Empress Chung | |||||||||||||
Director: | Nelson Shin | ||||||||||||
Producer: | Nelson Shin Yi Jin-eun Kang Min-woo | ||||||||||||
Screenplay: | Kim Jung-ha Shin Jang-hyun Yoo Kwang-hee Kyong Seung-won Kwon Young-sup | ||||||||||||
Story: | Nelson Shin | ||||||||||||
Music: | Sung Dong-hwan | ||||||||||||
Editing: | Nelson Shin | ||||||||||||
Studio: | AKOM SEK Studio | ||||||||||||
Distributor: | KOAA Films | ||||||||||||
Runtime: | 93 minutes | ||||||||||||
Country: | North Korea South Korea | ||||||||||||
Language: | Korean | ||||||||||||
Budget: | US$6.5 million[1] | ||||||||||||
Native Name: |
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Empress Chung is a 2005 animated feature film, produced in North and South Korea and directed by Nelson Shin, on whose story the screenplay is also based.
In this adventure, based on a famous Korean folk tale, a daughter sacrifices herself to restore her blind father's eyesight.
As a personal project, Shin spent eight years getting the project off the ground, including three and a half years of pre-production. The film was co-produced in North Korea by the Chosun April 26th Children Film Studio (also known as SEK), and the score was also recorded in the North by the Pyongyang Film and Broadcasting Orchestra. In a move unusual for the Korean film industry, the character voices were recorded in both the South and the North due to differences in dialect. For the definitive international release version, the South Korean dub is the one used.
On August 12, 2005, Empress Chung became the first film to have been released simultaneously in both North and South Korea. The film was featured at the 2004 Annecy International Animation Festival, and was also recognized with several awards in Korea.
The film grossed on its opening weekend against a budget,[1] continuing a trend of under-performing animated features made for the Korean market.[2]
Since the initial release, aside from few screenings across Europe, the film did not get an international theatrical release or home media release. Nowadays, the only things related to the film that are online is the trailer, sound test animation, some screenshots[3] and a collection of children's books.[4]
There has also been evidence suggesting despite not being released on DVD internationally or in South Korea, that it was released in North Korea because Johannes Schönherr has mentioned Empress Chung when talking about his latest North Korean DVD acquiring, however without more evidence it can neither be confirmed or disconfirmed whether North Korean DVD release is real.[5] [6]