Jinho Myung
Directing
Known For

During the summer semester at a New York City arts school, boundaries begin to blur between an adjunct professor and the students in her Personal Documentary filmmaking class.
Personal Documentary

Two Asian-American teenagers meet in the bathroom of a Chinese restaurant while having dinner with their families.
Lucky Fish

Following the death of their mother, a Thai American brother and sister from Queens navigate living in the city and beyond.
Softshell

When two reckless best friends get evicted from their apartment, they embark on a road trip with a pair of German immigrants attempting to trap them into green-card marriages.
Aitana Needs a Gun

After distancing herself from a complicated relationship with her father, 22-year-old Kate Young returns home for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Returning, Again

On their anniversary, a spontaneous sex-tape forces a 30-something couple to confront dormant issues in their relationship.
A Real, Sexual Relationship

A distraught teen attempts to track down her recently-deceased father’s missing cat, only to unearth a devastating family secret in the process.
Canicas

Experiencing a painful toothache, Roy Kim, a floater, must address the estranged relationship he has with his dentist.
incisor

After calling to have a plumbing issue repaired, Paul struggles to navigate a social interaction with his superintendent.
How do you take it?

Two undergraduates discuss the status of their relationship and their sexual experiences.
The Pressure of Sweetness
A young woman gets her back pierced and contemplates an upcoming decision.
Ribbon

After glancing at his girlfriend's phone, Mr. Carlos struggles keeping himself together around his after-school students.
Today I Did Not Make Smart Choices

In his first semester at an out-of-state university, Ison navigates new friendships and a romantic interest.
Into Particles

When two brothers get together for dinner and start trading stories about their girlfriends, their comfort with one another leads them to reveal a bit too much. To the rhythm of its sultry score, the film folds pithy observations on love — both romantic and fraternal — into a compendious morality tale that’s as funny as it is disturbing.
brothers who love

Michael, a new tenant at his Brooklyn apartment, hires a monk to host an overnight week long meditation retreat on his rooftop. When nobody shows up, the monk starts growing restless, fixing to leave early.