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Lee Kwang-hoon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Korean filmmaker
For the footballer, seeLee Gwang-hoon.
Lee Kwang-hoon
Born1959 (age 66–67)
OccupationFilmmaker
Known forGhost in Love
Korean name
Hangul
이광훈
RRI Gwanghun
MRI Kwanghun

Lee Kwang-hoon (Korean이광훈; born 1959) is a South Korean filmmaker who has directed four feature-length films.

Education and career

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Lee was born in South Korea in 1959, and studied atSogang University for his Bachelor of Arts and inOhio State University to get his Master of Arts. He was the assistant director forEyes of Dawn and also appeared as an extra. His first movieDoctor Bong was the biggest success in box office in Korea in 1995.[1]

Lee's 1999 filmGhost in Love (Jaguimo) was one of the leading films in the "new wave" of Korean cinema[2] around the turn of the millennium designed to produce blockbusters to rivalHollywood.[3]

In 2008 Lee was involved in controversy when he accusedKim Tae-kyun, the director ofCrossing, of plagiarism.[4]

References

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  1. ^"Lee Kwang-hoon (이광훈)".
  2. ^Leong, Anthony C. Y. (2003).Korean cinema: the new Hong Kong: a guidebook for the latest Korean new wave.Trafford Publishing. p. 139.ISBN 978-1-55395-461-3.
  3. ^Gateward, Frances K. (2007).Seoul searching: culture and identity in contemporary Korean cinema.SUNY Press. p. 55.ISBN 978-0-7914-7225-5.
  4. ^Han, Sunhee (7 August 2008)."S. Korea picks 'Crossing' for Oscars".Variety. Retrieved25 January 2010.


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