WAPO story on how South Korean directors are experiencing a sort of explosion in Hollywood. I've long been a big fan of SouKo's horror films, but now it appears that we're getting a broader flow - post-Gangnam Style:
South Korea’s film directors, like its pop stars, have been trying for years to break out of their country’s competitive but small market and into the West. Just as Korean music finally broke through last year with Psy’s “Gangnam Style,” this might be the year that Korean directors take over Hollywood.
Three of South Korea’s top directors are this year releasing, and in one case already have released, their first English-language films, often featuring top-name American actors (or Anglophones who pose as Americans), the New York Times noted in a story this weekend. The directors have long had “fan bases” in Hollywood eager to pull them into the U.S. market, the Times says, explaining that American producers appreciate that Korean directors’ “style and restraint go hand in hand with a taste for visceral, often bloody stories in popular categories like horror and crime.”
South Korea seems poised to follow the path of Japan. It had its democratization moment back in the 1990s, and its big firms have gone from knock-offs to high-end offerings. Now, it's time to start exporting the culture.
It's a journey worth watching. China invariably follows this path, and the Chinese spend a lot of time watching South Korea and how it navigates from middle-income to higher realms. South Korea is, last time I checked, just about the biggest regional investor in China and you see Koreans all over the place in major cities - especially in universities. It seems like a positive "lead goose" effect, wherein the Chinese are more ready to follow the South Korean example than admit to doing the same with Japan.
Then again, it's natural to focus more on the country making the journey is closest historical proximity to your own. Japan modeled itself significantly on the US, South Korea watched and copied Japan's example. China will eventually copy South Korea in many ways, and Seoul is an excellent example of how you do it.