Yeon Sang-ho

Yeon Sang-ho (born 25 December 1978) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. He gained international popularity for working his adult animated films The King of Pigs (2011) and The Fake (2013), and the live-action film Train to Busan (2016), its animated prequel Seoul Station (2016) and live-action sequel Peninsula (2020), and first South Korean superhero film Psychokinesis (2018).

Yeon Sang-ho
Yeon in 2016
Born (1978-12-25) December 25, 1978 (age 45)
EducationSangmyung University - Western Painting
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter
Years active1997–present
Korean name
Hangul
연상호
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYeon Sang-ho
McCune–ReischauerYŏn Sang-ho

Career

Born in Seoul on December 25, 1978, Yeon Sang-ho graduated from Sangmyung University with a degree in Western Painting.[1] He directed his first animated short film, Megalomania of D in 1997, followed by D-Day in 2000 and The Hell in 2002, then set up his own production house Studio Dadashow in 2004.[2] His next two animated shorts The Hell: Two Kinds of Life (2006) and Love Is Protein (2008) were invited to various international film festivals. The Hell: Two Kinds of Life won the Asian Ghost Award at the Short Shorts Film Festival Asia and the Public Award for Best Film School (Short Film Battle Royal) at the 2007 Lyon Asian Film Festival, and Love Is Protein screened in competition at the 2009 Curtocircuit International Short Film Festival of Santiago de Compostela in 2009.[3][4] Love Is Protein was later included in the three-short omnibus Indie Anibox: Selma's Protein Coffee.[5] Yeon also directed the animated opening trailer for the Busan International Film Festival in 2010.[6]

Yeon's first feature-length animation was The King of Pigs (2011), about a man who kills his wife after his business goes bankrupt, and seeks out his long-lost friend, a ghostwriter, 15 years after both had been severely bullied as adolescents in middle school. Inspired by the works of Satoshi Kon and Minoru Furuya, Yeon said the incidents in the film were drawn from his own life, and he cried while writing the screenplay.[7][8] The low-budget (US$150,000) film drew widespread critical acclaim for its raw portrayal of bullying, violence and systemic poverty (and the lifelong effects of such oppression), as well as the psychology of public attitudes toward a hero figure.[9][10] It became the first Korean animated film to be invited to the Cannes Film Festival, where it screened in the 2012 Directors' Fortnight sidebar.[11][12][13] It won numerous awards at domestic and international film festivals, including the Director's Guild of Korea Award for Best Director, CGV Movie Collage Award, and NETPAC Award at the 2011 Busan International Film Festival, the Satoshi Kon Award for Achievement in Animation and Special Mention (New Flesh Award for Best First Feature) at the 2012 Fantasia International Film Festival, and the Jury Prize at the 2013 Jameson Dublin International Film Festival.[14][15]

His follow-up The Window was a 30-minute animated short depicting violence in the military, and was the first film of the Independent Short Film Release Project organized by Indiespace, an independent-only theater and Indieplug, a digital distributor of independent films. Yeon said the script (illustrated by cartoonist Choi Gyu-seok) was 100% based on his own personal experience while doing his mandatory military service.[16] The Window won a Special Mention from the Jury at the 2013 Fantasia International Film Festival.

Yeon continued to make animation targeted at adults with dark, controversial themes that brutally and incisively explore human nature and social realism. His second feature The Fake (2013) critiqued organized religion, as a cult leader swindles rural, uneducated villagers out of their compensation money, while no one believes the local wastrel who discovers the truth (the characters were voiced by Oh Jung-se and Yang Ik-june, who previously starred in Love Is Protein and The King of Pigs).[17] Yeon said he wrote the script in 2009 because of his political dissatisfaction regarding issues about the FTA and Four Major Rivers Project.[18] The Fake made its world premiere at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival, and won Best Film of AnimaFICX at the 2013 Gijón International Film Festival, Best Animated Feature Film at the 2013 Sitges Film Festival, and the FIPRESCI Award at the 2014 Korean Association of Film Critics Awards.[19][20][21]

He then cast Ryu Seung-ryong and Shim Eun-kyung as voice actors in his third animated feature, Seoul Station (2015).[22] Yeon said he wanted to depict society's collective rage in a "simple, powerful way" by making a zombie film in which zombies are among people protesting for the democratization of Korea.[23]

In 2016, Yeon released his first live-action film Train to Busan, which takes place on a train to Busan as a zombie apocalypse suddenly breaks out in the country and threatens the safety of the passengers. The film was released to rave reviews, with praise given to its characters and use of social commentary. A standalone sequel Peninsula was released in 2020, also directed by Yeon.[23]

In 2024, Yeon was tapped by Toho to write and produce an adaptation of The Human Vapor to be distributed on Netflix.[24]

Filmography

Feature films

YearFilmCredited asNotes
DirectorWriterProducer
2011The King of PigsYesYesalso voice actor, editor, storyboard, character design, key animation, background artist, in between
2013The FakeYesYesalso voice actor, editor, storyboard, key animation, compositing
2014Master and ManYes
The Satellite Girl and Milk Cowas voice actor
2016The Senior ClassYesYes
Train to BusanYesAdaptation
Seoul StationYesYesYes
KaiYes
2018PsychokinesisYesYes
2019Princess AyaYes
2020PeninsulaYesYes
2021The Cursed: Dead Man's PreyYes
2023Jung_EYesYes

Short films

YearFilmSegmentCredited asNotes
DirectorWriter
1997Megalomania of DYesYes
2000D-DayYesYes
2002The HellYesYesalso producer, voice actor, rotoscoping cinematographer/line capture, layout, storyboard, in between
2006The Hell: Two Kinds of LifeYesYesalso editor, character design
2008Indie Anibox: Selma's Protein CoffeeLove Is ProteinYesYesalso lyricist
2012The WindowYesYesalso voice actor, animation director
2016The Way HomeYesYes

Television

YearTitleCredited asNotes
DirectorWriter
2020The CursedNoYes12 episodes
2021–presentHellboundYesYes
  • 6 episodes (Season 1)
  • Upcoming (Season 2)
2022MonstrousNoYes6 episodes
2024The BequeathedNoYes
Parasyte: The GreyYesYes

Awards

YearAwardCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef(s)
201116th Busan International Film FestivalDGK Award for Best DirectorThe King of PigsWon[25]
20141st Wildflower Film AwardsBest DirectorThe FakeWon[26]
201637th Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest FilmTrain to BusanNominated[27][28][29]
Best New DirectorNominated
201625th Buil Film AwardsBest FilmNominated[30][31][32]
Yu Hyun-mok Film Arts AwardWon
2017Fangoria Chainsaw AwardsBest Foreign-Language FilmWon[33]
201743rd Saturn AwardsBest Horror FilmNominated[34]
2016Korea Film Actor's Association Top Star AwardsBest New DirectorWon[35]
20178th KOFRA Film AwardsBest Discovery of the YearWon[36]
201753rd Baeksang Arts AwardsBest FilmNominated
Best New DirectorWon

State honors

Name of country, year given, and name of honor
CountryYearHonor Or AwardRef.
South Korea[note 1]2022Prime Minister's Commendation[42]

Notes

References