Champ (2011 film)

Champ (Korean: 챔프; RR: Champeu) is 2011 South Korean film is about a former horse jockey who became blind after losing his wife in an accident, but now gets a second chance with the help of his daughter and an injured horse.[2]

Champ
Theatrical poster
Hangul
Revised RomanizationChampeu
McCune–ReischauerCh‘aemp‘ŭ
Directed byLee Hwan-kyung
Produced byKim Min-ki
Lee Myung-sook
Lee Sang-hoon
Kim Min-guk
Lim Hee-chul
Chung Jae-seung
Heo Chang
Kim Sang-eun
Written byLee Hwan-kyung
Kim Young-seok
Kim Hwang-sung
StarringCha Tae-hyun
Kim Su-jung
Yu Oh-seong
Park Ha-sun
Music byLee Dong-jun
CinematographyLee Sang-gak
Edited byKim So-yeon
Choi Jae-geun
Production
company
FineWorks
Daemyung Culture Factory
Vantage Holdings
Jidam Inc. (formerly Yein Culture)
CL Entertainment
Distributed byShowbox/Mediaplex
Release date
  • September 7, 2011 (2011-09-07)
Running time
133 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Box officeUS$3,232,193[1]

Plot

Two damaged souls race together for the race of their lifetime. Horse jockey Seung-ho loses his wife in a fatal car accident. The accident also leaves him practically blind. No longer able to work, he leads an aimless life with his little daughter. Things take turn for the worse when he loses all his savings after trying to cheat at the horse track and flees to a remote ranch in Jeju Island. There he meets a violent and limping horse named Woo-bak and he trains the horse for racing. Against all odds, Seung-ho and Woo-bak finish first in the preliminaries but when Seung-ho's blindness is discovered by the officials, they're disqualified from the finals. Woo-bak rejects all other jockeys and waits for Seung-ho to come back. The limping horse and his blind jockey bet everything to race one last time.

Cast

Box office

The film was released in South Korea on September 7, 2011. The film grossed US$765,803 on its opening weekend, ranking at number 6 with 112,513 admissions.[3][4] In total the film grossed US$3,232,193 and had 535,766 admissions nationwide.[5][6]

gollark: Ah. You turned it *ou*. Turn it on instead.
gollark: I see.
gollark: You did turn it on, right?
gollark: It might just be the uo button.
gollark: Did you use one of the *reflection* ones? Don't do that. There are chirality issues.

References

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