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Lee Jeong-hyang

Lee Jeong-hyang
Lee Jeong-hyang, Korean film director at BIFF 2011.jpg
Born (1964-04-13) April 13, 1964 (age 53)
South Korea
Occupation

Director

Screenwriter

Director

Lee Jeong-hyang (Hangul: 이청향; born April 13, 1964) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. She is best known for The Way Home (2002), a film she wrote and directed which won her numerous prestigious awards including Best Film and Best Original Screenplay at the Grand Bell Awards.

Born in South Korea, Lee attended Sogang University, majoring in French Language and Literature. She subsequently entered The Korean Academy of Film Arts (KAFA) in 1988 and was a part of its fourth graduating class.

Upon graduation from KAFA, Lee worked as an assistant director on Declaration of Genius (1995), a film by Lee Jang-ho, a director who came to fame in the mid-1970s. It was during this time in 1995, when the government censorship was at its peak, that Lee began working on the script of what became her writer-directorial feature film debut, Art Museum by the Zoo (1998). Although only released towards the end of the year on December 19, 1998, the film became the fifth highest-grossing film of the year. The film, a semi-autobiographical romantic comedy about two strangers who end up living together and cowriting a screenplay about their relationship, won the leads, Shim Eun-ha a Best Actress award at the Grand Bell Awards and Lee Sung-jae several Best New Actor Awards.

Lee's second feature length film as a writer-director, The Way Home (2002), is undoubtedly her most successful and critically acclaimed to date. The film tells the story of a city-born boy who goes to live with his mute, elderly grandmother in her rural village. The young adolescent struggles to overcome their differences in lifestyles and attitude, but eventually grows to admire and appreciate the simpler, more traditional lifestyle. With its "subtle characterization, sensibility, and aesthetics", the film appealed to mass audiences, becoming Korea's second highest-grossing film of the year. It went on to win Best Film and Best Original Screenplay for Lee at the Grand Bell Awards, which is South Korea's equivalent of the Oscars.


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