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{{Under Construction}}{{Tab}}{{Notice|This is article about the film. For the monster, visit [[Bulgasari]].}}{{Infobox Film|image=Bulgasari poster.jpg|dt=''Bulgasari'' (1962)|name=''Bulgasari''|type1=Ghost|type2=Red|caption=South Korea Bulgasari poster|director=Myeong-je Kim|producer=Yong-Jin Cho|distributor=Kwang-seong Films|runtime=|aspectratio=}}
{{Tab}}
 
{{Infobox Film
'''''Bulgasari''''' {{Nihongo|불가사리|Bulgasali}} is a [[1962]] [[tokusatsu]] [[Kaiju|giant monster]] fantasy [[:Category:Films|film]] produced by Kwang-seong Films. It was released to South Korean theaters on December 1, [[1962]]. The film itself was lost during the Korean War.
|type1        =Ghost
 
|type2        =Red
|image       =Bulgasari poster.png
|caption      =The South Korean poster for Bulgasari
|name         =''Bulgasari''|alt-titles=yes
|dt          =''Bulgasari'' (1962)
|director     =Kim Myeong-je
|producer     =Cho Yong-Jin
|writer      =Yoon Beom
|composer    =Kim Yong-hwan
|runtime     =110 minutes<br>{{Small|(1 hour, 50 minutes)}}<ref name="KMDb">{{cite web|url=https://www.kmdb.or.kr/db/kor/detail/movie/K/00803/own/document|title=Bulgasari|work=Korean Movie Database|accessdate=1 November 2022}}</ref>
}}
'''''Bulgasari''''' {{Nihongo|불가사리|Bulgasali}} is a [[1962]] South Korean [[Kaiju|giant monster]] [[:Category:Films|film]] produced by Kwang-seong Films. Released to South Korean theaters on December 1, [[1962]], ''Bulgasari'' is believed to be the first Korean giant monster film, predating both ''[[Space Monster Wangmagwi]]'' and ''[[Yongary, Monster from the Deep]]'' by five years, and was inspired by the same legendary monster as the 1985 North Korean film ''[[Pulgasari (film)|Pulgasari]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://folkency.nfm.go.kr/en/topic/detail/5534|title=Impossible-to-Kill(不可杀伊)|work=Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture|accessdate=13 February 2021}}</ref> It is now considered lost; however, a copy of the film's screenplay is available at the Korean Film Archive.<ref name="KMDb"/>
{{TOC}}
{{TOC}}
 
==Plot==
== Plot ==
Murdered by traitors during the [[wikipedia:Goryeo|Goryeo]] Dynasty, a skilled martial artist is resurrected as the iron-eating monster [[Pulgasari|Bulgasari]] to seek vengeance.
In feudal Korea, during the [[wikipedia:Goryeo|Goryeo Dynasty]] (918-1392) a martial artist is killed by the hands of his enemies. his resentment makes him reborn as the monster [[Bulgasari]], that grinds and eats up iron. Bulgasari takes its revenge on the traitors responsible for his death.
==Staff==
 
{{Staffs
== Staff ==
|Directed by|Kim Myeong-je
{{Staffs|Directed by=Myeong-je Kim|Produced by=Yong-Jin Cho}}
|Produced by|Cho Yong-Jin
 
|Written by|Yoon Beom
== Cast ==
|Music by|Kim Yong-hwan
{{Small|Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.}}
}}
 
==Cast==
* Seong-ho Choe
*Choe Seong-ho
* Mu-ryong Choi
*Choi Mu-ryong  
* Aeng-ran Eom
*Eom Aeng-ran  
* Bang-yeol Ji
*Ji Bang-yeol  
* Hang Jo
*Jo Hang  
* Dong-won Kim
*Kim Dong-won  
* Gang Mi-ae
*Gang Mi-ae
* Sun-bong Park
*Park Sun-bong  
 
*Lee Up-Dong
* Lee Up-Dong
==Appearances==
 
===Monsters===
== Appearances ==
*[[Pulgasari|Bulgasari]]
 
==Gallery==
=== Monsters ===
 
* [[Bulgasari]]
 
