31 January, 2008 13:20
Toys from 70's/80's Korea Exhibit Opening today, plus Robot Taekwon V live-action/CG movie
Posted by clumproller, Categories [ comics , Korea , movies , new york , animation ][ (0) Comment ] | [ (0) Trackbacks ]

Just as The Korea Society opens a new exhibit on 70's and 80's toys from Korea with the Taekwondo-style butt-kicking giant robot Taekwon V as its centerpiece today, there's news that the animated feature film will be made into a live-action/CG film to be released in August, 2009 (Test CG footage looks awesome! read on).
First, straight from The Korea Society's website:
"Toys - always more meaningful than the simple playthings they appear to be - can embody the fantasies, values, obsessions and anxieties of a generation. Toy Stories: Souvenirs from Korean Childhood includes a veritable toy box of over 90 flamboyantly colored action figures, robots, miniature tanks and paper dolls from 1970's and 1980's Korea."
So the exhibit will have more than just action figures and robots for boys, but also girls' toys and dolls too. Being that Korea's growing industrialization made new things possible in the country for the first time during that period, it would be interesting to see just what got kids excited back when there was no Guitar Hero or PlayStation. Here's some key proceedings tied to the show:
- The opening reception for the exhibit is today at 5:30 PM
- Exhibit runs through April 18
- "Gallery Talk" (lecture): "Our Toys Our Selves: Robot Taekwon V and South Korean Identity" on February 7
- Film screening of animated feature Robot Taekwon V (2007, Digitally restored from original 1976 prints) on March 18
The film was the first Korean animated feature - ever. While original prints were long thought to have been destroyed by fire, a print was later found in one of KOFIC's (Korean Film Council) off-site storage warehouses, was digitally restored in a 3-year-long process and re-released in 2007 to theaters across the nation in a very successful run.
Second, the live-action/CG adaptation. (More)
10 November, 2007 13:57
New York Times Sunday Book Review: As Always, "So Many Books, So Little Time"
Posted by clumproller, Categories [ comics , books , NYT Sunday Book Review ][ (0) Comment ] | [ (0) Trackbacks ]

My picks from tomorrow's Times' Sunday Book Review with a bent for
the other, miscellaneous and alternative. Hopefully this will be
a recurring linkroll that I can keep up with each week. This week of
November 11 (11/11!), I choose you, Pikachu! I mean, the Children's Book section reviews of Shaun Tan's "The Arrival" -- graphic novel, a wordless, timeless meditation on "not an immigrant's story, but the immigrant's story," and Sherman Alexie's "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian", his first young-adult title. Also Adrian Tomine's "Shortcomings,"
another graphic novel, about 30-year-old "anti-hero" Ben Tanaka,
dealing with his career-driven girlfriend that leaves Cali for NY, a
lesbian Korean graduate friend, sprinkled with his penchant for blondes. "The Arrival" has also been picked as one of the Times' ten Best Illustrated Children's Books of 2007. Link to slideshow gallery
And finally, despite all the other notable books written about in this weeks section including a Picasso biography, an elaborate Star Wars pop-up book, a new translation of Dante's "Paradiso"... just for kicks... get ready for it... I would like to write about a book review I read today in the review section, of a book written about "How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read", and want you to keep in mind that I haven't read the actual book, but rather only the book review. Translated from French, psychoanalyst and professor of lit Pierre Bayard gives reason and thought to why he "doesn’t blame us for fudging [about books we haven't read], and he doesn’t want us to blame ourselves." He apparently says it's okay!
Just one more reason I think starting up this recap section on books we haven't read yet could become a nice record and incentive to do just that -- read more.
All right. Now, choice quotes from each of the above New York times reviews after the jump, plus pretty books covers for you to judge by(!) And just how to talk about that book you haven't read.
(More)01 July, 2007 03:26
The Great Catsby: Hit Korean Internet Comic Drama-tized into TV form debuts in 4 days
Posted by clumproller, Categories [ comics , Korea ][ (0) Comment ] | [ (0) Trackbacks ]

An internet comic sensation that vaulted the career of manhwa-ka (that's "comic writer/artist" in Korean) Kang Doha in the mainstream pop-culture of Korea a couple of years ago, The Great Catsby (위대한 캣츠비, weedayhan Catsby) is finally coming to TV as a drama. The first episode will be broadcast July 4th on the Korean cable
channel TVN.
The comic that touched upon the coming-of-age trials and tribulations of twenty-somethings in a rundown part of Seoul was unique for a few reasons:
- all the main characters are drawn as anthropomorphic animals, usually cats or dogs
- their stories were brutally honest and real, able to reach out to and transcend an age-gap of readers who ranged from teens in high-school to even 30-40 year olds.
- the drawing style is simple yet realistic, with many of the comic panels taking on the visual qualities of cinema and at times paying attention to fine details. (as the first in a trilogy of titles by Kang, that visual language gets perfected as he moves onto his next projects, read on.)
In any case, it's been a favorite read of mine. Then again I don't read too many comics, but trust me, this one's a keeper. If you don't believe me, its popularity is vetted by the 5 million views it got when it was serialized on Korean portal sites, over 200,000 books sold, and winning the 2005 Grand Comic Award in Korea. The title was turned into a musical last March, and after the drama's run will be made into a movie as well. For now, it is available free to view and translated to English at NetComics.com, who also publishes the manhwa - in full color, natch - and many other titles in book-form as well.
Any way, after all this success, the comic is now a
drama. The cast was only announced in May and includes
singer(DJ)-turned-actor MC Mong as Catsby, Park Ye-Jin as Persu, and Kang Kyung-Joon as Houndu (left-to-right in the above 'human' picture). 
Manhwa-ka Kang Doha said of the drama,
"Although there isn't a chance for the writer to squeeze in the drama-making system, I'm happy just to be able to see the process of restructuring and making it anew with on-screen magic while retaining the framework of the source material."
read on for more info on the plot, drama director and comic creator's reaction to the first episode.




