MBC Drama Thank You 고맙습니다 (2007) rebroadcasted on AZN TV
MBC Drama Thank You
장혁 張赫 Jang Hyuk currently making his first American film with Singaporean actress Fann Wong 范文芳 in America called "Dance of the Dragon". Before before doing that, his first production post his return from his military service (along the same time as Song Seung Hun 송승헌) his comeback 16 episode drama with MBC was "THANK YOU" 고맙습니다 Komapseumnida a big hit with the Korean audiences earlier this year.
AZN Rebroadcast it this time in the 9-10:30pm slot (EST) last night. I missed the first episode again! (The first time around my sister did not like it and told me not to watch it. I was in the midst of my "COFFE PRINCE" 커피프린스 1호점 marathon at that point back in September). I am glad they are repeating it as I can watch it again.
"Thank You" is a touching Korean Drama about a troubled young man Dr. Min Gi-Suh who goes to Blue Island to escape his past. The love of his life died in his arms, he has a troubled past, but he is also a talented doctor. Her final wish was to have him apologize to a young mother and daughter for her unknowingly giving"tainted" blood donation to the little girl. There he meets the simple but pretty single mom Lee Young Shin who rents out a room to him during his stay. She struggles because her daughter is HIV positive- the very cute and optimistic 8 year old Bom. She is the daughter of her first love Choi Suk-Hyun, but Young Shin refuses to acknowledge this fact. Young Shin and Bom live with her father Mr. Lee (Lee Byoung Gook). He has Alzheimer's and gets upset if he is not addressed as Mr. Lee. Plus he only remembers Young Shin's deceased brother and wife and does not recognize Bom as his granddaughter or Young Shin as his daughter.
In this drama the arrogant Dr. Min Gi-Suh learned that his life is not half that bad. He is around Young Shin and realizes he is very lucky. Due to her positive outlook despite many life adversities, he sees the beauty of her soul. Meanwhile, her first love Choi Suk-Hyun realizes his affections for Young Shin once more after Dr. Min Gi-Suh's interest in Young Shin.
I really loved the little girl who played Bom. She was a bright light throughout the drama with her infectious smile and sunny personality. This drama is different from the tearjerker romances and crazy dating dramas. After his absence from dramas, Jang Hyuk here did an amazing job and added a mature air to his performance as the troubled Min Gi Suh. For his fans, he is still appealing as ever. Gong Hyo Jin as Young Shin does a great job. Big departure from her role in "Ruler of your World" or "Sang Doo go to School". She is not the conventional Kdrama beauty but she does have the acting chops for this role.
I am glad I am having another chance to catch this drama.
CAST:
Min Gi-suh (29) / Jang Hyuk 장혁 (Success Story of a Bright Girl 명랑소녀 성공기)
Lee Young-shin (27) / Gong Hyo-jin 공효진 (Sang Doo go to School 상두야,학교가자!)
Lee Bom (Sam-wol, 8) / Suh Shin-aeChoi Suk-hyun (29) / Shin Sung-rok 신성록Mr. Lee (Lee Byung-gook, 70) / Shin Gu 신구
Monday, December 17, 2007
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Undoing-the movie premiere in Boston area
Last Friday night, I went to the UNDOING reception with some of the producers and star Sung Kang at Casablanca restaurant. My friend AC and I got a chance to talk to Sung Kang at length. I have talked to Roger Fan (another actor who is his friend and colleague in a few other films together) before. Sung believes internet is the wave of the future and has started to uploading mini videos on his website recently to tell a fun story. He does not want to write too much about his life or have his fans feel as if he is trying to "sell them" something. He had a great sense of humor and was fun to chat with.
Then we went to catch the film upstairs at the Brattle Theater. I just found out that Karin Chien, one of the producers also produced my friend's short film. She was great and very articulate! Philip (former engineer) now producer mentioned that the movie is coming out on DVD very soon (within a month or two).
Then we went to catch the film upstairs at the Brattle Theater. I just found out that Karin Chien, one of the producers also produced my friend's short film. She was great and very articulate! Philip (former engineer) now producer mentioned that the movie is coming out on DVD very soon (within a month or two).
Married to the Mafia-Enemy in Law (KR Movie 2005)
Married to the Mafia-Enemy in Law (KR 2005)
Kim Won-Hee and Shin Hyun-Jun in Marrying the Mfia 2. (credit:lovehkfilm.com)
Marrying the Mafia #2 Enemy in law, I caught last night. According to some net research, this sequel surpassed Married to the Mafia aka Gamunui Yeonggwang. It was a fun movie that had its comedic moments but what made the movie was the acting by the lad Shin Hyun Jun and Kim Won Hee.
Cast:
Shin Hyun-Jun, Kim Won-Hee, Kim Su-Mi, Tak Jae-Hun, Lim Hyeong-Jun, Kong Hyeong-Jin, Shin Yi
(Sanjuro 2006 review from http://www.lovehkfilm.com/panasia/marrying_the_mafia_2.html.)
