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Time to Hunt

Korean Cinema Today

Coming of Age · SF

  • CountryKorea
  • Production Year2020
  • Running Time134min
  • FormatDCP
  • ColorColor
Program Note
There is no country for boys. Director Yoon Sung-hyun, who led a trend in Korean independent films with Bleak Night in 2010, depicts boys in agony through his new film Time to Hunt. Jun-seok (Lee Je-hoon) and his friends rob a casino run by gangs to escape a hopeless country. Their reckless plans seem successful, but they are soon in crisis after being chased by killer Han (Park Hae-soo). Time to Hunt resembles an inescapable nightmare. The guys become helpless prey in front of the killer’s threat, which symbolizes a hellish future. Focusing on constant violence and tension, the film shows the director’s stubbornness toward the perfection of scenes and a boyhood that will last forever. (SONG Kyung-won)
Director
Director
YOON Sung-hyun
He made his feature debut in 2010 with Bleak Night, which was produced through a research course on the feature film of the Korea Academy of Film Arts, and in 2010, he won the New Currents Awards at the Busan International Film Festival and FIPRESCI Prize at the Hong Kong International Film Festival in 2011, drawing attention from home and abroad. The first new film in nine years, Time to Hunt, was invited to the Berlinale Special section of the Berlin International Film Festival, which was later released on Netflix.
Credit
  • Director
    YOON Sung-hyun
  • ProducerHan-dae LEE
    Mun-sung SON
  • CastJe-hoon LEE
    Jae-hong AN
    Woo-shik CHOI
    Jung-min PARK
    Hae-soo PARK
  • ScreenplaySung-hyun YOON
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