== Gallery ==
{{Main|Bulgasari (film)/Gallery}}
{{Main|Bulgasari (film)/Gallery}}
 
==Alternate titles==
== Alternate titles ==
*'''''Pulgasari''''' (alternate romanization)<!--
 
*'''''The Iron-Eating Monster'''''-->
* '''''Pulgasari''''' (Alternate romanization)
*'''''Bulgasari at the End of Songdo''''' ({{tt|松都末年의|Modernized as 송도말년의}} 불가사리; full South Korean title)
* '''''Starfish''''' (North Korea alternative transliteration)
==Theatrical releases==
* '''''The Iron-Eating Monster'''''
*South Korea - December 1, 1962
* '''''Bulgasari at the end of Goryeo''''' (''송도말년의 불가사리''; alternative South Korea title)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Bulgasari at the end of Goryeo|url=https://movie.daum.net/moviedb/main?movieId=21125|accessdate=13 February 2021|work=Movie.daum}}</ref>
==Reception==
 
''Bulgasari'' was widely panned upon release for Kim Myeong-je's antiquated direction and unconvincing special effects.<ref name="cine21">{{cite web|url=http://www.cine21.com/news/view/?mag_id=52373|title=Native Korean Monsters Are Coming|author=Yeongjin, Lee|date=29 July 2008|work=Cine21}}</ref>
== Theatrical releases ==
==References==
 
* South Korea - December 1, 1962
 
== See also ==
 
*[[Pulgasari (film)|''Pulgasari'']], a 1985 remake
 
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Kaiju Movies|tab=Misc}}
{{Comments}}
{{Comments|scroll=yes}}
{{Era|SHO|KAI|FIL}}
{{Era|FIL}}
 
[[Category:Films]]
[[Category:Films]]
[[Category:Korean films]]
[[Category:Korean films]]
[[Category:1960's Films]]
[[Category:1960's Films]]
[[Category:Kaiju Films]]
[[Category:Lost media]]

Latest revision as of 00:30, 13 October 2023

Article.png
Image gallery for Bulgasari (film)


Bulgasari
See alternate titles
The South Korean poster for Bulgasari
Directed by Kim Myeong-je
Producer Cho Yong-Jin
Written by Yoon Beom
Music by Kim Yong-hwan
Running time 110 minutes
(1 hour, 50 minutes)[1]

Bulgasari (불가사리,   Bulgasali) is a 1962 South Korean giant monster film produced by Kwang-seong Films. Released to South Korean theaters on December 1, 1962, Bulgasari is believed to be the first Korean giant monster film, predating both Space Monster Wangmagwi and Yongary, Monster from the Deep by five years, and was inspired by the same legendary monster as the 1985 North Korean film Pulgasari.[2] It is now considered lost; however, a copy of the film's screenplay is available at the Korean Film Archive.[1]

Plot

Murdered by traitors during the Goryeo Dynasty, a skilled martial artist is resurrected as the iron-eating monster Bulgasari to seek vengeance.

Staff

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Directed by   Kim Myeong-je
  • Produced by   Cho Yong-Jin
  • Written by   Yoon Beom
  • Music by   Kim Yong-hwan

Cast

  • Choe Seong-ho
  • Choi Mu-ryong
  • Eom Aeng-ran
  • Ji Bang-yeol
  • Jo Hang
  • Kim Dong-won
  • Gang Mi-ae
  • Park Sun-bong
  • Lee Up-Dong

Appearances

Monsters

Gallery

Main article: Bulgasari (film)/Gallery.

Alternate titles

  • Pulgasari (alternate romanization)
  • Bulgasari at the End of Songdo (松都末年의 불가사리; full South Korean title)

Theatrical releases

  • South Korea - December 1, 1962

Reception

Bulgasari was widely panned upon release for Kim Myeong-je's antiquated direction and unconvincing special effects.[3]

References

This is a list of references for Bulgasari (film). These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Bulgasari". Korean Movie Database. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  2. "Impossible-to-Kill(不可杀伊)". Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
  3. Yeongjin, Lee (29 July 2008). "Native Korean Monsters Are Coming". Cine21.

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