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Meet the In-Laws (2011 film)

Meet the In-Laws
Meet the In-Laws (2011 film)-poster.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed by Kim Jin-young
Produced by Lee Seo-yeol
Written by Ha Myeong-mi
Starring Song Sae-byeok
Lee Si-young
Music by Oh Jun-seong
Cinematography Jeong Jin-ho
Edited by Moon In-dae
Production
company
The Pictures With a View
Distributed by Lotte Entertainment
Release date
  • March 31, 2011 (2011-03-31)
Running time
118 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean
Box office US$17.6 million

Meet the In-Laws (Hangul위험한 상견례; RRWiheomhan Sanggyeonrye) is a 2011 South Korean film directed by Kim Jin-young, starring Song Sae-byeok and Lee Si-young.

The Korean title literally translates to "Dangerous Formal Greeting Between Families of the Bride and Bridegroom," hence the alternate English titles Clash of the Families and Dangerous Meeting.

A comedic take on star-crossed lovers set after the 1988 Seoul Olympics, the film explores the deep-rooted regionalism that has dogged various aspects of Korean society, particularly the antagonism between people from southeastern Gyeongsang and people from Jeolla.

Naive, pure-hearted Hyun-joon writes romance comics under the pseudonym "Hyun-ji." He becomes pen pals with Da-hong, and the two fall in love and begin dating. When Da-hong reveals that her father is forcing her to go on matchmaking dates with other men, Hyun-joon impulsively decides to propose to her. But Hyun-joon hails from humble roots in South Jeolla Province, and the couple knows that Da-hong's wealthy Gyeongsang family will instantly disapprove of him because of this. Unbeknownst to them, their respective fathers were also bitter rivals in high school baseball. So when Hyun-joon goes to Busan to ask for Da-hong's hand in marriage, he hides his accent and pretends to be from Apgujeong, the ritziest area in Seoul. As her relatives scrutinize, intimidate and spy on him, Hyun-joon is determined to overcome all their obstacles and marry Da-hong.

Meet the In-Laws was the ninth best-selling Korean film of 2011, grossing US$17,646,715 (or ₩19.7 billion) with 2,595,625 tickets sold.


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