For his role in Oldboy, he won the Best Actor prize at the 40th Baeksang Art Awards, the 24th Blue Dragon Awards, and the 41st Grand Bell Awards. In 2014, he was listed as Gallup Korea's Film Actor of the Year.[1]
Early life
Choi was born in Seoul, South Korea.[2] When he was in third grade, Choi was diagnosed with tuberculosis and told that he could not be cured. He claims to have regained his health by a month-long stay in the mountains.[3]
Career
Graduating with a degree in theatre from Dongguk University,[4] Choi began his career as a theatre actor by joining a theater company named ‘Ppuri’(극단 뿌리) in 1982. His debut was a play named ‘Our Town’.
In 1997, Choi played a police prosecuter in Song Neung-han's No. 3, and then accepted a role in Kim Jee-woon's debut film The Quiet Family. The first real success came with his role of a North Korean agent in Shiri in 1999. The film was not only critically acclaimed but also achieved box office success. Choi received the Best Actor award at Grand Bell Awards for his portrayal. In the same year he also took part in a stage production of Hamlet, and then starred in Happy End, where he portrayed a man who is cheated on by his wife. In 2001 he took the role of a gangster opposite Cecilia Cheung in Failan.[5] A year later, Choi portrayed Jang Seung-eop, a Joseon painter in Im Kwon-taek's Chihwaseon,[6] which was awarded the Best Director prize in Cannes.
In 2003, Choi starred in Park Chan-wook's Oldboy, which made him popular not only in South Korea but also won him international recognition.[7][8][5] In the next two years, he played a trumpet player in Springtime,[9] a struggling former boxer in Ryoo Seung-wan's Crying Fist,[10] and a child murderer in Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, the last film in Park Chan-wook's vengeance trilogy.[11] In 2005, Choi and Song Kang-ho were accused by director and Cinema Service head Kang Woo-suk of demanding a share of profits for so-called "contributions" when no contributions were made. Kang later rescinded the statement and apologized.[12][13][14][15]
At various points during 2006, Choi and other South Korean film industry professionals, together and separate from Choi, demonstrated in Seoul[16][17] and at the Cannes Film Festival against the South Korean administration's decision to reduce the Screen Quotas from 146 to 73 days as part of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States.[18][19][20] As a sign of protest, Choi returned the prestigious Okgwan Order of Cultural Merit which had been awarded to him, saying, "To halve the screen quota is tantamount to a death sentence for Korean film. This medal, once a symbol of pride, is now nothing more than a sign of disgrace, and it is with a heavy heart that I must return it."[21] Over the next four years, Choi went on a self-imposed exile from making films,[22][23] begun in protest over the screen quota but also partly due to the studios' reluctance to hire the outspoken and politically active actor. Instead he returned to his theater roots in the 2007 staging of The Pillowman, his first play in seven years.[24][25]
During the retrospective on Choi held at the 14th Lyon Asian Film Festival in November 2008,[26][27] the actor was asked his reaction to the upcoming remake of Oldboy, and he admitted to the French reporters present that he was upset at Hollywood for using what he described as pressure tactics on Asian and European filmmakers so they could remake foreign movies in the United States.[28]
