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The KOREAN ACTORS 200 website aims to introduce the 200 actors that best represent the present and future of Korean cinema to the people in the film industry all over the world.
The Actors is Present! Extremely Exquisite and Incredibly Vigorous. 200 KOREAN ACTORS
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  • Kang Malgeum
  • Kang Malgeum 강말금
    "Her passion for acting harbored for a decade burst into bloom when she swept the Best New Actress awards in 2020. Her fresh looks have become a ‘lucky’ charm in Korean movies"
Filmography
<MORE THAN FAMILY> (2020)
<A Bedsore> (2020)
<Lucky Chan-sil> (2020)
<Family Affair> (2019)
<Idol> (2019)
<The Chase> (2017)
Contact
starvillent@naver.com

Majoring in Korean literature at university, Gang Malgeum worked for a trading company for four years. Then she quit her job and worked part-time to work on her basic acting skills on stage, as she couldn’t forget her acting experience at a university club. Gang’s first appearance in a commercial film was in Idol (2019), directed by Lee Soojin. Gang played the wife of Ku Myeonghoe (Han Sukkyu), a provincial council member. Her character left a strong impression of a contradictory figure who criticized her husband for dealing with his son’s accident while standing by his side for her son. Piquing interest with her fresh face, the actor was highly praised by the film world the following year by playing Lee Chan-sil in Lucky Chan-sil (2020). Chan-sil is a film producer who has worked with a film director for a long time because she loves films. But suddenly, the director dies, and Chan-sil becomes unemployed at age 40. The film, which has an autobiographical element of Director Kim Chohee, has a perfect synergy effect with Gang’s role. Gang is from Busan just like Director Kim and has long been focused on acting by giving up her job. At the beginning of the film, on the steep uphill road of the new neighborhood she moves in, Chan-sil calmly says with a Busan accent, “Oh, I’m screwed. Shit, I’m so screwed”, which makes the audience who have experienced frustration empathize with her exceedingly realistic voice. The same goes when she suddenly says, “Gosh, why have I only worked so hard?” In popular culture, a single woman in her 40s tends to be consumed as a character of fantasy romance with a younger man or depicted as a character whose femininity is completely excluded. However, Lucky Chan-sil properly shows a woman in her 40s as she is and sends hopeful messages to many female audiences of her age, and Gang’s excellent performance plays a big part in it. No wonder the film industry cheered the late-bloomer by presenting the Best New Actress of the Year at the Baeksang Arts Awards, Buil Film ....

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