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Innocent Steps

Innocent Steps
Innocent Steps film poster.jpg
Hangul
Hanja 댄서의
Revised Romanization Daenseoui sunjeong
McCune–Reischauer Taensŏ ŭi sunjŏng
Directed by Park Young-hoon
Produced by Choi Sun-sik
Heo Jae-cheol
Lee Jae-hyeok
Shin Jae-hyeon
Written by Park Gye-ok
Starring Moon Geun-young
Park Gun-hyung
Music by Choi Man-sik
Cinematography Kim Jong-yun
Edited by Shin Min-kyung
Distributed by Show East
Release date
  • 28 April 2005 (2005-04-28)
Running time
110 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean
Mandarin
Box office US$13,195,678

Innocent Steps (Hangul댄서의 순정; Hanja댄서의 純情; RRDaenseoui sunjeong; lit. "Dancer Purity") is a 2005 South Korean film directed by Park Young-hoon. Another English title for the movie is "Dancing princess".

There's a director's cut version of the movie featuring additional 17 minutes of footage and alternative cut of the dance scene at competition.

Former acclaimed dancer Na Young-sae (Park Gun-hyung) attempts to make a comeback after his opponent, Hyun-soo (Yoon Chan), purposely injures him at a dance competition. At the suggestion of dance studio manager Ma Sang-doo (Park Won-sang), Young-sae then brings to Korea Jang Chae-min (Moon Geun-young), an ethnic Korean from China whom he presumes is a renowned, talented dancer. To his surprise, Young-sae learns Chae-ryn knows nothing about dancing and her soon-to-be married, older sister, Jang Chae-min, is the talented dancer. With only three months until the national dance championship, Young-sae trains Chae-min, vowing to turn her into a world-class dancer.

The film received mixed to negative reviews. Variety reviewer, Derek Elley favorably compared the film to Dance with the Wind, citing Moon Geun-young and Park Gun-hyung's performances, but wrote "the plot holds no water."Koreanfilm.org critic Tom Giammarco called the film "disappointing and cliche," and Darcy Paquet credited the film's box office success to Moon's celebrity status and noted that the ending was disappointing: "We never even really get to see the knock-em-dead dance sequence that you'd expect."

In 2015, Culture Cap Korea announced that it will co-produce a Chinese remake, which will cast a Chinese actor and a Korean actress. 60% of filming will take place in China, and 40% in Busan.



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