Iron Man movie poster 2008. Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron Man, Jeff Bridges, Terrence Howard, Gweneth Paltrow.Like another colleague of mine, I too have been lax in the updating department.
I'll come out and say it, I am Iron Man I mean, I was busy. And lazy.
We'll see how much longer this newfound impulse to blab lasts. Just don't hold your breath, 'cause I wouldn't myself.

And is it just me or was Robert Downey Jr. born to rock as Tony Stark?!!!

What else happened while I was blanked out...
Speed Racer was released (yeah, it's a pathetic two posts down that i wrote about 'first look'), Rain smoked Stephen Colbert on DDR (youtube), Grand Theft Auto 4 was unleashed and is taking names across the world (immigrant struggles), Metal Gear Solid 4 t-shirts aren't available at the New York Uniqlo store (at least not yet, bummer), I continue to suck at drums in Rock Band (pathetic), got new head phones (pretty cool - update soon), beat Guild Wars' first campaign (update soon again)...

read on when I write on, friends.


Toys at The Korea Society, CG movie test footage of Robot Taekwon V to be released in 2009.
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)

45th New York Film Festival at The Film Society of Lincoln Center, September 28 ? October 14, 2007
The schedule for the 45th New York Film Festival was up on Monday, and the biggest titles are already being sold out. A high profile selection of films from all over the world once again converge at Lincoln Center. It runs from September 28 to October 14, 2007

Opening night: Wes Anderson's The Darjeeling Limited. Blade Runner, Ridley Scott's 'Final Cut' after 25 years. Centerpiece Joel and Ethan Coen’s No Country for Old Men.  Closing night, the animated Persepolis, based on the acclaimed graphic novel. A complete retrospective of Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, "father of Brazil’s Cinema Novo movement."
While those are obvious picks for any avid film fan, sold out at no tickets means looking elsewhere. Other personal picks of mine would be: The Orphanage, produced by director Guillermo Del Toro of last year's fantastic closing night film Pan's Labyrinth.
Hou Hsiao-hsien directing Juliette Binoche in Flight of the Red Balloon. Nicole Kidman and Jack Black in Noah Baumbach's Margot at the Wedding. Song Kang-ho and Jeon Do-yeon (in her Cannes Best Actress award winning role) in Lee Chang-dong's Secret Sunshine. Claude Chabrol's A Girl Cut in Two. Béla Tarr's The Man from London. Palme D'Or winner 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days...

There's just too many interesting films. Enough reading, just go watch something before more tickets are gone.

and it's FREEEE!

This is only the 2nd year of the Short Film section at the New York Korean Film Festival, and they're doing something crazy - all three short film programs are completely free.  That's right, free. Each program covers 5 short films, and at each one there will be a video message or an in-person appearance by one of the short filmmakers. So they've timed a "sort-of" wrap-up party (with no cover charge, natch) after the screenings that night so that we can meet the filmmakers and festival staff in a casual setting.  Sort-of, because the actual rest of the Korean Film Festival still goes on for another three days at BAM Rose Cinemas in Brooklyn.

Beef Palace, short film starring James Kyson Lee of the NBC tv show HeroesIn Your Eyes, animation short part of the Short Film Fest/NY Korean Film Festival 2007Anyway, the short films all cover a range of topics from, by, of, or starring Koreans and Korean-Americans, and this year there's a juried section of finalists. There's even James Kyson Lee from the hit NBC TV show Heroes in a short called Beef Palace (far right) about what else, the meaty foods, love and sex. The animation shorts like In Your Eyes look real good, 'cause you know, everyone knows that the Simpsons and every other anime from Japan, animation from US and Disney is outsourced to the capable Korean hands of the world.

So to summarize, there's 15 short films, all free, on one night, at Cinema Village. And then a party at Forum, with no cover charge. short film + party = i like~

Check it out! I'm bringing some friends to expose them to the fine cinematic sensibilites of the independents (films, that is)! And of course, to party!


The 7th New York Korean Film Festival 2007 starts this Tuesday and it turning out to be their biggest yet. Family TiesEverything from romantic comedy to historical drama, the gangster flick and even documentary are represented. That includes 16 of the latest Korean movies from 2006 and 2007, a 4-film retrospective of renowned Mr. "101-films" director Im Kwon-Taek, 8 horror films (or rather 7 horror + 1 moody drama) and an expanded full day of short films for free(!). There will be a number of parties, and 2 special guest directors from Korea this year. Being pretty much the only chance for us to see these films in a theater-setting outside of Korea, I'm definitely looking forward to the fest.

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