Tuesday, February 27, 2007

MY RAIN READERS

Sorry If I am unable to post any updates. Will make it up to all once I am okay. Not feeling well lately.

You all take care and have a nice day.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

"I'm a Cyborg, But That's Ok" Draws Interest at Berlin Film Festival


Director Park Chan-wook's "I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK" has drawn much interest from the press at the Berlin International Film Festival, which opened on Feb. 7.

A throng of reporters came to the preview of the film, which was submitted to the festival's competition section, on Feb. 9. Many reporters also attended the press conference held after the preview to cover it.

Reporters showed particular interest in the film's peculiar subject matter, plot and description of violence. They asked Jeong Ji-hoon (singer Rain), who played the lead, how he as a top singer felt about his first appearance in a movie.

The hype for the movie from the press is mostly due to director Park's reputation in the international film world. Film reporters from around the world expressed their high expectations for the Korea director's new work.

Source : english.kbs.co.kr... ( English )
source: HanCinema e-news

Rain Raising AIDS Awareness with World Tour (2007/02/14)


Singer Rain, currently on a global concert tour, is raising AIDS awareness among his Asian fans as a goodwill ambassador for the international relief agency World Vision.

Wearing an AIDS charity bracelet in concerts in Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia, the singer said that 6,000 children are losing their parents to the deadly disease every day, with a total 14 million victims a year.

A screen set up on the concert stages showed a message urging fans to remember the bereaved orphans and keep prejudice against AIDS at bay.

Rain's film "I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK" is competing in the Berlin International Film Festival.

His next tour is in Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam on March 10, 11.

Source : english.kbs.co.kr... ( English )
Source: HanCinema e-news

Rain, Song Hye-kyo Promote Drama in China


Actress Song Hye-kyo and singer/actor Rain will visit China to promote their drama "Full House", which aired on KBS 2TV a few years ago in Korea.

They will leave Seoul Thursday for a 3-day visit to Hunan, China, where a news conference and a fan meeting are scheduled ahead of the drama's local airing.

Song's manager Na Byung-jun of Sidus HQ says inquiries by Chinese fans about their visit are pouring in.

The hit drama was exported to 14 countries including Thailand, the Philippines and Taiwan.

Actress Song has recently finished filming her latest movie, a film about the famous Korean courtesan Hwang Jini, while Rain is on his global concert tour.

Source : english.kbs.co.kr... ( English )
Source: HanCinema e-news
sitelink: http://www.hancinema.net/korean_drama_Full_House.php

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

REQUEST

I have requested time and time again, for those who are using my blog as an ad for their illicit sites, please count me out. This is purely a Rain Blog, nothing more. I post Rain News/Updates. I am already having a hard time opening my blog due to slow internet connection, please dont add up to my burden of deleting comments which are pure ads that wants to be advertised using my site. If your site is okay, why not. I always open the site you publish in my blog.

Lastly, I dont publish sites which are purely non-Rain related.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

North Korea is cracking down on a flood of South Korean pop culture permeating the hardline communist state, intelligence sources have said.

They confirmed a Yonhap news agency report that a campaign began this year against videotapes, CDs and other material smuggled into the reclusive nation.

"This year North Korean authorities waged what they call 'psychological warfare' against 'exotic lifestyles' by cracking down on South Korean pop culture," an unidentified South Korean official was quoted by Yonhap as saying.

Videotapes or CDs of South Korean films, music or TV soap operas enter the North via neighbouring northeast China.

The South's culture has become so popular that a lead actress's line in the hit movie "Sympathy for Lady Vengeance" became a household phrase in the North, Yonhap quoted sources as saying.

It said some North Korean youths are glued to mega-hit TV dramas such as "Fall Fairy Tale" and "Immortal Admiral Yi Sun-Shin." The youths also sport South Korean hairstyles and other fashions.

North Koreans for decades had access only to state-run domestic media which extolled the virtues of "Great Leader" Kim Il-Sung and his son and successor Kim Jong-Il, known as the "Dear Leader".

Very few private homes had telephones and calls were connected through operators, while radios were sold with tuning knobs fixed to official stations.

But new technology is breaking down barriers, observers say. Mobile phones with pre-paid cards have been smuggled in from China.

And as households in northeast China upgraded to DVD machines starting early this decade, smugglers bought their discarded VCR players cheaply and smuggled them across the border into North Korea.

This made VCRs affordable to a large number of North Korean households, according to analyst Andrei Lankov in a recent article in the Korea Times.

"Against the dull background of the official arts, the VCRs were a vehicle for accessing good entertainment," he wrote.

"Hallyu," a craze for Korean popular culture which has spread across East Asia, became part of North Korean life also.

"Young North Koreans enthusiastically imitate the fashions and parrot the idioms they see in South Korean movies. And this does not bode well for the regime's future," wrote Lankov, an associate professor at Seoul's Kookmin University.

The VCRs are also undermining North Korean propaganda claims that life in the South is far inferior, according to Lankov.

While viewers did not believe everything they saw in the films, some things could not be faked -- such as Seoul's affluent cityscape.

"It is gradually dawning on the North Koreans that the South is not exactly the land of hunger and destitution depicted in their propaganda."

