Wallpaper* was on hand to indulge in his wisdom – find out what we learned below. Bong’s feature debut was, in his words, ‘a complete box office disaster’. Even today, this dark comedy about missing ...
Incoherence is Bong’s thesis film made during his time at the Korean Academy of Film Art, and features a four-part story (told in episodes) of various public figures in the intellectual class of ...
Five years ago, South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon Ho stood on the Oscars stage, stunned as his movie “Parasite” made history as the first non-English-language film to win best picture.
Will “Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho and not one, not two, but a dozen Robert Pattinsons be able to inject a little life into the desolate box office? Movie theater owners certainly hope that ...
Bong Joon Ho has turned his funny-sad excavations of life under capitalism into unlikely blockbusters. With “Mickey 17,” he’s bending a whole new genre. Credit...Djeneba Aduayom for The New ...
After several years of waiting, director Bong Joon-ho’s latest sci-fi comedy ... day as long as people continue to perpetuate their evil ideas. This scene also conveys Mickey’s fear of ...
South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho is one of the most prominent figures in international cinema, with a rare combination of highbrow acclaim and mainstream success. Bong has won Oscars ...
It just cost way too much to ever turn a profit in this lifetime. The R-rated movie, directed by Bong Joon Ho and starring Robert Pattinson, opened on Feb. 28 in Korea (Bong’s home country ...
Bong Joon-ho's long-awaited new science fiction ... Mickey 17 realizes they're not exactly evil or dangerous, they're rather peaceful and docile as long as they're not under attack.
Yet it's safe to say you can never have too many Robert Pattinson's, as this latest effort from Bong Joon Ho attests ... nails the camp extremes that evil can embody without diminishing the ...
Although it is science-fiction to its core, director Bong Joon Ho‘s first film since his Oscar-winning Parasite six years ago is in many ways a not-that-absurd look at where we just might be ...