Bong Joon Ho explains how Mark Ruffalo's character in Mickey 17 was not based on one specific dictator, but rather multiple inspirations.
Takes you closer to the games, movies and TV you love Issues delivered straight to your door or device Mickey 17, the latest movie from Bong Joon Ho, is out now – and the follow-up to the director's Oscar-winning movie Parasite doesn't disappoint.
The sci-fi dark comedy Mickey 17 made based on the 2022 novel Mickey7 by Edward Ashton is now being screened in theatres in Colombo and outstation. Directed by Bong Joon-ho, the film stars Robert Pattinson in the main role, together with Naomi Ackie, Steven Yeun, Toni Collette, and Mark Ruffalo.
Bong Joon-ho's sci-fi comedy film Mickey 17 has come, presenting a thoughtful story that hints at humanity's dark future and Bong's future with the franchise.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your In
This is largely the character of Marshall (renamed Kenneth Marshall) in the movie, but Bong makes the biggest change by turning him from a military commander into a fame-hungry politician who wants Niflheim to be a "pure white planet of superior beings".
Robert Pattinson plays a space traveler who's repeatedly killed and resurrected in the name of scientific research in this otherworldly farce. It's Bong's first movie since his Oscar-winning Parasite.
From croissants to puppies in 'little cute hoodies,' filmmaker Bong Joon Ho talks about the conceptualization of the creepers in 'Mickey 17.'
Robert Pattinson goes forth and multiplies as clones in outer space in Bong Joon Ho's bizarre sci-fi satire Mickey 17. The South Korean director's first film since the brilliant, Oscar-winning Parasite is messy, scattershot and overlong, but Pattinson, making yet another of his daring, post- Twilight role choices, almost holds it all together.
Seeing a movie in theaters is expensive, and I am a casual movie-watcher at most. But when I heard Robert Pattinson’s whimsical voice in the trailer for Bong Joon-ho’s new
Robert Pattinson plays an off-world “Expendable” having a serious personality crisis.
Oscar winning director Bong Joon-ho (“Parasite”) returns to the big screen Friday with his latest film, “Mickey 17.” At first glance the film may seem like a typical sci-fi thriller, but Bong creates horror grounded in reality far more terrifying than any alien life form.
Coming off the masterly “Parasite,” Bong Joon Ho’s “Mickey 17” feels uncertain tonally and a little harried in its adaptation.