Jeong Young-Ki, director of the Asian horror flick The Doll Master, tries his hand at comedy with Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law, the hit 2005 sequel that was so popular it actually surpassed the impressive box office receipts of the 2002 film that spawned it. This wacky gangster comedy shifts its focus to a new mob family and centers on the marital situation of the clan's number one son, Jang In-Jae, played by actor Shin Hyun-Jun, last seen in High Dharma 2 and Face. It seems that In-Jae's mobster mother (Kim Soo-Mi) takes an active role in her three sons' lives. Whether it's faking her own kidnapping just to time their rescue attempts or simply trying to marry off In-Jae before he becomes an old bachelor, Mama Jang clearly wants to see her sons do well. However, the blind dates aren't working out for In-Jae, as no woman seems to compare to Jin-Sook, his beloved high school sweetheart. As luck would have it, after yet another unfulfilling blind date, In-Jae catches a glimpse of Kim Jin-Kyung (Kim Won-Hee), an attractive young woman who just so happens to be the spitting image of the dearly departed Jin-Sook But despite their similarities, Jin-Kyung isn't In-Jae's girlfriend come back to life, but is instead a chief prosecutor! In-Jae spies her just prior to her participation in a sting operation to take down a nefarious gangster, a man whose organization just so happens to be a rival of the Jang family. But when Jin-Kyung ends up drugged and defenseless, it's lucky for her that In-Jae is in the vicinity to step in and save the day. With Jin-Kyung knocked out cold, In-Jae has little option but to take her home until she awakens, a decision which, of course, results in the expected Three's Company-esque misunderstandings before a real romance between the two can properly develop.
Strangely enough, from this point forward, the film becomes increasingly bipolar in terms of tone. In one respect, it becomes a wacky "anything goes" comedy worthy of the best and worst of Wong Jing's oeuvre, full of out-of-place boob jokes and over-the-top penis sight gags that literally have to be seen to be believed. In the case of the latter, at one point, In-Jae's member gets injured so badly that he's forced to wear protective gear during his day-to-day activities. Here's the rub: the resultant bulge makes it seem like he's happy to see, well, just about everyone. The former joke involves legal eagle Jin-Kyung stealing some confiscated Chinese breast enhancement cream, which she eventually applies to her pixyish frame, only to find that there really was a reason why her office confiscated it in the first place. The film also contains some amusing flashbacks, including one in which In-Jae suspiciously resembles a spastic Howie Mandel! Other jokes rely heavily on Korean pop culture references, which while perhaps funny for native speakers, will likely go directly over the heads of non-Korean audience members, this reviewer included. Even so, there are plenty of funny moments that aren't lost in translation, one of the best being a situation in which the ultra suave In-Jae comically loses his cool when a romantic trip to the movie theatre goes horribly awry.
But even as all this utter zaniness is going on, there's actually something quite curious occurring in between the laughs - a fairly serious story about a mobster who's grown tired of his criminal life and longs for something more. Genuinely worried about what his lawyer girlfriend thinks and concerned for her career, he turns over a new leaf, but finds himself thwarted at every turn, first by his own brothers, and later by his criminal rivals. It's a testament to Shin Hyun-Jun's acting ability that these constant shifts in tone don't prove off-putting. Even as his character's personality haphazardly shifts to suit the demands of the script, he's able to deliver a convincing performance as a badass gangster, as a horny and somewhat infantile man-child, and even as a handsome romantic lead. Shin Hyun-Jun plays each "type" with considerable aplomb, which helps make the somersaults in tone bearable, if not entirely believable.
The conflicts, both personal and professional, within the film comes to a climactic head when a vicious crime boss frames the three Jang brothers, and they are put on trial by Jin-Kyung's colleague/wannabe boyfriend (Kong Hyeong-Jin). After learning of In-Jae's criminal past, will Jin Kyung defend her boyfriend in court? Or will she leave him high and dry? Of course, anyone even remotely familiar with filmic conventions will know exactly what will happen next, as the film climaxes with a trial that's somewhat reminiscent of Stephen Chow's early courtroom comedies. Sure, the ending comes courtesy of an altogether convenient deus ex machina, but if you've been laughing hard enough at that point, Marrying the Mafia 2 probably won't warrant that level of scrutiny.
Perhaps the most refreshing thing about Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law is how the character of the Jang family matriarch is handled. From her overdone makeup and larger than life presence in the opening sequence, one almost expects a cutthroat Mafioso-type, who would stop at nothing to break up her son's relationship with the lawyer, perhaps even going to extreme measures to protect her own interests. At the very least, considering how Korean comedies and melodramas tend to play out, one would expect some major league conflict between mother and daughter-in-law that may or may not result in reconciliation. But here, that's not the case at all. Thankfully, the film doesn't ask its audience to jump through these tired formulaic hoops. Rather than give us the typical domineering old harridan who thinks that no woman - particularly the story's heroine - is good enough for her boy, we get a mother who just wants her son to be happy. When he's found the love of his life, she just has to figure out a way to make her family come off as the Korean version of the Cleavers, a deception that proves to have fairly comic results.
