Kim Ki-young (October 10, 1919 – February 5, 1998) was a South Korean film director, known for his intensely psychosexual and melodramatic horror films, often focusing on the psychology of their female characters. Kim was born in Seoul during the colonial period, raised in Pyongyang, where he became interested in theater and cinema. In Korea after the end of World War II, he studied dentistry while becoming involved in the theater. During the Korean War, he made propaganda films for the United States Information Service. In 1955, he used discarded movie equipments to produce his first two films. With the success of these two films Kim formed his own production company and produced popular melodramas for the rest of the decade.
Directing
65
Male
1919-10-10
Seoul, South Korea
Ki-young Kim, 김기영, Kim Gi-yeong, 金绮泳, 金綺泳
The Sea Knows
The Housemaid
Ieoh Island
A Woman After a Killer Butterfly
Woman of Fire
Goryeojang
Love Of Blood Relations
Woman of Fire '82
Promises
Insect Woman
Yangsan Province
Beasts of Prey
Lady Hong
Be a Wicked Woman
Water Lady
Hunting of Fools
Transgression
Soil
Woman
Ban Geum-ryeon
Touch-Me-Not
A Woman's War
Boxes of Death
Twilight Train
Defiance of a Teenager
A Soldier Speaks after Death
The First Snow
A Sad Pastorale
Elegy of Ren
Asphalt
The Deaf Worker
Free Woman
I Am a Truck
A Barmaid
Magnificent Experience