"Actor: Kim Jin ah"

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  • Volcano High [2001]Volcano High | DVD | (22/03/2004) from £6.54   |  Saving you £13.45 (67.30%)   |  RRP £19.99

    Expelled from eight other schools because of his inability to control his remarkable telekinetic powers Kim Kyung-soo is transferred to Volcano High where he soon discovers his new school is populated by similarly gifted students all skilled in martial arts and possessing almost supernatural talents. Discipline at the school is in complete disarray following 17 years of turmoil begun by the ""Great Teachers Battle"". Legend speaks of a mystical manuscript containing secrets that can e

  • Real Fiction [2000]Real Fiction | DVD | (19/03/2007) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £5.99

    On a peaceful afternoon our distorted lives hidden in it. A girl stared at me. She said I am a good painter and that's what I haven't heard for a long time. She tempts me saying she will give good things to me. But where she has led me there was a strange and ruthless man I have never seen before. I could see my image from his eyes that were full of rage and engorged with blood... From Korea's most original filmmaker Kim Ki-duk (The Isle Bad Guy 3-Iron) Real Fiction is an absorbing surreal and intriguing film that develops over actual time. Ju Jin-mo is a quiet and repressed artist who tolerates an endless stream of humiliating abuse from customers and street thugs alike as he sketches portraits in a park. Through an encounter with a dissatisfied customer Ju finds himself enraged by the reality of his life and becomes hell bent on tracking down everyone who has ever tormented him. Unfortunately for the individuals who so frivolously wronged this fragile artist a simple apology will now no longer suffice and bloodlust can only be satisfied with blood. Ju is determined to wash away the stains on his soul with murderous retaliation whilst completely unaware that someone is secretly recording the killing spree with a camcorder in all its bloody glory... 'Real Fiction' was shot with no retakes. Director Kim Ki-duk had ten 35mm cameras and two digital cameras rolling simultaneously with sets prepared in advance and the crew rehearsing for ten days prior to filming.

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