Although the plot could use some work, and the romance could have been developed further, the fact remains that I did laugh quite a bit during Marrying the Mafia 2. It's wacky fluff with an occasional serious edge, but thanks to a strong performance from leading man Shin Hyun-Jun, Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law is a gangster comedy worth taking a shot at. (Sanjuro 2006)
Kim Won-Hee and Shin Hyun-Jun in Marrying the Mfia 2. (credit:lovehkfilm.com)
Marrying the Mafia #2 Enemy in law, I caught last night. According to some net research, this sequel surpassed Married to the Mafia aka Gamunui Yeonggwang. It was a fun movie that had its comedic moments but what made the movie was the acting by the lad Shin Hyun Jun and Kim Won Hee.
Cast:
Shin Hyun-Jun, Kim Won-Hee, Kim Su-Mi, Tak Jae-Hun, Lim Hyeong-Jun, Kong Hyeong-Jin, Shin Yi
(Sanjuro 2006 review from http://www.lovehkfilm.com/panasia/marrying_the_mafia_2.html.)
Jeong Young-Ki, director of the Asian horror flick The Doll Master, tries his hand at comedy with Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law, the hit 2005 sequel that was so popular it actually surpassed the impressive box office receipts of the 2002 film that spawned it. This wacky gangster comedy shifts its focus to a new mob family and centers on the marital situation of the clan's number one son, Jang In-Jae, played by actor Shin Hyun-Jun, last seen in High Dharma 2 and Face. It seems that In-Jae's mobster mother (Kim Soo-Mi) takes an active role in her three sons' lives. Whether it's faking her own kidnapping just to time their rescue attempts or simply trying to marry off In-Jae before he becomes an old bachelor, Mama Jang clearly wants to see her sons do well. However, the blind dates aren't working out for In-Jae, as no woman seems to compare to Jin-Sook, his beloved high school sweetheart. As luck would have it, after yet another unfulfilling blind date, In-Jae catches a glimpse of Kim Jin-Kyung (Kim Won-Hee), an attractive young woman who just so happens to be the spitting image of the dearly departed Jin-Sook But despite their similarities, Jin-Kyung isn't In-Jae's girlfriend come back to life, but is instead a chief prosecutor! In-Jae spies her just prior to her participation in a sting operation to take down a nefarious gangster, a man whose organization just so happens to be a rival of the Jang family. But when Jin-Kyung ends up drugged and defenseless, it's lucky for her that In-Jae is in the vicinity to step in and save the day. With Jin-Kyung knocked out cold, In-Jae has little option but to take her home until she awakens, a decision which, of course, results in the expected Three's Company-esque misunderstandings before a real romance between the two can properly develop.
Strangely enough, from this point forward, the film becomes increasingly bipolar in terms of tone. In one respect, it becomes a wacky "anything goes" comedy worthy of the best and worst of Wong Jing's oeuvre, full of out-of-place boob jokes and over-the-top penis sight gags that literally have to be seen to be believed. In the case of the latter, at one point, In-Jae's member gets injured so badly that he's forced to wear protective gear during his day-to-day activities. Here's the rub: the resultant bulge makes it seem like he's happy to see, well, just about everyone. The former joke involves legal eagle Jin-Kyung stealing some confiscated Chinese breast enhancement cream, which she eventually applies to her pixyish frame, only to find that there really was a reason why her office confiscated it in the first place. The film also contains some amusing flashbacks, including one in which In-Jae suspiciously resembles a spastic Howie Mandel! Other jokes rely heavily on Korean pop culture references, which while perhaps funny for native speakers, will likely go directly over the heads of non-Korean audience members, this reviewer included. Even so, there are plenty of funny moments that aren't lost in translation, one of the best being a situation in which the ultra suave In-Jae comically loses his cool when a romantic trip to the movie theatre goes horribly awry.
But even as all this utter zaniness is going on, there's actually something quite curious occurring in between the laughs - a fairly serious story about a mobster who's grown tired of his criminal life and longs for something more. Genuinely worried about what his lawyer girlfriend thinks and concerned for her career, he turns over a new leaf, but finds himself thwarted at every turn, first by his own brothers, and later by his criminal rivals. It's a testament to Shin Hyun-Jun's acting ability that these constant shifts in tone don't prove off-putting. Even as his character's personality haphazardly shifts to suit the demands of the script, he's able to deliver a convincing performance as a badass gangster, as a horny and somewhat infantile man-child, and even as a handsome romantic lead. Shin Hyun-Jun plays each "type" with considerable aplomb, which helps make the somersaults in tone bearable, if not entirely believable.
