Dramabeans |
- Eric shows his comic side behind the scenes of Poseidon
- Secret Garden: Episode 3
- Bae Soo-bin’s next role takes him to the stage
- Park Chan-wook’s Hollywood debut
Eric shows his comic side behind the scenes of Poseidon Posted: 21 Nov 2010 05:16 AM PST Cute! I was thinking that the upcoming maritime-police show Poseidon would be strictly high-action dramatic stuff, but perhaps there’s room for a dose of humor in there as well, based on these behind-the-scenes photos from the filming location. That’s something I’m quite okay with; Eric’s got a pretty good sense of comic timing, with a wry delivery. Granted, some of these are purely of the cast having fun between takes, like those picturing Eric and co-star Choi Jae-hwan (Pasta, Gloria) with the gun, but that pink moped is certainly part of the drama itself. And you know how nothing says manly elite special forces like two cops on a scooter decorated with flower decals. (...) © javabeans for Dramabeans, 2010. | Permalink | 6 comments | Add to del.icio.us |
Posted: 20 Nov 2010 09:39 PM PST
SBS has had a number of dramas with truly beautiful cinematography in the past year — Bad Guy, Dr. Champ, Will It Snow For Christmas, Jejoongwon — and now we can add Secret Garden to that list. I’m really enjoying this drama based on story and acting alone — and Hyun Bin and Ha Ji-won’s awesome chemistry — but the beauty of the visuals just makes it that much more enjoyable to watch. SONG OF THE DAY Kim Bum-soo – “๋ํ๋” (You appear) from the Secret Garden OST [ Download ] (...) © javabeans for Dramabeans, 2010. | Permalink | 102 comments | Add to del.icio.us This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Bae Soo-bin’s next role takes him to the stage Posted: 20 Nov 2010 03:59 PM PST It’s been a busy year for Bae Soo-bin, who has played a face-swapping cuckolded husband on a revenge mission, a devoted guard to a royal concubine, and a loser with a penchant for racy comic books. Now he travels back nearly a century to play a famed writer in a stage play, Yi Sang December 12. Yi Sang, the pen name for the man born Kim Hae-kyung, is a celebrated writer and leading figure in Korean literary modernism and surrealism. He is considered experimental in the bridging of literary forms and styles, writing in the 1930s when Korea was under Japanese imperial rule. He died at the young age of 27 after being imprisoned by the Japanese for political reasons, in 1937. The play is being produced to commemorate his birthday 100 years ago. (...) © javabeans for Dramabeans, 2010. | Permalink | 21 comments | Add to del.icio.us |
Park Chan-wook’s Hollywood debut Posted: 20 Nov 2010 10:36 AM PST Master of the psychologically disturbed dark thriller, director Park Chan-wook (Old Boy, Thirst) is poised to direct his first film in Hollywood, starring…Jodie Foster? I’m trying to wrap my head around Park Chan-wook directing Jodie Foster…hm…does anyone else think that if they remake Old Boy, they should make HER the star? And have him direct? Now THAT’s a thing I’d like to see. The thriller stars Carey Mulligan (An Education, Pride and Prejudice) alongside Foster, as a young woman whose uncle reappears in her life in the wake of her father’s death. Nothing in the premise to suggest anything otherworldly, but there is reportedly a supernatural element in the story. (...) © girlfriday for Dramabeans, 2010. | Permalink | 42 comments | Add to del.icio.us |
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