country. When two childhood friends, Kim Jong-dae (Lee Min-ho) and Baek Yong-ki (Kim Rae-won), are forced to become enemies, misunderstanding, revenge and conspiracy ensues. 


Chronicle of a Blood Merchant (Korea)

Opened Jan. 14
Drama. Directed by Ha Jung-woo

Based on renowned Chinese author Yu Hua’s 1995 novel of the same name, “Chronicle of a Blood Merchant” is set in a small village in Korea in the 1950s and ’60s. Heo Sam-gwan (Ha Jung-woo), a poor but good-hearted man, falls in love at first sight with Heo Ok-ran (Ha Ji-won), the most beautiful girl in the village. In order to win Ok-ran’s heart, Sam-gwan sells his blood and buys food and gifts for her. Sam-gwan makes a brave marriage proposal, and they settle down and have three boys. But one day a rumor surfaces that the eldest boy has a different father.


Ode to My Father (Korea)

Opened Dec. 17
Drama. Directed by Yoon Je-kyoon

“Ode to My Father” is the story of Deok-soo (Hwang Jung-min), a man who lived through Korea’s tumultuous 1950s and ’60s. When the Korean War breaks out, Deok-soo is separated from his younger sister and his mother and becomes the breadwinner of the family. From a young age, he takes all kinds of difficult odd jobs to provide for his mother and siblings. In search of opportunities, he travels the globe, working as a coal miner in Germany, where he falls in love with a migrant nurse named Young-ja (Kim Yun-jin).