Catalonian Fantastic Fest Hands Anima’t Short Film Prize to THE WHEEL TURNS
Korea’s first ever period creature feature Monstrum has picked up the Audience Award from the Panorama Fantàstic section of this year’s 51st Sitges International Fantastic Film Festival of Catalonia. Also on the prize winners list was KIM Sang-joon’s The Wheel Turns, which earned the Best Short Film Prize from the Anima’t section.
Pandora (2016) star KIM Myung-min plays a general in Joseon-Era Korea who is brought back from retirement to investigate rumors that a vicious monster is roaming the hills beyond the palace walls. Monstrum was released in Korea on September 12, just ahead of this year’s Chuseok holiday, and welcomed over 700,000 spectators. It is being represented for international sales by Finecut and has already scored several distribution deals, including one with the streaming service AMC Shudder, which will release the film in North America.
The Wheel Turns, a co-production between South Korea, Japan and the United States, tells the story of a subway operator whose daily monotony is shaken up when he encounters a mysterious pair of people on the tracks who conceal fog beneath their hoods.
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