Shin Sang-ok
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Family name hatnote Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Shin Sang-ok (Korean: Script error: No such module "Lang".; Hanja: Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler; 1925 or 1926Template:Efn – April 11, 2006), anglicized as Simon Sheen, was a South Korean filmmaker who directed 74 films in a career spanning over five decades.Template:Sfn He is best known in South Korea for his efforts during the 1950s and 1960s, many of them collaborations with his wife Choi Eun-hee. Shin posthumously received the Gold Crown Cultural Medal, the country's top honor for an artist.
In 1978, Shin and Choi were kidnapped by order of Kim Jong-il, who wanted them to improve the North Korean film industry. The couple remained in captivity for 8 years and Shin directed seven films for Kim, including An Emissary of No Return, Runaway (both 1984), Love, Love, My Love, Salt, and Pulgasari (produced in 1985), before they escaped in 1986 and sought asylum in the United States. Shin gained American citizenship in 1989, and continued to produce films in the United States, now under his adopted name Simon S. Sheen. He and Choi eventually returned to South Korea for his final years.
Early life
Sometime between 1925 and 1926,Template:Efn Shin was born Shin Tae-ik (Template:Langx)[1] or Shin Tae-seo (Template:Langx)[2] in Chongjin, in the northeastern part of the Korean Peninsula, at the time occupied by Japan and currently a part of North Korea.[3][4][1][5] His father was a prominent doctor of Korean medicine.[2] Shin studied in Japan at Tokyo Fine Arts School, the predecessor of Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, before returning to Korea three years later.[6][7]
Career in South Korea (1946–1978)
Shin started his film career as an assistant production designer on Choi In-kyu's Viva Freedom!, the first Korean film made after the country achieved independence from Japan. During the "Golden Age" of South Korean cinema in the late 1950s and 1960s, Shin worked prolifically, often directing two or more films per year, earning the nickname the "Prince of South Korean Cinema".[8] Shin featured the Western princess, female sex workers for American soldiers, in The Evil Night (1952) and A Flower in Hell (1958).[9] The production company he started, Shin Films, produced around 300 films during the 1960s,[7] including Prince Yeonsan (1961), the winner of the Best Film prize at the first Grand Bell Awards ceremony and a Grand Bell Award-winning 1964 remake of Na Woon-gyu's 1926 Beongeoli Sam-ryong. His 1961 film The Houseguest and My Mother became the first South Korean submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[10]
During the 1970s, Shin became less active, while South Korea's cinema industry in general suffered under strict censorship and constant government interference. Most of the films he directed during this period ended up being flops.[7] After Shin ran afoul of the repressive government in 1978, Park Chung Hee closed Shin's studio.[11]
North Korean period (1978–1986)
Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". In 1978, Shin's former wife, Choi Eun-hee, an actress who starred in many of his films, was kidnapped in Hong Kong and taken to North Korea. Shin himself came under suspicion of causing her disappearance and when he traveled to Hong Kong to investigate, he was kidnapped as well. The kidnappings were on orders of future leader Kim Jong-il, who wanted to establish a film industry for his country to sway international opinion regarding the views of the Workers' Party of Korea.[12][13] The North Korean authorities have denied the kidnapping accusations, claiming that Shin came to the country willingly. Shin and Choi made secret audiotapes of conversations with Kim Jong-il, which supported their story.[13][14]Template:Sfn[15]
Shin was put in comfortable accommodation, but after two escape attempts was placed in a prison for over two years. Once his re-education in North Korean ideology was thought to be complete, he was taken to Pyongyang in 1983 to meet Kim Jong-il and learn why he had been abducted to North Korea.[13] His ex-wife was brought to the same dinner party, where she first learned that Shin was also in North Korea. They remarried shortly afterwards, as suggested by Kim Jong-il.Template:Sfn[16]
From 1983 on, Shin directed seven films, with Kim Jong-il acting as an executive producer. The last and best-known of these films is Pulgasari, a giant-monster film similar to the Japanese Godzilla. In 1986, eight years after his kidnapping, Shin and his wife escaped while in Vienna for a film festival.[13] They managed to obtain political asylum from the US embassy in Vienna and Kim Jong-il became convinced that the couple had been kidnapped by the Americans. Shin and his wife lived covertly for two years in Reston, Virginia, under American protection and authorities debriefed the couple about Kim Jong-il and their experience in North Korea.[14]Template:Sfn[15]
Late life (1986–2006)
According to Michael Lee, a former CIA agent, Shin and Choi adopted the names Simon Sheen and Theresa Sheen (respectively) and became American citizens in 1989, three years after their escape.[17] The couple moved to Los Angeles, where Shin worked in the 1990s as Simon Sheen, directing 3 Ninjas Knuckle Up and working as an executive producer for 3 Ninjas Kick Back and 3 Ninjas: High Noon at Mega Mountain.
