Take Off | |
---|---|
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Gukgadaepyo |
McCune–Reischauer | Kukkataep‘yo |
Directed by | Kim Yong-hwa |
Produced by | Park Mu-seung Bang Chu-sung |
Written by | Kim Yong-hwa |
Starring |
Ha Jung-woo Kim Dong-wook Kim Ji-seok Choi Jae-hwan Lee Jae-eung Sung Dong-il |
Music by | Lee Jae-hak |
Cinematography | Park Hyun-cheol |
Edited by |
Park Gok-ji Jeong Jin-hee |
Distributed by | Showbox/Mediaplex |
Release date
|
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Running time
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137 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Box office | US$52,141,043 |
Take Off (Hangul: 국가대표; RR: Gukgadaepyo, literally "National Representative" or "National Athlete" or "National Team") is a 2009 South Korean film written and directed by Kim Yong-hwa. The film was the 2nd most attended film of the year in South Korea with 8,392,953 admissions.
Cha Heon-tae, a Korean-born American, was adopted with his sister to American parents. He appears on a Korean television program in search of his mother. Since Heon-tae is a trained alpine skier, he is approached by Coach Bang who wants to recruit members for a new national ski jumping team for the approaching 1998 Winter Olympics. The other members are Choi Hong-cheol, a night club waiter; Ma Jae-bok, who works at a meat restaurant and has a strict father; and Kang Chil-gu, who lives with his grandmother and autistic brother Bong-gu. All are good skiers, but are out of practice. To gear up for the qualifying match at the World Cup, they overcome their fear and train in unusual places, such as from the top of cars, amusement park roller coasters, etc. After almost getting disqualified because of a fight the night before, they succeed in qualifying at the World Cup. But the victory is bittersweet once they hear the IOC opted for Salt Lake City over Korea's Muju County. Unfortunately, because of deep fog, Chil-gu injures his leg and becomes unable to compete. Bong-gu decides to jump as a substitute but does not make the required distance for a gold medal and nearly loses his life. Despite their loss, the athletes rejoice because Bong-gu survived the jump, and the Koreans back home are proud of them.
Korea is new to the venue of ski jumping, and there were only five members of the national team, so this event is not well known to the Korean people. Film director Kim Yong-hwa made this movie to introduce the ski jumping event to Koreans, in order to pique their interest and therefore improve national support for the event. In order to do that, he cast top actor Ha Jung-woo. Kim also introduced the background on the players and the environment in which they practiced. This was the first Olympics in which the Korean ski jump team competed, so they did not receive much financing. Therefore, they had to practice in a bad training area. Despite this, they managed to attend the Olympics.