The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market

On 26 August 2016, the South Korea–Thailand–China co-production P'ainŏl Reship'i//Final Recipe (Gina Kim, 2014) opened on 3200 screens across the People’s Republic of China. The film was the first South Korean-directed feature to be granted a wide release in China following the 2014 South...

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Main Author: Lee, Sangjoon
Other Authors: Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143217
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1432172020-08-13T02:46:00Z The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market Lee, Sangjoon Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication South Korean Films Chinese Film Market On 26 August 2016, the South Korea–Thailand–China co-production P'ainŏl Reship'i//Final Recipe (Gina Kim, 2014) opened on 3200 screens across the People’s Republic of China. The film was the first South Korean-directed feature to be granted a wide release in China following the 2014 South Korea–China Free Trade Agreement (FTA). Final Recipe featured the Malaysian Michelle Yeoh, the Singaporean Chin Han and the K-pop superstar Henry Lau (a Taiwanese American), and was shot in Bangkok, Seoul and Shanghai. The film tells the story of a high-school student (Lau) who enters a MasterChef-type cooking competition and finds his long-lost father along the way. Final Recipe is one of many attempts made by the South Korean media giant CJ E&M (hereafter CJ) to break into the global film market. Led by the company’s US-born executive Miky Lee (Yi Mi-kyŏng), CJ’s ‘global project’ has an ambitious vision of broadening the horizons of international co-productions and using English-language scripts and transnational casts to increase its films’ global appeal. Following this strategy, CJ planned to target the company’s emerging markets in Southeast Asia and China with Final Recipe’s ‘all English-speaking’ Asian cast. Given the popularity of food-related films in Asia, Final Recipe’s box-office forecast in the Chinese market was positive. Hallyu, the Korean pop culture wave, has triggered numerous trends across Asia, and China has become the biggest market for the hallyu industry. The culmination of this wave was the South Korean television drama T'aeyang ŭi huye/Descendants of the Sun (2016), broadcast simultaneously in South Korea and China only months before the release of Final Recipe in China. The last episode of Descendants of the Sun was viewed a record-breaking 2.4 billion times on the online video platform iQiYi in April 2016. Ministry of Education (MOE) Accepted version This work was supported by the MOE AcRF Tier 1 Grant funded by the Ministry of Education, Singapore (MOE) (WBS: M4012104.060). 2020-08-13T02:46:00Z 2020-08-13T02:46:00Z 2019 Journal Article Lee, S. (2019). The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market. Screen, 60(2), 332-341. doi:10.1093/screen/hjz019 0036-9543 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143217 10.1093/screen/hjz019 2-s2.0-85072022964 2 60 332 341 en M4012104.060 Screen © 2019 The Author(s). All rights reserved. This paper was published by Oxford University Press in Screen and is made available with permission of The Author(s). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
South Korean Films
Chinese Film Market
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
South Korean Films
Chinese Film Market
Lee, Sangjoon
The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
description On 26 August 2016, the South Korea–Thailand–China co-production P'ainŏl Reship'i//Final Recipe (Gina Kim, 2014) opened on 3200 screens across the People’s Republic of China. The film was the first South Korean-directed feature to be granted a wide release in China following the 2014 South Korea–China Free Trade Agreement (FTA). Final Recipe featured the Malaysian Michelle Yeoh, the Singaporean Chin Han and the K-pop superstar Henry Lau (a Taiwanese American), and was shot in Bangkok, Seoul and Shanghai. The film tells the story of a high-school student (Lau) who enters a MasterChef-type cooking competition and finds his long-lost father along the way. Final Recipe is one of many attempts made by the South Korean media giant CJ E&M (hereafter CJ) to break into the global film market. Led by the company’s US-born executive Miky Lee (Yi Mi-kyŏng), CJ’s ‘global project’ has an ambitious vision of broadening the horizons of international co-productions and using English-language scripts and transnational casts to increase its films’ global appeal. Following this strategy, CJ planned to target the company’s emerging markets in Southeast Asia and China with Final Recipe’s ‘all English-speaking’ Asian cast. Given the popularity of food-related films in Asia, Final Recipe’s box-office forecast in the Chinese market was positive. Hallyu, the Korean pop culture wave, has triggered numerous trends across Asia, and China has become the biggest market for the hallyu industry. The culmination of this wave was the South Korean television drama T'aeyang ŭi huye/Descendants of the Sun (2016), broadcast simultaneously in South Korea and China only months before the release of Final Recipe in China. The last episode of Descendants of the Sun was viewed a record-breaking 2.4 billion times on the online video platform iQiYi in April 2016.
author2 Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
author_facet Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Lee, Sangjoon
format Article
author Lee, Sangjoon
author_sort Lee, Sangjoon
title The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
title_short The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
title_full The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
title_fullStr The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
title_full_unstemmed The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market
title_sort south korean film industry and the chinese film market
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143217
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