Antarctic Journal Explained

Antarctic Journal
Director:Yim Pil-sung
Starring:Song Kang-ho
Yoo Ji-tae
Producer:Cha Seung-jae
Noh Jong-yun
Chae Hoe-seung
Music:Kenji Kawai
Cinematography:Chung Chung-hoon
Editing:Kim Sun-min
Distributor:Showbox Entertainment
Country:South Korea
Runtime:114 minutes
Language:Korean
Native Name:
Rr:Namgeukilgi
Mr:NamgÅ­kilgi
Gross:[1]

Antarctic Journal is a 2005 South Korea survival psychological horror film. It is the feature film debut by director Yim Pil-sung. The film mixes elements of psychological thriller and classical horror films while showing the hardships met by a modern Korean antarctic expedition trying to reach the pole of inaccessibility. The film generated some buzz before its release due to its large budget (over) and notable cast, but wasn't a box office hit.

Plot

During their journey to the Pole of Inaccessibility (POI), the remotest point of the Antarctic, the expedition of six men, led by Captain Choi Do-hyung, discovers a journal that was left behind by a British expedition 80 years earlier. The journal was remarkably preserved in a box in the snow and Kim Min-jae, another member of the expedition, gets the job of examining it. It turns out that the two expeditions shared the same goal and soon other strange similarities between them start to show up. Will they make it to their destination before the sun goes down for the Antarctic winter?

Cast

Reception

Derek Elley from Variety wrote, "Some awesome widescreen lensing, with New Zealand convincingly repping the polar wastes, can't compensate for the dramatic emptiness of Antarctic Journal, in which the script gets lost along with the explorers."[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://boxofficemojo.com/movies/intl/?page=&country=KR&id=_fNAMGEUKILGI%28ANTA01 "Antarctic Journal"
  2. Web site: Elley . Derek . Antarctic Journal. Variety.com . 16 June 2005 . Derek Elley . 25 October 2018.