Empress Chung
| Empress Chung | |
|---|---|
![]() Korean theatrical release poster | |
| Hangul | 왕후 심청 |
| Hanja | 王后沈淸 |
| RR | Wanghu simcheong |
| MR | Wanghu simch'ŏng |
| Directed by | Nelson Shin |
| Screenplay by | Kim Jung-ha Shin Jang-hyun Yoo Kwang-hee Kyong Seung-won Kwon Young-sup |
| Story by | Nelson Shin |
| Produced by | Nelson Shin Yi Jin-eun Kang Min-woo |
| Edited by | Nelson Shin |
| Music by | Sung Dong-hwan |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by | KOAA Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
| Countries | North Korea South Korea |
| Language | Korean |
| Budget | US$6.5 million[1] |
| Box office | US$140,000 |
Empress Chung (Korean: 왕후심청; RR: Wanghu simcheong) is a 2005 animated feature film, produced in North and South Korea and directed by Nelson Shin, on whose story the screenplay is also based. Empress Chung was the first film to release simultaneously in both North and South Korea. It saw critical acclaim and won awards at two film festivals, but was a commercial failure, earning US$140,000 against a US$6.5 million budget.
Premise
[edit | edit source]Based on a Korean folk tale, the film follows a girl that sacrifices her life to a sea dragon in order to restore her blind father's eyesight. She is rewarded for her filial piety by being made an empress.[2]
Production
[edit | edit source]Empress Chung was the personal project of Nelson Shin, a South Korean animator that founded AKOM. He spent seven years and US$6.5 million of his own money on the film. In order to save costs, he collaborated with the North Korean SEK Studio because North Korean animators are paid less than South Korean animators. The film made use of 500 animators, 400 of which were North Korean.[2] Shin visited Pyongyang eighteen times to supervise production.[3]
Shin incorporated aspects of his personal life into the film, such as turning his pets into characters. He also did historical research for the film; the film was initially planned to be set in the Goryeo era, but it was rewritten into the Joseon era to maintain historical accuracy. Several locations in the film are based on real Korean temples and palaces, including Gyeongbokgung.[4]
Release
[edit | edit source]On August 12, 2005, Empress Chung became the first film to have been released simultaneously in both North and South Korea. It played in 6 theaters in North Korea and 51 theaters in South Korea. The film won a prize at the 2003 Annecy International Animation Film Festival and won the top prize at the 2004 Seoul International Cartoon and Animation Festival.[2] The film grossed US$140,000 on its opening weekend against a US$6.5 million budget.[1][2] Empress Chung was never released on home media and has, as such, been described as a lost film.[5]
See also
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References
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Official websiteLua error: not enough memory.
- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. at IMDbLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Empress Chung at HanCinema
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- 2005 films
- South Korean animated films
- 2005 animated films
- 2000s children's animated films
- Epic fantasy films
- 2000s fantasy adventure films
- Films based on Korean myths and legends
- Films directed by Nelson Shin
- Animated films set in Korea
- North Korean epic films
- South Korean epic films
- South Korean independent films
- 2000s South Korean films
- North Korean animated films
- Lost animated films
- 2000s lost films
- Films set in Joseon
