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John Cho (born Cho Yo-Han; June 16, 1972) [1] is an American actor known for his roles as Harold Lee in the Harold & Kumar films, and Hikaru Sulu in the Star Trek rebooted film series, [2] Better Luck Tomorrow, Columbus, and Searching, which made him the first Asian American actor in history to headline a mainstream thriller film in Hollywood.
John Cho plays Sulu in the Star Trek films in the "Kelvin timeline". John Cho portrays an alternate Sulu in the 2009 film Star Trek. J. J. Abrams was concerned about casting a Korean-American as the character, but Takei explained to the director that Sulu was meant to represent all of Asia on the Enterprise, so Abrams went ahead with Cho. [21]
The 'Searching' star discusses his career, Asian-American representation and how 'Star Trek 4' will handle the late Anton Yelchin's absence. John Cho: 'I'd loved to be overrated, overpaid and ...
Zoe Saldana and John Cho in 'Star Trek Beyond' (2016). In Star Trek Beyond , the Enterprise crew is ambushed by a villain named Krall ( Idris Elba ) and his allies who want the Abronath — a ...
It is the 12th installment in the Star Trek franchise and the sequel to the 2009 film Star Trek, as the second in a rebooted film series. It features Chris Pine reprising his role as Captain James T. Kirk , with Zachary Quinto , Simon Pegg , Karl Urban , Zoe Saldaña , John Cho , Anton Yelchin , Bruce Greenwood , and Leonard Nimoy reprising ...
Zoe Saldana and John Cho in "Star Trek Beyond." The movie is the latest in Cho’s diverse body of work, which includes comedy like the stoner cult-classic franchise “Harold and Kumar” and ...
Star Trek Beyond is a 2016 American science fiction action film directed by Justin Lin, written by Simon Pegg and Doug Jung, and based on the television series Star Trek created by Gene Roddenberry. It is the 13th film in the Star Trek franchise and the third installment in the reboot series , following Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into ...
A new Twitter account is Photoshopping John Cho onto movie posters of big-time blockbusters -- and it's making a big point. Allow Twitter to reimagine John Cho as the star of blockbusters (and ...