Garden of Heaven
Garden of Heaven is a 2003 South Korean film starring Ahn Jae-wook and Lee Eun-ju.[1]
Garden of Heaven | |
---|---|
Hangul | 하늘정원 |
Hanja | 하늘庭園 |
Revised Romanization | Haneul jeongwon |
McCune–Reischauer | Hanŭl jŏngwŏn |
Directed by | Lee Dong-hyeon |
Produced by | Kim Yong-beom Lee Seok-gi |
Written by | Lee Han Lee Ji-won |
Starring | Ahn Jae-wook Lee Eun-ju |
Cinematography | Lee Seung-woo |
Edited by | Park Gok-ji |
Distributed by | Showbox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Plot
Oh-sung, a doctor at a hospice facility, is emotionally scarred by the experience of losing his parents as a child. One night he meets Young-ju, a make-up artist who has been diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer. Despite having very little time together, the two start to develop feelings for each other.
Cast
- Ahn Jae-wook ... Choi Oh-sung
- Lee Eun-ju ... Kim Young-ju
- Son Jong-beom ... Jeong Jeol
- Jeon Moo-song ... Choi
- Oh Yoon-hong ... Kim Young-ja
- Song Ok-sook ... Moon
gollark: That won't technically operate *forever* without harvesting more stuff.
gollark: Firstly, technological progress allows more efficient use of the existing limited resources.Secondly, technological progress allows more efficient extraction of more, as well as access to more in e.g. sspæceë.Thirdly, unless perfect recycling exists somehow, I don't think there's an actual alternative beyond slowly scaling down humanity and dying out or something. Or maybe regressing living standards.
gollark: I do find the "finite resources exist so arbitrary growth isn't possible" argument quite bee for various reasons however.
gollark: Sure, I guess. It isn't very actionable either way.
gollark: Although they contain apioformically hard microchips.
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