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Love with an Alien

Love with an Alien
Traditional Chinese異國情鴛
Simplified Chinese异国情鸳
Literal meaningExotic Lovebirds
Hanyu Pinyinyìguó qíngyuān
Directed by
  • Jeon Chang-geun
  • Tu Gwang-qi
  • Mitsuo Wakasugi[1]
Starring
CinematographyNishimoto Tadashi
Production
companies
Release date
  • 1958 (1958)
Countries
LanguageChinese

Love with an Alien (Chinese: 異國情鴛; pinyin: yìguó qíngyuān; lit. 'Exotic Lovebirds', known in South Korea as Korean이국정원; RRIgukjeongwon; lit. Exotic Garden) is a 1958 romance film produced by Shaw Brothers Studio and Korea Entertainment as the first co-production film between South Korea and Hong Kong. Love with an Alien follows a romance between a Hong Kong singer and a visiting Korean composer, and the complications their nationalities pose for their relationship. The film is notable for being the first color film from Shaw Brothers as well as being the first in the line of South Korea-Hong Kong co-productions and influencing other romance films of the era. The film was lost for 54 years after its release before being rediscovered and restored, though the restoration has never been widely released.

Synopsis

In 1950s Hong Kong, singer Bang-eum falls in love with composer Su-pyeong who is visiting from South Korea. Bang-eum’s parents become infuriated, seemingly because Su-pyeong is a foreigner. However, as the two plan to leave Hong Kong, Bang-eum's mother Bing-shim reveals that she had been married to a Korean man and had two children in Korea, a boy and a girl, Bang-Eum. She took Bang-eum to Hong Kong and never returned and having lost contact with her husband and son fears Su-pyeong may be Bang-eum's long lost brother.[3]

Cast

Production

The South Korean-Hong Kong film collaboration began in 1955 at the 2nd Southeast Asia Film Festival in Singapore. Korean film producer Im Hwa-su (CEO of Hanhkook Entertainment Company[4], also sometimes called Korea Entertainment[2]) met the Shaw brothers, still of Shaw & Sons at the time. The brothers suggested collaborating, with Love with an Alien the first resulting film.[1]

The film was shot in Eastmancolor under direction of Japanese cinematographer Nishimoto Tadashi.[5] Nishimoto was referred to the Shaw Brothers for his expertise with color film technologies, and Love with an Alien was the first color film from Shaw Brothers.[6]

Impact

Love with an Alien was released in Korea, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia in 1958.[1] It initially met a lukewarm reception[2] but inspired other romance films involving "hopeless love" between a Hong Kong woman and a Korean man such as Deep in My Heart and Loving the Years of War, both from 1967.[1][7]

The co-production relationship between Hong Kong and South Korea continued later in the 1960s, due to collaboration between Korean director Shin Sang-ok and Shaw Brothers. This resulted in films including Last Woman of Shang (1964), The Goddess of Mercy (1966) and King with My Face (1967).[2]

Restoration

The film was lost after its premiere until a badly damaged negative print was discovered by the Korean Film Archive in a Shaw Brothers storage facility in May 2012, 54 years after its initial release. The restoration was handled by Imagica, and was debuted by the Korean Film Archive on April 2, 2013.[8] Love with an Alien is the oldest surviving color feature film archived in Korea.[3]

As the audio for the film was lost, in 2013 a 'dubbing show' performance based on the film was presented in Incheon, South Korea with voice work by actors including Park Si-won, Lee Soo-an and Seo Hyun-woo accompanied by live foley effects.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Lee, Sangjoon (18 June 2019). "The South Korean film industry and the Chinese film market". Screen. 60 (2): 332–341. doi:10.1093/screen/hjz019. Retrieved 18 May 2025.
  2. ^ a b c d e Lee, Claire (27 March 2013). "Love in Hong Kong, 1957". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 14 May 2025.
  3. ^ Shim, Doobo (December 2020). "Transnational Koreans in Asian Pop Culture in the Pre-Korean Wave Era". Asian Communication Research. 17 (3): 55–83. doi:10.20879/acr.2020.17.3.55. Retrieved 18 May 2025.
  4. ^ "NISHIMOTO Tadashi (HE Lanshan) 西本正(賀蘭山)(1921–1997)" (PDF). Hong Kong Film Archive. Hong Kong Film Archive. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 January 2025.
  5. ^ Han, Yanli. "Japanese Cinematographer Nishimoto Tadashi's Hong Kong Romance" (PDF). Our Stories on One Hundred Years of Cinema. Translated by Chen, Piera. Hong Kong Film Archive. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 December 2022.
  6. ^ "The Joys and Sorrows of Ting Ying". Hong Kong Film Archive. Hong Kong Film Archive. Retrieved 14 May 2025.
  7. ^ "Seoul-Hong Kong-Macau: Love with an Alien and South Korea's Encounter with Sinophone Cinemas".
  8. ^ "21세기 사운드 입히는 한국 첫 컬러영화 `이국정원`" [Korea's first colour movie 'Gukjeongwon' with 21st century sound]. 경인일보 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-05-17.
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