A survey of North Korean refugees in China by the US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea showed 82 percent do not believe that the South's economy is in worse shape than the North's.

Jeung Young-Tae of the Korea Institute for National Unification said the North views fads from the outside as a threat to its socialist system.

"North Korea has been expanding trade and exchanges with the outside world in order to improve economic conditions, but such a policy always entails fallout in the form of what it perceives as negative foreign influence on its people," Jeung told AFP. —

source: TodayOnline
sitelink: http://www.todayonline.com/articles/169375.asp

Torrential Rain

1 Feb 2007

Korean pop sensation Rain mesmerised his fans in Kuala Lumpur last weekend with a brilliant concert that showcased his singing, dancing and wash-board abs to stunning effect. CHOW EE-TAN writes.

YOU probably can't name his songs but you would have heard his name.

Korean pop sensation Rain is a phenomenon that has swept Asia by storm in the last year. So much so that the 24-year-old whose original name was Jung Ji-Hoon was listed by Time magazine as one of the World's 100 Most Influential Persons and second most influential in entertainment!

Imagine the buzz and hype generated when Rain was to hold a live concert in Kuala Lumpur as part of his "Rain's Coming 06/07 World Tour".

Last Saturday's concert at Putra Stadium, Bukit Jalil, presented by Hotlink and organised by CMG Absolute Entertainment, was an extravagant event and a top-class production featuring state-of-the-art stage design and stunning visual effects.

Rain's brilliant and innovative dance choreography would just blow you away. The audience was also awed by his stamina as he practically danced non-stop throughout the two-hour concert.

The concert opened with the screen displaying (what else) rain effects, a large submarine bursting open and Rain, clad in dark glasses and silver jacket, jumping out to thunderous yells and screams.

From then on, the music linked seamlessly from one song to another — beginning with fast ones like It's Raining, Touch Ya and Why of All Things.

However, no one, except his Korean fans (quite a number were at the concert) would understand what he was singing. English translations came on only for a few songs.

But then again, no one really cared what he was singing as they were busy gawking at his electrifying footwork, his seductive body movements and every little gesture that came from his well-toned torso.

Rain knew exactly how to turn his fans on. He would playfully shake his booty, and for one or two more passionate songs such as In My Bed, he did a rather crude pelvic-trusting movement that sent his fans into a frenzy.

Those who had hoped to see him rip off his shirt were in for a disappointment. Rain kept his clothes on as he had to respect our local laws.

The sexiest moments were when his long-sleeved white shirt was drenched in the man-made rain and when he took off a jacket to reveal a tiny singlet that showed his wash-board abs.

One of the high points of the concert was when he sang I. Soaked in the “rain” at the centre of the stage, he fell to his knees at one point and the music stopped. He hit one note and sustained it there, the visual and sound conjuring a rather poignant moment.

A song that was almost devoid of sexual innuendoes was Friends, written for World Vision (of which he is an ambassador).

During the chorus of that song, he was elevated on a platform, his arms stretched out wide, fusing perfectly with the image of a gigantic pair of angel’s wings.

While his performance was top-notch, Rain somehow lacked the charisma that could connect him with the audience.

Speaking in raw and stiff American-accented English, Rain’s words came across as something rehearsed, like something he would say at every concert.

He called the audience his "babies."

"Don't forget I will always be with you, my baby. I love you, my baby," he cooed in-between songs.

But such soppy and emotional lines were enough to melt all his fans hearts.

Once he got a bit carried away and said: "I love your face, I love your heart, I love your body!"

I was cringing but his adoring "babies" obviously didn't mind it.

To them, Rain is a demi-god that could do no wrong.



Behind the sexy, cold facade
RAIN was in a much relaxed and amiable mood at a brief Press conference the afternoon of his concert a lucky break for the Malaysian media.

The Korean pop sensation was reported as "cold" and "non-expressive" in Hong Kong and Singapore, where he also wore shades throughout.

But in Kuala Lumpur, we could see Rain's cute, small eyes. Looking neat in a long-sleeved white shirt, dark pants and tie, he smiled and dutifully answered questions posed through an interpreter.

He was soft-spoken and polite, quite a contrast to the sexy and wild image he portrayed on stage.

To a question why he's so popular especially among the female fans, Rain modestly replied that he didn't know but added that he always gives his best in his music and performing.

He said he would work on fusion pop and continue to challenge himself to come out with more good music in the future.

The singer also attributed the popularity of K-pop to the strong foundation that some of his seniors had laid.

"The most essential tool for me to make it on the international front is to improve my English," he said, in response to another query.

Rain, who starred in popular drama series such as Full House and A Love to Kill, will also be working on some drama series soon.

He has received "quite a lot" of scripts but will only look at them after his world tour.

The "Rain's Coming" world tour will take the superstar to Vietnam, China and Japan as well as the United States.

The tour is sponsored by Korean Air, which has put up a staggering US$1.8 billion (RM6.4 billion) for the concerts, and even allocated an aircraft with Rain’s photo on it. —

By Chow Ee Tan

source: NewStraitsTime On-line e-news
sitelink:
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Thursday/Features/20070131153743/Article/index_html