The conflicts, both personal and professional, within the film comes to a climactic head when a vicious crime boss frames the three Jang brothers, and they are put on trial by Jin-Kyung's colleague/wannabe boyfriend (Kong Hyeong-Jin). After learning of In-Jae's criminal past, will Jin Kyung defend her boyfriend in court? Or will she leave him high and dry? Of course, anyone even remotely familiar with filmic conventions will know exactly what will happen next, as the film climaxes with a trial that's somewhat reminiscent of Stephen Chow's early courtroom comedies. Sure, the ending comes courtesy of an altogether convenient deus ex machina, but if you've been laughing hard enough at that point, Marrying the Mafia 2 probably won't warrant that level of scrutiny.
Perhaps the most refreshing thing about Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law is how the character of the Jang family matriarch is handled. From her overdone makeup and larger than life presence in the opening sequence, one almost expects a cutthroat Mafioso-type, who would stop at nothing to break up her son's relationship with the lawyer, perhaps even going to extreme measures to protect her own interests. At the very least, considering how Korean comedies and melodramas tend to play out, one would expect some major league conflict between mother and daughter-in-law that may or may not result in reconciliation. But here, that's not the case at all. Thankfully, the film doesn't ask its audience to jump through these tired formulaic hoops. Rather than give us the typical domineering old harridan who thinks that no woman - particularly the story's heroine - is good enough for her boy, we get a mother who just wants her son to be happy. When he's found the love of his life, she just has to figure out a way to make her family come off as the Korean version of the Cleavers, a deception that proves to have fairly comic results.
Although the plot could use some work, and the romance could have been developed further, the fact remains that I did laugh quite a bit during Marrying the Mafia 2. It's wacky fluff with an occasional serious edge, but thanks to a strong performance from leading man Shin Hyun-Jun, Marrying The Mafia 2: Enemy in Law is a gangster comedy worth taking a shot at. (Sanjuro 2006)
Friday, December 7, 2007
More 9 end and 2 outs
More 9 end and 2 outs (MBC 2007)
The fans out there are great! Thanks to them and their hard work I have been able to appreciate a lot of Korean dramas! I have to say I am appreciative. From the English translation of Coffee Prince 커피프린스 1호점, or Coffee Prince(based on popular internet story to runaway hit of South Korea this past summer) to many websites and great fans translating the dramas into various languages/forums and websites plus doing synopsis and making MV, translating the OST. I am very appreciative. 감사합니다!
It is good to see Lee Jung Jin 이정진 stars in his first drama after his military time with 9 End 2 Outs (or better translated 2 outs 9th inning/Bottom of the ninth) with Soo Ae 박수애 . I saw him as Alex Hong as Kim Rae Won's 김래원 adversary in "Love Story in Harvard" (러브스토리 인 하버드; Rubeusutori in Habeodeu 16 episodes 2004) for Kim Tae Hee's 김태희 affections. I liked his chemistry with Soo Ae in this drama. Their interplay as friends for over 30 years. In the first episode, they both get a text message on New Year's Eve. After not talking for a long period of time, they wonder why they got message from Nam San. Then they realize their promise to each other at the end of their 20's to meet at Nam San. This drama uses baseball to describe the ups and downs of singles in their 30's.
I enjoyed this drama a lot, it is not the sad "heavy" crying dramas that I first starting watching thanks to my mother "Beautiful Days" (아름다운 날들 / Ah-reum-dah-woon Nal-deul 24 episodes 2001) or "Autumn Love (aka Endless Love)"(16 episodes 2000). I like the fact it is about relationships with loved ones and friends. The ins and outs of a variety of people whose lives are interwined.
One person did an extensive summary of the first episode which should be bottom of the 9th inning 2 outs:
http://asiandramaddict.wordpress.com/2007/08/09/9-end-2-outs-episode-1/ detailed summary of episode 1
http://www.flickr.com/photos/leejungjin_fanclub/sets/72157600582915353/ Lee Jung Jin's fanclub FLICKR site with photos from this drama
Episode titles (subbed/translated by S2):
1st Inning: 30... My youth is coming to an end at 9 ends and 2 outs
#2nd Inning: Timing
#3rd Inning: Baseball is an art of time.
