Madame Aema 9

Madame Aema 9 (Korean: 애마부인 9; RR: Aema Buin 9) is a 1993 South Korean film directed by Kim Sung-su. It was the ninth in the Madame Aema series, the longest-running film series in Korean cinema.[2]

Madame Aema 9
Theatrical poster for Madame Aema 9 (1993)
Hangul 9
Hanja 9
Revised RomanizationAemabuin 9
McCune–ReischauerAemapuin 9
Directed byKim Sung-su[1]
Produced byChoe Chun-ji
Written bySong Jae-beom
StarringJin Ju-hui
Music byGang In-hyeok
CinematographySeo Il-ryong
Edited byCho Ki-hyung
Distributed byYun Bang Films Co., Ltd.
Release date
  • November 6, 1993 (1993-11-06)
Running time
95 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean

Plot

Aema is a bored housewife married to a successful, workaholic businessman. She begins an affair with Jean, a business associate of her husband's. Her husband suspects and begins tormenting Aema, while not letting on that he knows, to protect a business deal. Aema leaves her husband, but is persuaded to return after heeding advice from a friend.[1]

Cast

  • Jin Ju-hui: Aema[1]
  • Park Gyeol: Jean
  • No Hyeon-u: Hyeon-woo
  • Gang Seon-yeong: kang-hee
  • Yun Bo-ra: Secretary
  • Seo Ji-eun: Model
  • Hong Chung-gil: Manager

Notes

  1. "Madame Emma 9 (Aemabu-in 9)(1993)". Korean Movie Database. Retrieved 29 June 2009.
  2. Lankov, Andrei (13 December 2007). "(481) Dictating Sex". The Korea Times. Archived from the original on 2007-05-28. Retrieved 29 June 2009.
gollark: If we approximate it by saying that having and raising a child consumes 50% of your resources and the other half of said resources can be used on direct contributions to things, and the child will definitely help with whatever your goal is, than the child provides a 50% benefit.
gollark: Children *are* quite expensive, but it's possible that a reducing population would actually be bad for future development of civilization and such - you would have fewer 1-in-1-million geniuses or something.
gollark: What?
gollark: That is an uncharacteristically formally written thing for you, hm.
gollark: It's much easier to indoctrinate your own children than other people's, see.

English

Korean

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.