Han Jae-rim

Film director

Birthday July 14, 1975

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Jeju Province, South Korea

Age 48 years old

Nationality South Korea

#37434 Most Popular

1950

It won six trophies at the 50th Grand Bell Awards, including Best Film and Best Director for Han.

1975

Han Jae-rim (born July 14, 1975) is a South Korean film director.

Born in 1975, Han Jae-rim graduated from Seoul Institute of the Arts in 1998.

2003

He began his filmmaking career in 2003 as an assistant director and script editor for Min Byung-chun's Natural City.

Han was the runner-up for Best Screenplay at the Korean Film Council (KOFIC) Screenplay Contest in 2003 with To Do or Not to Do, which he had co-written with Go Yoon-hee.

2005

He directed Rules of Dating (2005), The Show Must Go On (2007), The Face Reader (2013), The King (2017), and Emergency Declaration (2021).

Retitled Rules of Dating, it became his directorial debut in 2005.

Featuring sexually frank dialogue between teacher colleagues played by Park Hae-il and Kang Hye-jung, the film explored controversial gender politics, sexual harassment and moral relativism in a cynical and unsettling take on the romantic comedy.

Rules of Dating drew critical praise and became a sleeper hit with 1.6 million admissions.

Han won Best Screenplay at the Blue Dragon Film Awards, along with Best New Director at the Busan Film Critics Awards and the Grand Bell Awards.

2006

Han, Kim Jee-woon and Yim Pil-sung then signed on to each shoot a short film for the omnibus Doomsday Book in 2006.

Han's segment "The Christmas Gift" was supposed to have been a science-fiction musical retelling of O. Henry's The Gift of the Magi, but it was never shot after financing fell through.

2007

In 2007, he wrote and directed his second film, The Show Must Go On.

Starring Korea's top actor Song Kang-ho as a mid-level gangster dealing with family and work troubles, Han injected off-kilter comedy and pathos into the Korean film noir genre.

The Show Must Go On won Best Film at the Blue Dragon Film Awards and the Korean Association of Film Critics Awards.

2009

Han entered pre-production for his purported third film, Trace in 2009.

Based on the webtoon of the same title, it follows a young man who wakes up from a coma with superpowers after an assault that took his father's life.

But despite winning the Kodak Award (with a cash prize of US$17,000) at the Busan International Film Festival's Pusan Promotion Plan, Han was unable to secure financing for the US$7.7 million blockbuster, and the project was shelved.

2012

The film was later released in 2012, but without Han's involvement (Kim and Yim co-directed the third short with a completely new script).

2013

Six years after his last completed film, Han returned to the big screen in 2013 with period drama The Face Reader.

The film delved into the philosophical question whether character determines fate or vice versa, in a story about a Joseon fortuneteller skilled in physiognomy who becomes swept up in court intrigues and power struggles.

Again starring Song Kang-ho as the titular character opposite Lee Jung-jae as the ambitious Grand Prince Suyang, The Face Reader scored 9.1 million admissions at the local box office, making it the 13th highest grossing Korean film of all time.

Han also produced Roh Deok's films Very Ordinary Couple (2013) and The Exclusive: Beat the Devil's Tattoo (2015).