#4th Inning: "title was not translated"
#5th Inning: 30...The banquet has ended
#6th Inning: "All ball players should quit when it starts to feel as if all the baselines run uphill." Babe Ruth
#7th Inning: Strike Zone (Jung Joo returns back from America)
#8th Inning: Goodbye my Major League: love that may have been my last love (Chun Hee pays off her debt. Nan Hee accepts Jung Joo's proposal)
#9th Inning: The return a player that backed out (Nan Hee learns Jung Joo lied about not making Major League, lists all the loves in Nan Hee's past)
#10th Inning: The After effect of an Injury (Chun Hee tries to apologize to Nan Hee's colleague to not sue Lotte/Nan Hee and Hyun Tae date at resort-he admits he likes her) their first kiss
#11th Inning: On the 15th of every month, there is a Civil Defense Exercise (Nan Hee avoids Hyun Tae post their vacation at the resort)
#12th Inning: It seems ike our friendship is coming to an end at the bottom of the 9th inng 2 outs (Plans to see "LOVE LETTER" with Hyun Tae but Yoon Sung Ah has returned)
#13th Inning: Reality & Wrong Intuition, Truth & Imagination, and getting poisoned
#14th Inning: The wish green grass still remembers your story
#15th Inning: Thank you super stars (Nan Hee misses Hyun Tae and not used to living alone now, she gets drunk and sees him at his home outside and she kisses him and tells him she loves him Nan Hee misses being selected as an essay writer)
#16th Inning (finale): Baseball is a game of chance.(Jung Joo makes major league, and Nan Hee and Hyun Tae start dating, receive letter from themselves at 20 Author Shin want Nan Hee as her editor)
The fans out there are great! Thanks to them and their hard work I have been able to appreciate a lot of Korean dramas! I have to say I am appreciative. From the English translation of Coffee Prince 커피프린스 1호점, or Coffee Prince(based on popular internet story to runaway hit of South Korea this past summer) to many websites and great fans translating the dramas into various languages/forums and websites plus doing synopsis and making MV, translating the OST. I am very appreciative. 감사합니다!
It is good to see Lee Jung Jin 이정진 stars in his first drama after his military time with 9 End 2 Outs (or better translated 2 outs 9th inning/Bottom of the ninth) with Soo Ae 박수애 . I saw him as Alex Hong as Kim Rae Won's 김래원 adversary in "Love Story in Harvard" (러브스토리 인 하버드; Rubeusutori in Habeodeu 16 episodes 2004) for Kim Tae Hee's 김태희 affections. I liked his chemistry with Soo Ae in this drama. Their interplay as friends for over 30 years. In the first episode, they both get a text message on New Year's Eve. After not talking for a long period of time, they wonder why they got message from Nam San. Then they realize their promise to each other at the end of their 20's to meet at Nam San. This drama uses baseball to describe the ups and downs of singles in their 30's.
I enjoyed this drama a lot, it is not the sad "heavy" crying dramas that I first starting watching thanks to my mother "Beautiful Days" (아름다운 날들 / Ah-reum-dah-woon Nal-deul 24 episodes 2001) or "Autumn Love (aka Endless Love)"(16 episodes 2000). I like the fact it is about relationships with loved ones and friends. The ins and outs of a variety of people whose lives are interwined.
One person did an extensive summary of the first episode which should be bottom of the 9th inning 2 outs:
http://asiandramaddict.wordpress.com/2007/08/09/9-end-2-outs-episode-1/ detailed summary of episode 1
http://www.flickr.com/photos/leejungjin_fanclub/sets/72157600582915353/ Lee Jung Jin's fanclub FLICKR site with photos from this drama
Episode titles (subbed/translated by S2):
1st Inning: 30... My youth is coming to an end at 9 ends and 2 outs
#2nd Inning: Timing
#3rd Inning: Baseball is an art of time.
#4th Inning: "title was not translated"
#5th Inning: 30...The banquet has ended
#6th Inning: "All ball players should quit when it starts to feel as if all the baselines run uphill." Babe Ruth
#7th Inning: Strike Zone (Jung Joo returns back from America)
#8th Inning: Goodbye my Major League: love that may have been my last love (Chun Hee pays off her debt. Nan Hee accepts Jung Joo's proposal)
#9th Inning: The return a player that backed out (Nan Hee learns Jung Joo lied about not making Major League, lists all the loves in Nan Hee's past)
#10th Inning: The After effect of an Injury (Chun Hee tries to apologize to Nan Hee's colleague to not sue Lotte/Nan Hee and Hyun Tae date at resort-he admits he likes her) their first kiss
#11th Inning: On the 15th of every month, there is a Civil Defense Exercise (Nan Hee avoids Hyun Tae post their vacation at the resort)
#12th Inning: It seems ike our friendship is coming to an end at the bottom of the 9th inng 2 outs (Plans to see "LOVE LETTER" with Hyun Tae but Yoon Sung Ah has returned)
