Boy Goes to Heaven
Boy Goes to Heaven | |
---|---|
Korean name | |
Hangul | 소년, 천국에 가다 |
Hanja | 少年, 天國에 가다 |
Revised Romanization | Sonyeon, cheonguge gada |
McCune–Reischauer | Sonyŏn, ch'ŏn'guge kada |
Directed by | Yoon Tae-yong |
Written by | Park Seong-kyeong Park Chan-wook Lee Moo-yeong Choi Dong-hoon Yoon Tae-yong |
Produced by | Cha Seung-jae Kim Mi-hee Kim Yeong-dae Kim Sun-ho |
Starring | Yum Jung-ah Park Hae-il |
Cinematography | Lee Jun-gyu |
Edited by | Kim Sang-bum Kim Jae-bum |
Music by | Dalpalan Jang Young-gyu |
Production companies | Sidus FNH Christmas Entertainment |
Distributed by | Showbox Chungeorahm |
Release date |
|
Running time | 114 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Box office | US$949,293[1] |
Boy Goes to Heaven (Korean: 소년, 천국에 가다), also known as A Boy Who Went to Heaven, is a 2005 South Korean film directed by Yoon Tae-yong, starring Yum Jung-ah and Park Hae-il.
Plot
[edit]Ne-mo is a thirteen-year-old boy growing up in 1980s South Korea, and is the only child of a single mother who runs a watch repair shop in their small town. Having never met his father, Ne-mo resolves to marry a single mother when he is older. Following the suicide of his mother, Ne-mo becomes acquainted with Bu-ja, who opens a comic shop in his town. Bu-ja is also a single mother with a young son of her own, and Ne-mo instantly falls in love with her. Despite their age difference he proposes to her in a movie theater, but a fire breaks out and Ne-mo is killed saving Bu-ja's son.
Waking up in Heaven, Ne-mo finds himself in the middle of an argument between two angels, who can't agree whether his life was supposed to end at the age of thirteen or ninety-three. As a compromise they return him to Earth several days after he died, except he is now thirty-three years old and will age one year every day until he reaches ninety-three. Now an adult and with just sixty days left to live, Ne-mo poses as his own father and resumes his pursuit of Bu-ja.
Cast
[edit]- Yum Jung-ah ... Bu-ja
- Park Hae-il ... adult Ne-mo
- Oh Kwang-rok
- Park Eun-soo
- Jeong Jin-gak
- Kim Kwan-woo ... young Ne-mo
- Hong So-yeon
- Jo Min-su ... Ne-mo's mother (cameo)
Release
[edit]Boy Goes to Heaven opened in South Korea on 11 November 2005, and was ranked fourth at the box office on its opening weekend with 109,186 admissions.[2] The film went on to accumulate a total of 242,053 admissions nationwide.[3]
Critical response
[edit]In a review for The Korea Herald, Yang Sung-jin praised the performance of child actor Kim Kwan-woo as "impressive and believable" and found Park Hae-il "true to form" as one of South Korea's leading actors, but criticized Yum Jung-ah for her "hackneyed" and overemphasised sexuality. Yang also regarded the relationship between the two main characters as inappropriate, noting that Bu-ja promises to marry Ne-mo when he is still a child and later has sex with him falsely believing that he is an adult, saying that while the character "is not a pedophile... she clearly—and at least initially—doesn't have motives as pure-hearted as Nae-mo's."[4] Love HK Film.com described Boy Goes to Heaven as a "cute, fairly entertaining, but wholly inconsequential fantasy melodrama", and was critical of the director for a lack of attention to detail, in particular a reference to the age gap between the characters despite the film's 1980s setting.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "A Boy Who Went to Heaven". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
- ^ "Korean Box Office Week-end 2005.11.11 ~ 2005.11.13". Hancinema. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
- ^ "Box-Office Results (2005)". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
- ^ Yang, Sung-jin (4 November 2005). "'Boy, Goes to Heaven' conjures up body-transference fantasy tale". Hancinema (originally published by The Korea Herald). Retrieved 22 May 2009.
- ^ "A Boy Who Went to Heaven". Love HK Film.com. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
External links
[edit]- Boy Goes to Heaven at HanCinema
- Boy Goes to Heaven at the Korean Movie Database (in Korean)
- A Boy Who Went to Heaven at IMDb