Choi made his comeback in Jeon Soo-il's 2009 art film Himalaya, Where the Wind Dwells, in which he was the only South Korean actor working with locally cast Tibetan actors.[29][30] Though Kim Jee-woon's 2010 action thriller I Saw the Devil drew criticism from some quarters for its ultra-violent content, reviewers agreed that Choi's performance as a serial killer was memorable and the film emerged as a box office success.[31][32] Choi did voice acting for Leafie, A Hen into the Wild, which in 2011 became the highest grossing South Korean animated film in history.[33] In his 2012 follow-up Nameless Gangster: Rules of the Time, Choi played another complex, layered antihero, and the Yoon Jong-bin film was both a critical and box office hit.[34][35][36] and earned him the Best Performance by an Actor award at the 2012 Asia Pacific Screen Awards. Choi's next film was Park Hoon-jung's New World, a 2013 noir about an undercover cop in the world of gangsters, which also became successful critically and commercially.[37][38]
For his English-language debut, Choi appeared in Luc Besson's Lucy (2014), in the role of a gangster who kidnaps a girl and forces her to become a drug mule (Scarlett Johansson), but she inadvertently acquires superhuman powers.[39][40][41][42][43][44] He then played Yi Sun-sin in the blockbuster period epic The Admiral: Roaring Currents about the Battle of Myeongnyang, regarded as one of the admiral's most remarkable naval victories.[45][46][43]Roaring Currents became the all-time most watched film in South Korean film history, the first ever to reach 15 million admissions and the first local film to gross more than US$100 million.[47][42][48] Choi next starred in the period film The Tiger: An Old Hunter's Tale, where he played a hunter.[49][50] Choi had three films in 2017; he played an unscrupulous mayor in the political film The Mayor,[51][52][53] and headlined the remake crime thriller Heart Blackened.[54][55]
Choi is set to star in the period film Astronomy next, playing Jang Yeong-sil.[56] On December 10, 2021, his contract with C-JeS Entertainment ended.[57]
In 2022, Choi stars in the Disney+ series Casino which marks his first drama appearance in 26 years since Love and Separation in 1997.[58]
Sung, So-young (August 27, 2010). "Violent films raise alarms". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on January 26, 2013. Retrieved November 21, 2012.
Kim Seung-hyun (December 10, 2021). "씨제스 측 "최민식 독자 활동 나선다… 많은 응원 부탁"(공식)"[C-JeS side "Choi Min-sik's activities as a reader… I ask for a lot of support" (official)] (in Korean). YTN. Retrieved December 10, 2021– via Naver.
Choi Ji-yoon (June 13, 2022). "최민식, 26년만 드라마 도전…손석구와 '카지노'"[Choi Min-sik, a drama challenge for the first time in 26 years... Son Seok-gu and 'Casino'] (in Korean). Newsis. Retrieved June 18, 2022– via Naver.
Kim Hyun-soo (January 13, 2022). "2022년 한국영화 신작 프로젝트: '이상한 나라의 수학자' 박동훈 감독"[A new Korean film project in 2022: 'The Mathematician in Wonderland' Director Dong-Hoon Park]. Cine21. Retrieved January 13, 2022– via Naver.
Jo Ji-young (February 8, 2022). "[공식] 최민식 컴백 '이상한 나라의 수학자' 3월 9일 개봉 확정"[[Official] Choi Min-sik's comeback 'Mathematicians in Wonderland' is confirmed for release on March 9th] (in Korean). Sports Chosun. Retrieved February 8, 2022– via Naver.
Kang Hyo-jin (August 12, 2022). "[단독]'대세' 이도현, '파묘'로 스크린 데뷔…최민식·김고은과 '특급 캐스팅' 완성[종합]"[[Exclusive] 'Trend' Lee Do-hyeon, debut on the screen with 'Pamyo'... Completion of 'Express Casting' with Choi Min-sik and Kim Go-eun [General]] (in Korean). spoTV News. Retrieved August 12, 2022– via Naver.
Jeon Hyung-hwa (January 3, 2022). "[단독]최민식·이동휘·허성태·김주령·조재윤 디즈니플러스 '카지노' 탑승 [종합]"[[Exclusive] Choi Min-sik, Lee Dong-hwi, Heo Seong-tae, Kim Joo-ryung, Jo Jae-yoon boarding Disney Plus 'Casino' [Comprehensive]] (in Korean). Star News. Retrieved January 3, 2022– via Naver.
Hong, Jeong-won (October 5, 2012). "최민식-김민희, 부일영화상 남녀주연상 수상 (BIFF)"[Choi Min-sik-Kim Min-hee, Best Actor and Actress at Buil Film Awards (BIFF)]. Newsen (in Korean).
Ahn Byung-gil (April 11, 2022). "58회 백상예술대상 후보 공개…영광의 주인공은?"[58th Baeksang Arts Awards nominations revealed... Who is the hero of glory?] (in Korean). Sports Kyunghyang. Retrieved April 11, 2022– via Naver.
External links
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