#13th Inning: Reality & Wrong Intuition, Truth & Imagination, and getting poisoned
#14th Inning: The wish green grass still remembers your story
#15th Inning: Thank you super stars (Nan Hee misses Hyun Tae and not used to living alone now, she gets drunk and sees him at his home outside and she kisses him and tells him she loves him Nan Hee misses being selected as an essay writer)
#16th Inning (finale): Baseball is a game of chance.(Jung Joo makes major league, and Nan Hee and Hyun Tae start dating, receive letter from themselves at 20 Author Shin want Nan Hee as her editor)
Labels:
9 ends 2 outs,
9회말 2아웃,
Asian Drama,
Korean drama,
Lee Jung Jin,
MBC Kdrama,
Soo Ae
Thursday, December 6, 2007
9회말 2아웃/9 End 2 Outs-Korean Drama
9회말 2아웃 (AKA: Bottom of the 9th 2 Out) I watched three episodes and I liked it a lot. It is romance and it chronicles two friends who have known each other from childhood. This drama chronicles their lives being single in their 30's. This drama uses Baseball as a metaphor to cover young 30's and their love lives. From their relationships with friends, colleagues and their loves. It is not that simple as you fill your life with memories, experiences from your personal hardships and happiness. For Hong Nan Hee (Soo Ae), she is considered a failure by her mom for not being married or having a "well paying" job. Nan Hee wants to be a published author!She works for a small manhwa publishing company for low pay and is dating a university baseball player who is 8 years her junior. Her childhood friend Byun Hyun Tae is a head project leader for an advertising firm and to the women around him he has it all-looks, aparment, car and job. He is a player and loves women. But to his childhood friend Nan Hee, she does not see him in that way as a "man" and the same for him. They have known each other for 30 years since childhood and their parents are good friends. I am going to "slowly watch" it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcZaFp_4mRw Byul (별) - Fly Again (9 End 2 Outs OST)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L2LGdfq5_s&feature=related 9 End 2 Outs 9회말 2아웃 - Arirang Showbiz Extra (subbed in English)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggj5_KI37po&feature=related Trailer preview of (9 End and 2 Outs)
Title: 9회말 2아웃 / 9 End 2 Outs
Also known as: 2 Outs in the 9th Inning
(MBC 2007 drama)
Main Cast
Lee Jung Jin 이정진 as Byun Hyung Tae
Soo Ae 박수애 as Hong Nan Hee
Lee Tae Sung as Kim Jung Joo (Nan Hee's young baseball BF)
Hwang Ji Hyun as Yoon Sung Ah (Hyung Tae's cheot sarang)
Lee Sang Woo as Lee Joon Mo (Nan Hee's cheot sarang)
Extended Cast
Jung Da Hye as Kim Nam Jung
Lee Doo Il as Im Nak Bin
Jo Eun Ji as Kim Choon Hee (Lotte card worker/friend of Hyung Tae and Nan Hee)
Hwang Suk Jung as Jang Choo Ja
Kim Chang Sook as Kim Shin Ja
Jang Joon Hwi as Park Sang Hoon (Husband and friends with Hyung Tae and Nan Hee)
Son Jung Min as Jun Mi Kyung
Lee Hee Do as Byun Jung Woo
Park Hae Young as Park Ji Sun
Im Yoon Ah as Shin Joo Young (young author/admirer of Jung Joo)
Yoon Hye Jung
Yoon Ye Hee
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcZaFp_4mRw Byul (별) - Fly Again (9 End 2 Outs OST)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L2LGdfq5_s&feature=related 9 End 2 Outs 9회말 2아웃 - Arirang Showbiz Extra (subbed in English)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggj5_KI37po&feature=related Trailer preview of (9 End and 2 Outs)
Title: 9회말 2아웃 / 9 End 2 Outs
Also known as: 2 Outs in the 9th Inning
(MBC 2007 drama)
Main Cast
Lee Jung Jin 이정진 as Byun Hyung Tae
Soo Ae 박수애 as Hong Nan Hee
Lee Tae Sung as Kim Jung Joo (Nan Hee's young baseball BF)
Hwang Ji Hyun as Yoon Sung Ah (Hyung Tae's cheot sarang)
Lee Sang Woo as Lee Joon Mo (Nan Hee's cheot sarang)
Extended Cast
Jung Da Hye as Kim Nam Jung
Lee Doo Il as Im Nak Bin
Jo Eun Ji as Kim Choon Hee (Lotte card worker/friend of Hyung Tae and Nan Hee)
Hwang Suk Jung as Jang Choo Ja
Kim Chang Sook as Kim Shin Ja
Jang Joon Hwi as Park Sang Hoon (Husband and friends with Hyung Tae and Nan Hee)
Son Jung Min as Jun Mi Kyung
Lee Hee Do as Byun Jung Woo
Park Hae Young as Park Ji Sun
Im Yoon Ah as Shin Joo Young (young author/admirer of Jung Joo)
Yoon Hye Jung
Yoon Ye Hee
Labels:
9회말 2아웃,
Asian Drama,
Freeze Korean Drama,
Lee Jung Jin,
MBC Kdrama,
Soo Ae
Undoing to Premiere in Boston
Friday night (tomorrow) is the start of a limited three day engagement of the latest movie by Chris Chan Lee "Undoing" at the Brattle Theater in Cambridge near the Harvard Campus. There is a special pre-movie reception at Casablanca Restaurant the star Sung Kang (The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift) and the producers will be on hand. After the first showing, there will be a special Q & A for attendees too.
