Park Bo-gum is in the "fever" rather than before after Enlisted: after targeting the home theater, he moves straight to the screen and shows off his presence.
Park Bo-gum, Enlisted as a Navy Culture Promotionalist on August 31st. His Bai Qi', which was reborn as a popular trend in Asia Discharge through 'K-Drama' such as 'Respond 1988', 'Gurmigreen Moonlight' and 'Boyfriend', was enough to make fans feel sorry. However, as the works that have been filmed before Enlisted have been released in a row, fortunately, they can soothe the heart. The TVN Wolhwa Drama 'Youth Record', which is currently on air, is steadily gaining popularity with 7 ~ 8% audience rating.
After the end of the Drama, in the coming December, it will return to the screen through the film "Seo Bok" (director Lee Yong-ju). It is the first return in about five years since the movie "Chinatown" (director Han Jun-hee), which proved its potential as a movie Actor, and it is the first film to be featured.
Seo Bok' is a story about the story of the intelligence agent 'Constitution' who took the last task of transferring the first Duplicates of mankind, Seo Bok', to the secret secret, and being caught up in an unexpected situation with special companionship in the pursuit of various forces aiming for Seo Bok'. Gong Yooo will play the role of "Constitutional", a former intelligence agent who desperately needs life tomorrow, and the first Duplicates Seo Bok' of mankind, where Park Bo-gum was born as a secret project.
When the steel and trailer for "Seo Bok" is released, the reaction is hot as expected. It is also interesting that it deals with 'Duplicates' material for the first time in Korean film history, but it is shaking the fact that Gong Yooo and Park Bo-gum can be seen side by side on one screen through a large screen. It is also interesting to be able to enjoy the establishment of agents and Duplicates with sad stories and the 'emotional romance' of the two.
It is also surprising that COVID-19 has been brave enough to open the movie industry in the midst of the big films that have not been seen before. Seo Bok' is said to have invested about 16 billion won in production cost. "Sung Ri-ho" (director Cho Sung-hee), which cost 24 billion won, is considering delaying its release twice, and eventually releasing it through Netflix, not through the theater. You can get a glimpse of the confidence of Seo Bok' that two Korean stars, Gong Yoo and Park Bo-gum, who have huge popularity, will be able to overcome the crisis that hit the theater. The netizen response to "I will take a stamp on commuting to the movie theater in December" is unlikely to be an exaggeration.