So Yong Kim

So Yong Kim (born 1968) is a Korean American independent filmmaker. She has made four feature films: In Between Days, Treeless Mountain, For Ellen, and Lovesong.

So Yong Kim
So Yong Kim in 2012 at the Deauville American Film Festival.
Born
So Yong Kim

1968 (age 5152)
Pusan, South Korea
Korean name
Hangul
김소영
Revised RomanizationGim Soyeong
McCune–ReischauerKim Soyŏng

Early life

She was born in Busan, South Korea, in 1968 and moved to Los Angeles, California to live with her mother at the age of 12.[1]

Career

Kim received the Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival for her debut feature In Between Days. Loosely inspired by her own youth, the film was shot in Toronto and mostly improvised by its teenage cast members, whose awkward, raw romance and alienation from their surroundings were expressed through intimate digital photography.

Kim's film For Ellen premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.

In 2014, Kim released Spark and Light, a short film starring Riley Keough which was commissioned by fashion house Miu Miu as part of their ongoing series Women's Tales.[2]

In 2016, Kim's film Lovesong premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival.[3] The film, about two best friends who fall in love, reunited her with Jena Malone (who appeared in For Ellen) and Riley Keough. Additionally, Kim's first foray into directing television began in 2016 with Queen Sugar, and she has since directed episodes of Transparent, American Crime, The Good Fight, Halt and Catch Fire, Vida, On Becoming a God in Central Florida, and Tales from the Loop.

In 2016, Kim directed the music video for Mitski's "A Burning Hill."

Personal life

Kim is married to Bradley Rust Gray. The couple has two children.[4]

gollark: If someone found tomorrow that you could create energy from nothing, and it can't be proved that that *can't* happen unless you already start from a model, the models would have to be updated.
gollark: The models in physics are created from reality, not the other way round.
gollark: In maths you can go "if we know X axioms, we can definitely say that Y"; in science you can at most say something like "we found that things in situations X, Y, Z obey A and it's very unlikely that this result was obtained by random chance".
gollark: How? The incompleteness thing?
gollark: You can't really "prove" things about reality like you can do for maths.

See also

References

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