"Undoing" also stars Russell Wong, Kelly Hu, Leonardo Nam, Bobby Lee.
The synopsis (wikipedia):
After a mysterious year-long absence, SAM KIM (Sung Kang) returns to Los Angeles determined to find redemption from the past. His mentor and only friend, DON OSA (Tom Bower), is a retired gangster with a parallel desire to leave the former world behind. But as Sam tries to balance revenge with reconciliation, he is drawn back to the shadowy world he left behind. Can Sam undo his mistakes before losing what he came back to save?
The story unfolds as we learn about the night, a year ago, when Sam and JOON (Leonardo Nam) meet for a joyride through Koreatown. Joon has more serious plans for the evening, but they soon go terribly wrong, leaving Sam alone and lost in a world he desperately wants to escape.
A year later, Sam returns to the scene of the crime, and with Don’s help, finishes what he should have done a year ago. But just as things appear to be resolved, we find out that Sam came back not only to avenge Joon’s death, but also to win back his love, VERA (Kelly Hu). Sam locates Vera working as a waitress/bar manager at the Red Room, and they’re suddenly thrown back into their impossible desires for each other; two people who seem hopelessly isolated from the world around them and from each other. Abandoned a year ago, Vera resents Samuel and now finds herself deep in debt and also emotionally entangled with the owner of the Red Room, RANDALL (Jose Zuniga). With no family and no outside resources, Sam must return to the Koreatown streets of his past in attempt to settle Vera’s obligations, as well as his own debts to the past. His reckless naiveté leads him to hustle a corrupt, veteran police detective named KASAWA (Mary Mara). Unbeknownst to others, Kasawa and Sam’s mentor Don share a history in a former generation of inner-city crime. Though the two have led their lives in opposing order: one in law enforcement and the other in crime; they share a unique bond in their attempt to find comfort in the niche they’ve spent a lifetime carving out. But Sam stirs chaos and, in classical noir form, “good” and “bad” are not so easy to differentiate; each character struggles with the conflicting impulses of good and evil in the world around him, and in themselves.
"Undoing" also stars Russell Wong, Kelly Hu, Leonardo Nam, Bobby Lee.
The synopsis (wikipedia):
After a mysterious year-long absence, SAM KIM (Sung Kang) returns to Los Angeles determined to find redemption from the past. His mentor and only friend, DON OSA (Tom Bower), is a retired gangster with a parallel desire to leave the former world behind. But as Sam tries to balance revenge with reconciliation, he is drawn back to the shadowy world he left behind. Can Sam undo his mistakes before losing what he came back to save?
The story unfolds as we learn about the night, a year ago, when Sam and JOON (Leonardo Nam) meet for a joyride through Koreatown. Joon has more serious plans for the evening, but they soon go terribly wrong, leaving Sam alone and lost in a world he desperately wants to escape.
A year later, Sam returns to the scene of the crime, and with Don’s help, finishes what he should have done a year ago. But just as things appear to be resolved, we find out that Sam came back not only to avenge Joon’s death, but also to win back his love, VERA (Kelly Hu). Sam locates Vera working as a waitress/bar manager at the Red Room, and they’re suddenly thrown back into their impossible desires for each other; two people who seem hopelessly isolated from the world around them and from each other. Abandoned a year ago, Vera resents Samuel and now finds herself deep in debt and also emotionally entangled with the owner of the Red Room, RANDALL (Jose Zuniga). With no family and no outside resources, Sam must return to the Koreatown streets of his past in attempt to settle Vera’s obligations, as well as his own debts to the past. His reckless naiveté leads him to hustle a corrupt, veteran police detective named KASAWA (Mary Mara). Unbeknownst to others, Kasawa and Sam’s mentor Don share a history in a former generation of inner-city crime. Though the two have led their lives in opposing order: one in law enforcement and the other in crime; they share a unique bond in their attempt to find comfort in the niche they’ve spent a lifetime carving out. But Sam stirs chaos and, in classical noir form, “good” and “bad” are not so easy to differentiate; each character struggles with the conflicting impulses of good and evil in the world around him, and in themselves.
Steps/The Whole City is Dancing 舞動全城 (TVB Drama 2007)
I recently started watching "Steps/The Whole City is Dancing 舞動全城" a TVB production when I went to see A Mei at Mohegan Sun on the bus. I luckily that night asked my mom about it. Well luck would have it, she had just rented it. So she is going to let me watch it before returning to her video store rental place. I am very behind on TVB productions. Growing up I watched a lot of them but not anymore.
I find it cool they have Chinese Characters when they have the dramas as I can practice my reading and I am glad I understand Cantonese too.
