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Park Chul-soo

Park Chul-soo
Born (1948-11-20)November 20, 1948
Daegu, South Korea
Died February 19, 2013(2013-02-19) (aged 64)
Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea
Occupation Film director, Screenwriter, Producer, Actor
Years active 1978 – 2013
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised Romanization Bak Cheol-su
McCune–Reischauer Pak Ch'ǒl-su

Park Chul-soo (November 20, 1948 – February 19, 2013) was a South Korean film director, producer, screenwriter and occasional actor. He was one of the most active filmmakers in Korean cinema in the 1980s and '90s.

Park Chul-soo was born in Daegu, South Korea. After graduating from Daegu Commercial High School, Park studied Economics on scholarship at Sungkyunkwan University. After graduation, he briefly worked as a teacher in his hometown, Daegu.

He began his film career as a crew member for Shin Film before making his directorial debut in 1978 with Captain of the Alley, which opened to a lukewarm reception. But success came his way through his second film released the following year, The Rain that Falls Every Night, a story about a woman who falls in love with a boxer who raped her. Sentimental and sophisticated melodramas were the mainstay films during this period of his career. His 1985 thriller Mother, featuring star actress Youn Yuh-jung in the role of a mother on a killing spree after her college student daughter is raped and commits suicide, is still considered as Korean cinema’s definitive work in the rape-revenge genre that was popular in the 1970s and '80s. It won several categories at the Grand Bell Awards that year, including best film. Women, sex and repressed urbanites continued to be main themes of Park's movies throughout his career, although his style of expression frequently altered between outrageous and subtle.

A major change in his artistic approach came with his 1995 cult hit 301, 302 which tells the story of two women who share the same apartment building but take very different approaches to food, sex, and the challenges of modern life. Park was arguably the first filmmaker to popularize South Korean cinema internationally when the film became one of the first contemporary Korean films to be released theatrically in North America.

His 1996 work Farewell My Darling was shot mostly with hand-held cameras and remains his most critically acclaimed work. It portrays a family's experience as they hold a traditional three-day funeral for an elderly man killed after falling off a bicycle. It was renowned overseas and on the festival circuit, and received the Best Artistic Contribution Award at that year's Montreal Film Festival.Push! Push! (1997) continued Park's attempts at experimentation. His 1998 film Kazoku Cinema was adapted from the novel by Korean-Japanese writer Miri Yu, cast Japanese actors and was shot in Japanese.


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