
Kim Kyung-mook
Directing
Biography
Kim Kyung Mook is a South Korean screenwriter and director.
Known For

The various faces of youth and people in an enclosed space of a convenience store for 12 hours.
Futureless Things

Stateless Things crosscuts between the lives of two young men, one an illegal immigrant from North Korea stuck in dead-end jobs, the other the kept boy of a married businessman stifling in a swanky apartment.
Stateless Things

A trans person is contemplating on the "New Seoul" rising from the "Old and ugly Seoul" while strolling along a river, Cheonggyecheon River in the middle of downtown Seoul, where they meet a talking dog. The two start talking and the dog guides the stranger through a weird multidimensional world. The male side of their personality sees Seoul one way and the female side sees something complete different.
A Cheonggyecheon Dog

Faceless Things shows two acts of gay sadomasochistic sex—one acted, the other not—with such bare-faced cheek that some viewers will be repelled.
Faceless Things
No description available.
DisPlaced: Closed Circuit
Uses the contrast between 16 mm and DV tape to explore the boundary between actual sex and imagined sex.
Sex/Less
No description available.
Grace Period

I like to play with a doll when I was young. I did make up at my mom’s dressing table. It was like playing at playground to other kids and I did wear a skirt and shoes and went outside to play. However, everything had been changed since I went to school there was certain rules at school.
Me and Doll-Playing
Peace in Me