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On the Way to the Airport (Korean: 공항가는 길) is a South Korean television series starring Kim Ha-neul, Lee Sang-yoon, Shin Sung-rok, Choi Yeo-jin, and Jang Hee-jin, about married individuals who meet by fate and become more involved in each other's lives.
South Korean drama road movies (4 P) Pages in category "South Korean road movies" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Vietnam! Vietnam! is a United States Information Agency (USIA) film about the Vietnam War. The film, narrated by Charlton Heston, was shot on location in Vietnam in October–December 1968 but not released until 1971. Though John Ford, the executive producer, went to Vietnam, he did not participate in production work there. Ford later did ...
Road Movie (Korean: 로드무비) is a 2002 South Korean film about a love triangle between a woman, a man who loves her, and a gay man who loves him. Living on the margins of society, they go on a road trip together.
Road Movie, 2002 South Korean remake of the 1974 film; Road Movie, American film by Joseph Strick; Road, Movie, 2010 Hindi film, directed by Dev Benegal and starring Abhay Deol; Road Movie, 1996 documentary-style film by rock group R.E.M. Road Movies, a Canadian documentary television series; Road Trip, 2000 film by Todd Phillips and starring ...
R-Point (Korean: 알 포인트) is a 2004 South Korean psychological horror war film written and directed by Kong Su-chang. Set in Vietnam in 1972, during the Vietnam War, it stars Kam Woo-sung and Son Byong-ho as members of the South Korean Army in Vietnam. Most of the movie was shot in Cambodia.
The film was released during the Lunar New Year in February 1974 in South Vietnam with Chinese, English and French subtitles 1975: Dưới hai màu áo (Under Two Shirt Colors) Hoàng Dũng: Kim Cương, Ngọc Đức, Túy Hoa, Phương Khanh, Ngọc Đan Thanh: Feature Film: Em bé Hà Nội (Child from Hanoi) Hải Ninh: Feature Film
Reinforcing the film's pro-war message is the portrayal of the relationship between the Soviet characters and the Vietnamese characters as the latter are portrayed as clearly subordinate to the former, suggesting that Communist Vietnam is a sort of Soviet colony, and the claim made during the war that the North Vietnamese were just Soviet ...