Loading AI tools
2013 South Korean film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Spy: Undercover Operation (Korean: 스파이; RR: Seu-pa-i; lit. "Spy") is a 2013 South Korean action comedy film about an agent (Sol Kyung-gu) who is undercover in a foreign country while his wife (Moon So-ri) has no idea what he does for a living.[2][3][4]
The Spy: Undercover Operation | |
---|---|
Hangul | 스파이 |
Revised Romanization | Seu-pa-i |
Directed by | Lee Seung-jun |
Written by | Park Soo-jin Yoon Je-kyoon |
Starring | Sol Kyung-gu Moon So-ri Daniel Henney Go Chang-seok |
Distributed by | CJ Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Budget | US$8.9 million |
Box office | US$22.5 million[1] |
The early working title was Mister K (Korean: 미스터K; RR: Miseuteo K; MR: Misŭt‘ŏ K).[5][6]
Chul-soo is a secret agent in South Korea, who is also a loving husband to his flight attendant wife Young-hee, but hides his true profession and makes her to think that he is a normal office worker. One day, Chul-soo tells his wife that he is going to Busan for a business trip, but is actually travelling with his department head Jin to Bangkok, Thailand to carry out a top secret operation with national ramifications. In Bangkok, Chul-soo spots Young-hee (who is supposed to be in Korea) with a good-looking man named Ryan. Shocked, Chul-soo decides to complete his mission, while also decides to follow his wife, fearing that she will ditch him for Ryan.
Lee Myung-se was originally attached as the film's director, then-titled Mister K.[10][11] In May 2012, production company JK Film (run by CEO/film director Yoon Je-kyoon) filed a copyright lawsuit against Lee, claiming he had "illegally and secretly registered" himself as the film's copyright holder through the Korea Copyright Commission website after he quit the project in April 2012. The legal battle was sparked after JK Film had a series of conflicts with Lee over the film's concept. Cineastes and critics had been excited about the rare collaboration between Lee and Yoon ― two influential figures in the Korean film industry who are very different from each other. Yoon is known for his commercial blockbusters Haeundae (2009) and Sector 7 (2011), while Lee is famous for his aesthetically conscious mise-en-scene and style shown in Duelist (2005) and M (2007). However, the producers and Lee had several artistic and creative differences during the early days of shooting in South Korea and Thailand. JK Film alleged that Lee refused to follow the original script, making significant deviations that were no longer appropriate to an action adventure film, and completely ignored every cinematic and stylistic request from the producer: "The film was going to be an action comedy with realistic characters, something like the James Bond series. But director Lee got rid of entire script lines and shot each scene in a rather serene and lyrical way. They weren't what we initially had in mind as its producers." JK Film resumed shooting in mid-May 2012, and Lee was replaced by rookie filmmaker Lee Seung-jun (he was assistant director for two of JK Film’s blockbusters Haeundae and Quick).[12][13]
Director Lee Myung-se and his company, Production M, did not comment.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.