Let Me Out (film)

Let Me Out
Hangul 렛 미 아웃
Revised Romanization Let-mi-aut
Directed by Kim Chang-rae
Jae Soh
Produced by Jae Soh
Irene Cho
Min Soh
Written by Kim Chang-rae
Jae Soh
Starring Kwon Hyun-sang
Park Hee-von
Cinematography Kim Seung-hoon
Distributed by Baekdu-Daegan Film Company
Release dates
  • August 15, 2013 (2013-08-15)
Running time
97 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean
Budget ₩150 million

Let Me Out (Hangul: 렛 미 아웃; RR: Let-mi-aut) is a 2013 South Korean film. Part coming-of-age, part comedy, the low-budget indie is about a film student's struggles with making a movie for the first time, and captures the harsh realities of the Korean filmmaking industry.[1] Produced by the Seoul Institute of the Arts and the Baekdu-Daegan Film Company, it was directed by Soh Jae-young (or Jae Soh) and Kim Chang-rae,[2] and starred Kwon Hyun-sang in his first leading role.[3][4]

Let Me Out won the Gold Medal Award at the 57th New York Festivals International Television & Film Awards in 2014.[5]

Plot

Mu-young (Kwon Hyun-sang) is a 4th-year film student and convenience store clerk. A know-it-all who is quick to pick apart and ridicule the work of others, he is endlessly complaining about the state of the Korean film industry and showing off his vast knowledge of cinema. When a famous indie director (Yang Ik-june) visits his university, his fellow students are starstruck, but Mu-young is unimpressed. At a Q&A session, he mocks the director's most recent work as a commercial sellout. Similarly unimpressed with Mu-young's attitude, the director throws it back at him, unexpectedly "awarding" him a US$5,000 production grant and challenging him to go out and actually shoot a decent film.

The problem is, Mu-young is nowhere close to being prepared, with his unfinished screenplay languishing in a drawer. With no other choice, he gathers together a cast and crew with varying experience, and casts Ah-young (Park Hee-von), the girl he loves, as the protagonist. He sets out to shoot his dream project, a zombie melodrama. But his inexperience, demands and impatience cause everyone around him to go crazy, turning his project into a nightmare. Everything that can go wrong, does, and the shoot faces a series of obstacles and accidents, from casting actors to securing locations and funds. Mu-young comes to realize that the reality of filmmaking is very different from theory, and like love, isn't easy at all.[6]

Cast

Release

Let Me Out premiered at the 2012 Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival. Then in 2013, it was the first Korean independent film to receive a simultaneous theater release in South Korea and the United States.[7]

Baekdu-Daegan Film Company released the film in Korea on August 15, 2013, in approximately 15 theaters, including Art House Momo, CGV Movie Collage, and Artplus Cinema Network. It made its U.S. premiere at The Downtown Independent in Los Angeles on August 16, and was released by distributor Funimation on September 25 in San Francisco, San Diego and Dallas, on October 23 in Atlanta, and on October 24 in Chicago.[1][8]

References

  1. 1 2 Chung, Ah-young (6 September 2013). "Korean indie film creating buzz in US". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  2. Jang, Sung-ran (26 October 2012). "LET ME OUT Director Jae Soh & KIM Chang-rae". Korean Cinema Today. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  3. Tae, Sang-joon (28 August 2013). "KWON Hyun-sang, Actor of LET ME OUT: To Let It Out and Aim for a Scene Stealer". Korean Cinema Today. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  4. Kang, Grace (27 August 2013). "Q&A With Let Me Out Director Jae Soh and Actor Kwon Hyunsang". KoreAm Journal. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  5. Chung, Ah-young (18 April 2014). "Let Me Out wins gold medal in NYF awards". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2014-04-19.
  6. Paquet, Darcy (9 August 2013). "Let Me Out, and the plight of indie-mainstream films". Daum. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  7. Conran, Pierce (25 July 2013). "LET ME OUT Unleashed in Korea and US". Korean Film Council. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  8. Conran, Pierce (7 October 2013). "LET ME OUT Adds US Dates". Korean Film Council. Retrieved 2014-04-19.

External links

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