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Kkum
South Korean black and white animated short film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kkum (Korean: 꿈; lit. Dream) is a South Korean intimate black and white animated short film made in a minimal set design with Styrofoam in stop-motion.[1] Seoul-born, Los Angeles-based independent director Kim Kang-min confessed using this material because it is inexpensive and fit his $80 budget.[2] This Oscar-qualified short is the first Korean to take grand prize at OIAF[3] and the 3rd film in Ottawa history to win both top short and public prize.[4][1]
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Plot
With prayers in the daytime and dreams at night, a mother protects her son. The mother's become premonitions to the point of devotion.
Voice cast
- Kim Kang-min as himself.
- Park Joung-soon as the mother. Kang-min's real mother provided her own voice for the project.[5]
Accolades
References
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