Jung Woo-sung "Flaming on Refugee, Differences in Understanding...As long as human beings persist" (Interview)

Seoul=) = Actor Jung Woo-sung, who is working as a goodwill ambassador for the UN Refugee Organization, expressed his thoughts on Flaming and condemnation toward him in connection with the Refugee issue.In a cafe in Samcheong-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, an interview with Jung Woo-sung, starring The Animals Who Want to Hold a Jeep, (director Kim Yong-hoon) was held on the morning of the 6th.If the intention of a person who uses such a word in Flaming is a hateful expression, it is not a good expression, Jung Woo-sung said. I am talking naturally because I am a UN Refugee goodwill ambassador, and it is not a story of any kind, but a story of war and peace that will constantly be troubled as long as humanity has passed.Jung Woo-sung said, I do not want to swear at those who make such (vile) comments.It is a human society that there is a difference in understanding even if it takes a long time and the generation changes, he said.On the other hand, the Japanese novel of the same name is the original crime drama of ordinary humans planning the worst hantang to take the money bag, which is the last opportunity of life, an animal that wants to catch even straw.It is also a work that won the Special Prize of Judges at the 49th Rotterdam International Film Festival.Jung Woo-sung played Taeyoung, a civil servant at the immigration office, who was suffering from debts due to his lover who disappeared from the movie.Taeyoung is a person who continues his uneasy life under all kinds of threats from two or three loan sharks (Jeon Man-sik) because of his lover Yeon-hee (Jeon Do-yeon), who has disappeared with a huge debt left in his future.The release of the Beasts Who Want to Hold the Spray, which was originally scheduled for December 12, was delayed due to the aftermath of the new corona virus.

Seoul=) = Actor Jung Woo-sung, who is working as a goodwill ambassador for the UN Refugee Organization, expressed his thoughts on Flaming and condemnation toward him in connection with the Refugee issue.

In a cafe in Samcheong-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, an Interview with Jung Woo-sung, starring "The Animals Who Want to Hold a Jeep," (director Kim Yong-hoon) was held on the morning of the 6th.

"If the intention of a person who uses such a word in Flaming is a hateful expression, it is not a good expression," Jung Woo-sung said. "I am talking naturally because I am a UN Refugee goodwill ambassador, and it is not a story of any kind, but a story of war and peace that will constantly be troubled as long as humanity has passed."

Jung Woo-sung said, "I do not want to swear at those who make such (vile) comments. "It is a human society that there is a difference in understanding even if it takes a long time and the generation changes," he said.

On the other hand, the Japanese novel of the same name is the original crime drama of ordinary humans planning the worst hantang to take the money bag, which is the last opportunity of life, "an animal that wants to catch even straw". It is also a work that won the Special Prize of Judges at the 49th Rotterdam International Film Festival.

Jung Woo-sung played Taeyoung, a civil servant at the immigration office, who was suffering from debts due to his lover who disappeared from the movie. Taeyoung is a person who continues his uneasy life under all kinds of threats from two or three loan sharks (Jeon Man-sik) because of his lover Yeon-hee (Jeon Do-yeon), who has disappeared with a huge debt left in his future.

The release of the "Beasts Who Want to Hold the Spray", which was originally scheduled for December 12, was delayed due to the aftermath of the new corona virus.