So far I have watched three episodes. I love anything related to dancing. There is ball room dancing so that has kept my interest. The characters in this drama are alright but it is the dancing I like the best in this drama.
Cast: Liu Bernice Jan 廖碧兒 , Steven Ma 馬浚偉, Tsui Tsz Shan 徐子珊, Lai Yiu Cheung 黎耀祥 , Chen Fa La 陳法拉 , Matthew Ko 高鈞賢 , Claire Yiu 姚嘉妮 , Stephen Wong 黃長興
http://tvb4abcs.blogspot.com/2007/09/tvb-steps.html (blog with downloadable episodes)
SYNOPSIS (wikipedia)
Exotic Salsa, Fussy CHA CHA CHA,
Flirtatious Tango, A Mixture of Dancing Harmony
Ballroom dancing emphasizes rhythm and mutual trust between the partners. If we can apply the same philosophy to our daily communication practices, we are likely to find ourselves in greater harmony and our lives will surely be enriched.
Dance lover Lee Sum Ying (Bernice Liu) is going to audition for a place in the Hong Kong Dance Company. Before the audition starts, she bumps into her brother Lee Lik Keung (Wayne Lai) and his colleague Ching Ka Tsun (Steven Ma) at a supermarket, where she is accidentally run over by Tsun’s trolley and hurts herself. Due to her arm injury, Ying does not perform well in the audition and fails the assessment. At the invitation of Tsun’s mother, Ying goes to teach Latin dance at a local community center, in the hope that she can save up enough money for further studies abroad. Ying has a very warm personality and is well-liked by many of her students. Her popularity eventually lands her a teaching job at a dance workshop, which makes another dance tutor, Ching Ka Man (Fala Chen), incredibly jealous. Man dislikes Ying so much that she means to make things difficult for her in every possible way.
Yeung Sze Man (Kate Tsui), the daughter of Tsun’s boss, is appointed to take charge of the company. In order to improve staff morale, Man has announced a series of reforms. She needs her staff to learn dancing so that they can get more physical exercise. Ying is hired as the dance teacher of Tsun and his colleagues. Tsun, who has some knowledge in dancing, has soon resumed his interest in this expressive form of art. Ying and Tsun have gradually developed a close bond with each other and even decided to take part in an international dance competition as partners, but the pair’s relationship is put to the test when Tsun and Keung later fall out over business matters. The discord between the two men has put Ying in dilemma…
I find it cool they have Chinese Characters when they have the dramas as I can practice my reading and I am glad I understand Cantonese too.
So far I have watched three episodes. I love anything related to dancing. There is ball room dancing so that has kept my interest. The characters in this drama are alright but it is the dancing I like the best in this drama.
Cast: Liu Bernice Jan 廖碧兒 , Steven Ma 馬浚偉, Tsui Tsz Shan 徐子珊, Lai Yiu Cheung 黎耀祥 , Chen Fa La 陳法拉 , Matthew Ko 高鈞賢 , Claire Yiu 姚嘉妮 , Stephen Wong 黃長興
http://tvb4abcs.blogspot.com/2007/09/tvb-steps.html (blog with downloadable episodes)
SYNOPSIS (wikipedia)
Exotic Salsa, Fussy CHA CHA CHA,
Flirtatious Tango, A Mixture of Dancing Harmony
Ballroom dancing emphasizes rhythm and mutual trust between the partners. If we can apply the same philosophy to our daily communication practices, we are likely to find ourselves in greater harmony and our lives will surely be enriched.
Dance lover Lee Sum Ying (Bernice Liu) is going to audition for a place in the Hong Kong Dance Company. Before the audition starts, she bumps into her brother Lee Lik Keung (Wayne Lai) and his colleague Ching Ka Tsun (Steven Ma) at a supermarket, where she is accidentally run over by Tsun’s trolley and hurts herself. Due to her arm injury, Ying does not perform well in the audition and fails the assessment. At the invitation of Tsun’s mother, Ying goes to teach Latin dance at a local community center, in the hope that she can save up enough money for further studies abroad. Ying has a very warm personality and is well-liked by many of her students. Her popularity eventually lands her a teaching job at a dance workshop, which makes another dance tutor, Ching Ka Man (Fala Chen), incredibly jealous. Man dislikes Ying so much that she means to make things difficult for her in every possible way.
Yeung Sze Man (Kate Tsui), the daughter of Tsun’s boss, is appointed to take charge of the company. In order to improve staff morale, Man has announced a series of reforms. She needs her staff to learn dancing so that they can get more physical exercise. Ying is hired as the dance teacher of Tsun and his colleagues. Tsun, who has some knowledge in dancing, has soon resumed his interest in this expressive form of art. Ying and Tsun have gradually developed a close bond with each other and even decided to take part in an international dance competition as partners, but the pair’s relationship is put to the test when Tsun and Keung later fall out over business matters. The discord between the two men has put Ying in dilemma…
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