Английская Википедия:Dream (2023 film)

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Dream (Шаблон:Ko-hhrm) is a 2023 South Korean sports comedy-drama film written and directed by Lee Byeong-heon, starring Park Seo-joon and Lee Ji-eun. It revolves around Yoon Hong-dae, a football player, who receives disciplinary provision and is given the challenging job of coaching the national football team of homeless people for the Homeless World Cup.[1][2] It was released theatrically on April 26, 2023.[3]

Synopsis

After football player Hong-dae (Park Seo-joon) is involved in an unexpected incident and receives disciplinary probation, he is appointed the coach for a special national soccer team. The team consists of homeless people, some of whom have never even handled a ball before, or they exhibit eccentric and challenging behaviour. They aim to compete in the international Homeless World Cup.

Hong-dae is skeptical and cranky, but slowly warms to the role of coach, also becoming something of a TV star thanks to a documentary simultaneously being filmed about him and the team by videographer Lee So-min (played by Korean celebrity singer IU), whose career was also flagging. Hong-dae received a tempting offer that would mean leaving his coaching role, but he sticks with it and rejoins the team for the competition.

The movie is based on a true event, believed to be the 2010 Homeless World Cup, and the team flies to Europe. Although the team does not win the Cup, their performance in their final matches captures the hearts of the spectators and the documentary audience. The careers of Lee So-min and Hong-dae are rehabilitated back in Korea, and Hong-dae is seen re-entering major league soccer in the final sequence. The two leads, who initially dislike each other, does not warm into romance.

Cast

Main

  • Park Seo-joon as Yoon Hong-dae, a football coach.
  • Lee Ji-eun as Lee So-min, an aspiring director, who is making a documentary about the team[4]

Supporting

Special appearance

Production

Casting

In January 2020, Park Seo-joon was cast to play Yoon Hong-dae, a football player-turned-coach.[13] In January 2020, IU was confirmed to star alongside Park. Park prepared for his role by going to the gym.[14]

Filming

Principal photography began on May 7, 2020.[15][16] In October 2020, the production team wrapped up filming in South Korea. Additional scenes were scheduled to be filmed in Hungary or Colombia, depending on the COVID-19 situation.[17] Foreign locale shooting of the film were then postponed to 2022 due to post COVID-19 complications and working schedule of actors.[18]

On February 8, 2022, it was reported that the actors and staff of Dream would start filming overseas in Europe in March. Later, director Lee Byung-hun flew to Europe and toured the filming location.[19] On March 3, 2022, it was reported that Park Seo-joon flew to Hungary for the shooting of the film.[20]

Filming wrapped on April 13, 2022, in Hungary. Commenting on post-production work, director Lee Byung-hun said, "I will do my best to complete the rest of the post-production work so that the feelings we wanted to convey through this film can be conveyed to the audience."[21]

Release

The film was released theatrically on April 26, 2023.[22] It will make its international premiere as Centerpiece Presentation at the 22nd New York Asian Film Festival on July 17, 2023.[23][24]

Home media

The film was made available for streaming on IPTV (KT olleh TV, SK Btv, LG U+ TV), Home Choice, Google Play, Apple TV, TVING, WAVVE, Naver TV, KT skylife, and Coupang Play from June 14, 2023 in South Korea and globally via Netflix from July 25, 2023.[25] [26]

Reception

Box office

The film was released on April 26, 2023 on 1229 screens. It opened at 1st place on the South Korean box office with 93,417 people viewing the film.[27] It was placed at 2nd place on first weekend of its release with 138,859 admissions.[28] The film surpassed 1 million cumulative viewers on 16th day of its release.[29]

Шаблон:As of, with gross of US$8,222,678 and 1,128,375 admissions, it is the twelfth highest-grossing Korean film of 2023.[30]

Critical response

On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes website, the film has an approval rating of 38% based on 8 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10.[31] Viewers found the film rushed, predictable, lengthy at 125m, and only passable, with its many 'feelgood' scenes.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Lee Byeong-heon (filmmaker)