Boy Goes to Heaven

Boy Goes to Heaven (Korean: 소년, 천국에 가다; RR: Sonyeon, cheonguke gada), also known as A Boy Who Went to Heaven, is a 2005 South Korean film directed by Yoon Tae-yong, starring Yum Jung-ah and Park Hae-il.

Boy Goes to Heaven
Theatrical poster
Hangul소년, 천국 가다
Hanja少年, 天國에 가다
Revised RomanizationSonyeon, cheonguke gada
McCune–ReischauerSonyŏn ch‘ŏn’guke gada
Directed byYoon Tae-yong
Produced byCha Seung-jae
Kim Mi-hee
Kim Yeong-dae
Kim Sun-ho
Written byPark Seong-kyeong
Park Chan-wook
Lee Moo-yeong
Choi Dong-hoon
Yoon Tae-yong
StarringYum Jung-ah
Park Hae-il
Music byDalpalan
Jang Young-gyu
CinematographyLee Jun-gyu
Edited byKim Sang-bum
Kim Jae-bum
Production
company
Sidus FNH
Christmas Entertainment
Distributed byShowbox
Chungeorahm
Release date
  • November 11, 2005 (2005-11-11)
Running time
114 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Box officeUS$949,293[1]

Plot

Ne-mo is a thirteen-year-old boy growing up in 1980s South Korea, and is the only child of a single mother who runs a watch repair shop in their small town. Having never met his father, Ne-mo resolves to marry a single mother when he is older. Following the suicide of his mother, Ne-mo becomes acquainted with Bu-ja, who opens a comic shop in his town. Bu-ja is also a single mother with a young son of her own, and Ne-mo instantly falls in love with her. Despite their age difference he proposes to her in a movie theater, but a fire breaks out and Ne-mo is killed saving Bu-ja's son.

Waking up in Heaven, Ne-mo finds himself in the middle of an argument between two angels, who can't agree whether his life was supposed to end at the age of thirteen or ninety-three. As a compromise they return him to Earth several days after he died, except he is now thirty-three years old and will age one year every day until he reaches ninety-three. Now an adult and with just sixty days left to live, Ne-mo poses as his own father and resumes his pursuit of Bu-ja.

Cast

Release

Boy Goes to Heaven opened in South Korea on 11 November 2005, and was ranked fourth at the box office on its opening weekend with 109,186 admissions.[2] The film went on to accumulate a total of 242,053 admissions nationwide.[3]

Critical response

In a review for The Korea Herald, Yang Sung-jin praised the performance of child actor Kim Kwan-woo as "impressive and believable" and found Park Hae-il "true to form" as one of South Korea's leading actors, but criticized Yum Jung-ah for her "hackneyed" and over-emphasised sexuality. Yang also regarded the relationship between the two main characters as inappropriate, noting that Bu-ja promises to marry Ne-mo when he is still a child and later has sex with him falsely believing that he is an adult, saying that while the character "is not a pedophile... she clearly—and at least initially—doesn't have motives as pure-hearted as Nae-mo's."[4] Love HK Film.com described Boy Goes to Heaven as a "cute, fairly entertaining, but wholly inconsequential fantasy melodrama", and was critical of the director for a lack of attention to detail, in particular a reference to the age gap between the characters despite the film's 1980s setting.[5]

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gollark: ```Midnight takes your heart and your soulWhile your heart is as high as your soulPut your heart without your soul into your heartGive back your heartDesire is a lovestruck ladykillerMy world is nothing Fire is iceHate is waterUntil my world is Desire,Build my world upIf Midnight taking my world, Fire is nothing and Midnight taking my world, Hate is nothingShout "FizzBuzz!"Take it to the topIf Midnight taking my world, Fire is nothingShout "Fizz!"Take it to the topIf Midnight taking my world, Hate is nothingSay "Buzz!"Take it to the topWhisper my world```A fizzbuzz program.
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References

  1. "A Boy Who Went to Heaven". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  2. "Korean Box Office Week-end 2005.11.11 ~ 2005.11.13". Hancinema. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
  3. "Box-Office Results (2005)". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
  4. Yang, Sung-jin (4 November 2005). "'Boy, Goes to Heaven' conjures up body-transference fantasy tale". Hancinema (originally published by The Korea Herald). Retrieved 22 May 2009.
  5. "A Boy Who Went to Heaven". Love HK Film.com. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
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