Film critic Peter Travers reviews "Mickey 17," produced, written and directed by Bong Joon-ho, starring Robert Pattinson.
Director Bong Joon-ho returns with the sci-fi comedy ‘Mickey 17,’ Lady Gaga drops the highly anticipated album ‘Mayhem,’ ‘Moby-Dick’ surfaces at the Metropolitan Opera, and more.
This week we recommend Bong Joon-ho’s dystopian social satire, a queer superhero romp and a gripping Netflix drama.
Here is a list of 10 movies that serve as a satire and biting commentary on various social issues that are relevant even today. Directed by Bong Joon-ho, Parasite is a South Korean masterpiece that shakes you right to the core with its haunting imagery of the prevalent class distinction in society.
HBO's Parasite series has faced several delays and false rumors but Bong Joon-ho confirmed that it is under development but a long time away.
On a recent visit to The Late Show, award-winning Parasite director Bong Joon Ho shared why, though he respects musicals, he could never make one himself. Watch the conversation here!
The director faced backlash from fans for not mentioning the Thai-born singer’s name in an interview, sparking racism accusations.
In Bong Joon-ho’s latest film, Robert Pattinson plays a space traveller facing a succession of death sentences.
Bong Joon Ho had to make up a story to keep Harvey Weinstein from cutting his 2013 English-language debut, Snowpiercer.
Mickey 17' director Bong Joon Ho explains everything about the pivotal ship scene with Mickey Barnes, played by Robert Pattinson, on their journey to colonize an ice planet. Hear Bong break down the intentions in detail including the framing and mise en scène,
SOUTH KOREAN DIRECTOR Bong Joon-ho may have burst onto the scene with mainstream movie-viewing audiences back in 2020, when his masterful film Parasite won Best Picture at the Academy Awards, but the 55-year-old filmmaker has actually been hard at working cranking out unique and visionary films for now 25 years.
Bong Joon-ho is addressing chatter about Donald Trump being the inspiration behind Mark Ruffalo’s villainous character in Mickey 17. In a new interview, the Oscar-winning director discussed who really inspired the egomaniacal politician Kenneth Marshall,