Little Forest (2018) – Korean Movie

A story of youth, friendship, food, and getting a fresh start.

Little Forest 리틀 포레스트 (2018)

Directed by: Yim Soon-rye (임순례)

Starring: Kim Tae-ri (김태리), Ryu Jun-yeol (류준열), Moon So-ri (문소리), Jin Ki-joo (진기주)

The Film: It’s okay if you’re going to take a break, be different, or be normal! A special story where everything is okay in our youth. Taking tests, dating, getting a job — When things just aren’t going her way, Hye-won (Kim Tae-ri) decides to take a break and heads back to her hometown where she meets her old friends Jae-ha (Ryu Jun-yeol) and Eun-sook (Jin Ki-joo). Jae-ha found himself different from others and returned to his hometown to live his own life as well as Eun-sook who wanted to break the monotony of her ‘normal’ life. Together, they grow their own crops and make their own meals. From winter to spring, then summer, and after spending the fall, Hye-won finds that it is once again winter. As she spends these special four seasons in her hometown, Hye-won finds her true reason and takes her first step towards a new spring…

Release Date: February 28th, 2018

Little Forest made our year end “Best Korean Movies of 2018” list! Check out the video here!

Our favorite young actress Kim Tae-ri (The Handmaiden, 2016; 1987, 2017) returns to star in a new melodrama based on a popular manga series of the same name from the director of Waikiki Brothers (2001) and Forever the Moment (2007). Director Yim Soon-rye is one of the few highly respected female filmmakers and screenwriters who made a strong presence during the Korean new wave. Ryu Jun-yeol is probably most known from his breakout role in the hit drama Reply 1988 and veteran actress Moon So-ri (Oasis, 2002; Forever the Moment, 2007) is one of Koreas most talented actors. We are expecting an above average performance at the box office for this one.


 

Categories
Korean MoviesNews

Tyler is a passionate fan of East Asian cinema, especially South Korean films which he has followed closely for nearly two decades. He started one of the Pacific Northwest's first Korean Cinema Clubs out of the University of Idaho in 2004, where he also spent a year abroad studying Japanese at Nagasaki University of Foreign Languages. Since 2011, Tyler has been living and working in Seoul, South Korea as a freelance English teacher and writer. He also spent one year studying at Sogang University's well-known Korean Language program.
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