Lee Doo-yong

This is a Korean name; the family name is Lee.
Lee Doo-yong
Born (1942-12-24) December 24, 1942
South Korea
Occupation Film director,
screenwriter
Korean name
Hangul 이두용
Revised Romanization I Du-yong
McCune–Reischauer I Tu-yong

Lee Doo-yong (born December 24, 1942) is a South Korean film director. Since his debut in 1969 with the film The Lost Wedding Veil (1970), Lee has made more than 60 films in a wide array of genres. In the 1970s, he introduced Korean-style action films, including The Korean Connection (1974) and Left Foot of Wrath (1974).[1][2][3] His film Mulleya Mulleya (1984) created great controversy in the Korean media as well as in the West, due to the graphic portrayal of a woman's subjugated life during the Yi Dynasty.[4]

Filmography

As director

  • The Lost Wedding Veil (1970)
  • Is Your Husband Like This Too? (1971)
  • A Sudden Calamity (1971)
  • My Older Brother (sequel) (1971)
  • A Guilty Woman (1971)
  • A Chinese Ghost (1971)
  • Some Married Couple (1971)
  • Don't Go (1972)
  • Where Should I Go? (1972)
  • Ever smiling Mr. Park (1972)
  • I Will Give It All (1972)
  • A Warrant for an Arrest (1973)
  • The General in Red Robes (1973)
  • Manchurian Tiger (1974)
  • Bridge of Death (1974)
  • A Little Bird (1974)
  • The Korean Connection (1974)
  • Returned Single-Legged Man 2 (1974)
  • Left Foot of Wrath (1974)
  • A Betrayer (1974)
  • Disarmament (1975)
  • At The Risk of Life (1975)
  • Byeong-Tae's Impressive Days (1975)
  • Black Night (1975)
  • Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave (1976)
  • Secret Agents 2 (1977)
  • 44th Street, New York (1977)
  • The Early Years (1977)
  • Confession of Life or Death (1978)
  • The Last Heist (1979)
  • Rely on Your Brother (1979)
  • Muldori Village (1979)
  • 49 Days in Hell (1979)
  • Police Story (1979)
  • Three Women Under the Umbrella (1980)
  • The Last Witness (1980)
  • Two Heroes (1980)
  • The Haunted Villa (1981)
  • The Hut (1981)
  • The Trouble-solving Broker (1982)
  • The Swamp of Desire (1982)
  • Strange Relationship (1983)
  • Mulleya Mulleya (1984)
  • Day and Night (1984)
  • The Oldest Son (1985)
  • The Fool (1985)
  • Mulberry (1986)
  • The Fool 2 (1986)
  • Eunuch (1986)
  • Highway (1987)
  • Karma (1988)
  • Mulberry 2 (1989)
  • Silent Assassins (1989)
  • Road to Cheongsong Prison (1990)
  • Black Snow (1991)
  • Mulberry 3 (1992)
  • Pro at Love, Amateur at Marriage (1994)
  • The Great Hunter G. J. (1995)
  • L'Amour (1999)
  • Arirang (2003)
  • A Journey with Korean Masters (2013)[5]

As screenwriter

  • The Lost Wedding Veil (1970)
  • The General in Red Robes (1973)
  • Manchurian Tiger (1974)
  • Rely on Your Brother (1979)
  • The Oldest Son (1985)
  • The Fool 2 (1986)
  • Karma (1988)
  • Black Snow (1991)
  • The Great Hunter G. J. (1995)
  • L'Amour (1999)
  • Arirang (2003)

Awards

References

  1. "LEE Doo-yong". Korean Film Biz Zone. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  2. "LEE Doo Yong: The Pathfinder of Korean Genre Films". Busan International Film Festival. 25 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-10-18.
  3. "Korean Film Archive to Screen Director Lee Du-yong's Films". Hancinema. 6 January 2006. Retrieved 2015-12-26.
  4. Dissanayake, Wimal (1994). Colonialism and Nationalism in Asian Cinema. Guildford: Indiana University Press. pp. 95–96. ISBN 0-253-20895-5. Retrieved 2015-12-26.
  5. Kim, Hyun-min (18 March 2013). "PARK Pulled Off Many Extraordinary Feats for Korean Film World". Korean Film Biz Zone. Retrieved 2015-12-24.

External links


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