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Su A Kim's Fan Forum
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Anonymous
Rookie
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I am doing an analysis of LPGA performance and I need the birth year of Su A Kim. What year was she born? |
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Anonymous
Legend
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All roads lead to the center of Devil Mountain! Majeh and Young dig deeper into the mountain's heart and Chung-Poong looks for his kidnapped brother. Lurking in the shadows is an indestructible army of regenerating zombies. What no one knows is that it's all a trap to lure all the expert fighters to Devil Mountain...and kill them!
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Anonymous
Legend
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Although its publicity touts Three Seasons, a triple winner at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival, as "the only American film made entirely in Vietnam,, there is little that is American about this movie. Its sensibility seems far more Vietnamese than American, from its lyrical Oriental imagery and its concern with the plight of Vietnamese citizens since the war to its reverence for the country's ancient culture. Similarly, Harvey Keitel is listed as the star, but his is really the most minor of the film's major roles. Three Seasons tells three tangentially linked stories. First is the tale of Kien An (Ngoc Hiep Nguyen), a lovely young woman who works picking lotus blossoms at a sanitarium. She becomes a scribe for its mysterious proprietor, Teacher Dao (Manh Cuong Tran), a leper who hides himself away in shame but whose soul is full of beautiful poetry. Then there is Hai (Don Duong), a gentle "cyclo" (bicycle ricksha) driver who falls in love with Lan (Zoe Bui), an alluring, feisty prostitute he sees coming and going from the big tourist hotels. Last, there is James Hager (Keitel), an ex-Marine who fought in the war and has returned to find the daughter he fathered many years before. There is also a charming plot about Woody (Huu Duoc Nguyen), a little street urchin who sells contraband out of a suitcase. The narrative involving Keitel's character is the least developed in the film, and seems to be almost an afterthought, but in any event, truly magnificent visuals and a delicate lyricism make Three Seasons a haunting, bittersweet film portrait of life in contemporary Vietnam. --Laura Mirsky |
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Anonymous
Legend
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![]() Wookyung Kim, tenor The release of this CD by Wookyung Kim marks the unstoppable ascendency of this exciting young Korean tenor. Having won Plácido Domingo's Operalia competition and following his critically acclaimed debuts at the Metropolitan Opera and Carnegie Hall, New York, Munich State Opera and the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, the album allows the listener to meet one of the great new voices of the future. This first release reflects his choice of favourite Korean songs, to be followed shortly by his operatic arias disc [June 2008]. This is his solo recording debut. 13 tracks of well known classical Korean Songs including 'An Ode for my Home Town', 'New Arirang' and 'Bellflower'. |