Gong Yoo, Park Bo-gum team up in film about first human clone


By AGENCY
Gong Yoo poses after the online press conference for his upcoming movie 'Seobok' held on Oct 27. Photo: Handout
Actor Gong Yoo is returning to the big screen with Park Bo-gum in Seobok, a film about the first human clone.

The upcoming film which is set to be released in December will draw the bromance between the two main characters played by Gong Yoo and Park.

“The director told us to use Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise’s relationship in Rain Man as our reference. In the movie, Seo-bok is constantly curious, seeing the real world for the first time, and Ki-hun becomes a little irritated by this,” Gong Yoo said during an online press conference held Tuesday (Oct 27).

“These are actually important emotional scenes (between the two characters) in our movie as well as the parts where the audiences can probably relax a bit. I also enjoyed filming these scenes (with Park).”

Seobok introduces Ki-hun (Gong Yoo) who is an ex-intelligence agent. Seo-bok (Park Bo-gum) is the first ever human clone and possesses the secret of eternal life.

Ki-hun receives his last mission from the director of the intelligence agency (played by Cho Woo-jin), to move Seo-bok, who has never known life outside of the laboratory, to a safe place.

During the conference, director Lee Yong-joo also explained why he chose to create two male main characters.

“When I was first planning the plot, I did consider setting Seo-bok as a female character (like many other films that feature the first human clones). But then, I decided to make it a male character since it could become a cliche movie if Seo-bok is a woman and there’s a romantic relationship between the two main protagonists,” director Lee said.

The film is Lee’s first since Architecture 101, a hit romance that came out in 2012.

The director added although the movie uses a human clone as one of its main characters, that is not the key element of the movie.

“Human clone character Seo-bok came in later,” Lee said. “I did not begin writing the script with the theme of eternal life or a human clone in my mind. The script began with my intention to write a story about human fear.”

He noted that the idea to name the clone Seobok, which came from the legend of Chinese explorer Xu Fu, came to him late on, saying it represents the fear of death and the desire to live eternally.

Xu Fu, known as Seobok in Korea, is a Qin Dynasty figure sent to Korea by Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huang to find a plant that is known for giving eternal life. – The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

Get 20% OFF The Star Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 11.12/month

Billed as RM 11.12 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 9.87/month

Billed as RM 118.40 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Entertainment

HK actor Vinci Wong said to be starting anew in Canada after bankruptcy case
Actress held after allegedly testing positive for meth in KL entertainment outlet raid
South Korean rapper Penomeco featured on football legend Ronaldinho’s new album
Singer featured on LMFAO’s ‘Party Rock Anthem’ dies at 37
John Denver's 'Country Roads' is the unofficial US anthem at World Cup
'Good Boys Go To Heaven' star Beto Kusyairy says Malaysian audiences are ready for stories that tackle taboo issues
China influencer’s act of kindness ends in tragedy as farmer dies in car crash after shared lunch
Paul McCartney performs Beatles classic ‘I Want To Hold Your Hand’ at Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce wedding
Singer Wang Leehom returns to perform one day after heavy fall that requires 39 stitches: ‘Your love is the best medicine’
HK singer George Lam's son Alex expecting 2nd child with wife Candace

Others Also Read