At first, Shin was reluctant to go back to South Korea, because he feared that the government's security police would not believe the kidnapping story; he eventually returned to South Korea permanently in 1994 and continued to work on new movies. The same year, he was invited to the Cannes Film Festival as a jury member. His last movie as a director was an unreleased 2002 film called Kyeoul-iyagi (The Story of Winter).
Shin ended his career in 2004.Template:Sfn That year, Shin underwent a liver transplant. He died of complications caused by hepatitis two years later. At the time of his death he was planning a musical about Genghis Khan. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun posthumously awarded Shin the Gold Crown Cultural Medal on April 12, 2006, the country's top honor for an artist.
In media
In 2015, an English language biography of his life (along with Choi Eun-hee), called A Kim Jong-Il Production: The Extraordinary True Story of a Kidnapped Filmmaker, was published by Paul Fischer.[18]
In January 2016, at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, in the World Cinema Documentary Competition, a documentary about the North Korean ordeal, entitled The Lovers and the Despot and directed by Robert Cannan and Ross Adam, was presented.[19]
In 2017, BBC Radio 4 broadcast a drama Lights, Camera, Kidnap!, based on Shin's ordeal, written by Lucy Catherine, directed by Sasha Yevtushenko, and starring Paul Courtenay Hyu as Shin and Liz Sutherland as Choi.[20]
Works
Filmography
Partial filmography as director:
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- A Flower in Hell (1958)
- To the Last Day (1960)
- Prince Yeonsan (1961)
- Seong Chun-hyang (1961)
- The Houseguest and My Mother (1961)
- The Memorial Gate for Virtuous Women (1962)
- Rice (1963)
- Red Scarf (1964)
- Deaf Sam-yong (1964)
- Phantom Queen (1967)
- Prince Daewon (1968)
- Ghosts of Chosun (1970)
- A Woman with Half Soul (1973)
- The Three-Day Reign (1973)
- At 13 Years Old (1974)
- An Emissary of No Return (1984)Template:Sfn
- Runaway (1984)Template:Sfn
- Love, Love, My Love (1985)[21]
- Salt (1985)Template:Sfn
- The Tale of Shim Chong (1985)Template:Sfn
- Pulgasari (1985)Template:Sfn
- Breakwater (1985)Template:Sfn
- Mayumi (1990)Template:Sfn
- Vanished (1994)
- 3 Ninjas Knuckle Up (1995)
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Executive producer
- Galgameth (1996)
Bibliography
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See also
Notes
References
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ "Accounting practices blamed for slump in Japanese films" by Kakumi Kobayashi, Japan Times, October 13, 2000, retrieved January 26, 2006
- ↑ a b c Biography at asianfilms.org Script error: No such module "webarchive".
- ↑ "Pleasure and Pain" Script error: No such module "webarchive". by Chuck Stephens, The Village Voice, February 27 – March 5, 2002
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- ↑ a b c d "The producer from hell" by John Gorenfeld, The Guardian, April 4, 2003, retrieved January 26, 2006
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- ↑ Obituary The Economist, April 27, 2006
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- ↑ "The Lovers and the Despot: study of Kim Jong-Il's cinephilia is hard to adore" by Jordan Hoffman, The Guardian, January 24, 2016, retrieved October 22, 2016
- ↑ Radio Drama Reviews, 2017
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Works cited
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Further reading
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External links
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- Shin Sang-ok at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- The Korea Society Film Journal: Review of "Flowers of Hell" Script error: No such module "webarchive".
Template:Shin Sang-ok Template:Buil Film Awards for Best Director Template:Grand Bell Awards for Best Director Template:Paeksang Arts Award Best Director Film Template:Authority control Template:North Korean abductions
- Pages with script errors
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- 1925 births
- 1926 births
- 2006 deaths
- Deaths from hepatitis
- South Korean film directors
- People from Chongjin
- Formerly missing people
- Kidnapped South Korean people
- Liver transplant recipients
- North Korean abductions
- Best Director Paeksang Arts Award (film) winners
- Pyongsan Shin clan
- South Korean horror film directors
- South Korean people of North Korean origin
- American film directors of Korean descent
- Naturalized citizens of the United States
- North Korean film directors