Park Kwang-chun

Park Kwang-chun, also known as K.C. Park (born May 24, 1967) is a South Korean film director. He attended the film school at New York University and worked as an assistant director on Kang Je-gyu's The Gingko Bed (1996).[1] Park directed the special effects-intensive fantasy blockbuster The Soul Guardians (1998), romance drama Madeleine (2003), comedies She's on Duty (2005) and Our School's E.T. (2008),[2] and horror mystery Natural Burials (2012; before its theatrical release, it first aired as a 2-episode TV movie on cable channel MBN).

Park Kwang-chun
Born (1967-05-24) May 24, 1967
Other namesK.C. Park
Alma materNew York University
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter
Years active1998-present
Korean name
Hangul
박광춘
Revised RomanizationBak Gwang-chun
McCune–ReischauerPak Kwang-ch'un

Filmography

  • The Gingko Bed (1996) - assistant director, actor
  • The Soul Guardians (1998) - director, screenplay
  • Madeleine (2003) - director, script editor
  • She's on Duty (2005) - director, script editor
  • Our School's E.T. (2008) - director, script editor
  • Natural Burials (2012) - director
gollark: > suffering is bad. anything which suffers should have its suffering lessened where possible.is basically what negative utilitarianism is, no?
gollark: Negative utilitarianism seems kind of bee, and your definition of "bad" isn't objective fact (is-ought thing).
gollark: It just explains the definitions of things without much background.
gollark: But yes, Wikipedia isn't exactly a great teaching resource in my opinion.
gollark: Directly instantiate abstract algebraic structures in physical reality.

References

  1. 박광춘. Daum (in Korean). Retrieved 2014-02-27.
  2. Lee, Hyo-won (20 August 2008). "Actor Kim Su-ro as English Teacher on Big Screen". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2014-02-27.


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