Szukaj:


wymiana linkami SEO Tools SEO Tools system wymiany linków
Last visited :
  • 2009 Lost Memories [en]
  • Portal:Mathematics [en]
  • Wikipedia [en]
  • Herta Müller [en]
  • Scheduled monument [en]
  • Chicago Loop [en]
  • August 14 [en]
  • Portal:Technology [en]
  • June 1 [en]
  • Georgia (country) [en]
  • Syria [en]
  • Germany [en]
  • Superhero [en]
  • National Trades Union Congress [en]
  • Indian diaspora in France [en]
  • Indians in Singapore [en]
  • Malays in Singapore [en]
  • singapore [en]
  • Association football [en]
  • Haiti [en]
  • Main Page [pl]
  • List of sovereign states [en]
  • France [en]
  • Democratic Society Party [en]
  • Main Page [en]
  • Roman–Persian Wars [en]
  • Nobel Prize in Chemistry [en]
  • The Land of Green Plums [en]
  • Burdock [en]
  • To jest tresc encyklopedii wikipedia.org
    Data theft hits 24,000 HSBC clients
    HSBC has revealed that a former employee stole the personal details of around 24,000 clients of its private bank in Switzerland in a major security breach three years ago.
    BP strikes $7bn Brazil oil deal
    The energy group is set to make its first move into the deep waters off the South American country with a $7bn deal to buy oil and gas assets put up for sale by Devon Energy of the US
    China data spur talk of further tightening
    Pressure on Beijing to begin raising interest rates and to allow the renminbi to appreciate against the US dollar is set to rise as inflation jumped 2.7 per cent last month from a year before
    Jitters over economy curtail risk appetite
    Global Markets Overview: Equities mark time as inflation data from China reawaken fears over monetary tightening
    Call for ban on CDS speculation
    Germany and France have called on the European Union to consider banning speculative trading in credit default swaps and set up a compulsory register of derivatives trading

    Greece Roiled By General Strike Over Austerity Plan
    Greek police fired tear gas to disperse protesters throwing rocks and firebombs outside Parliament as tens of thousands of people marched through Athens to protest measures to cut the country's debt. The strike grounded all flights and brought public transport to a halt.
    Trade Deficit Shrinks As Auto And Oil Imports Drop
    The U.S. trade deficit unexpectedly shrank in January, reflecting a big drop in imports of oil and foreign cars. American exports also fell, a potential blow to hopes that the economic recovery will be aided this year by U.S. sales abroad.
    First-Time Weekly Jobless Claims Decrease Slightly
    The number of newly laid-off workers requesting unemployment benefits slipped by 6,000 last week. But the four-week average of claims climbed, reflecting a sharp increase in claims last month.
    Foreclosures Slow Considerably In February
    Fears remain about the hundreds of thousands of homeowners who are still being evaluated for help under loan modification programs. Many analysts say most of those borrowers will eventually lose their homes, sparking a new round of foreclosures later this year.
    Electric Vehicles May Energize Elkhart's Future
    Elkhart, Ind., is known as the RV-making capital of the world. The mayor wants to claim a new title: The electric vehicle capital of the world. Stimulus grants and other incentives are attracting companies planning to build electric vehicles to Elkhart. It's hoped the electric vehicles will fill the void created by a serious slump in recreational vehicles sales.

    2009 Lost Memories

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search
    2009 Lost Memories
    Hangul 2009 로스트메모리즈
    Directed by Lee Si-myung
    Produced by Kim Yun-young
    Seo Jun-won
    Written by Lee Si-myung
    Lee Sang-hak
    Starring Jang Dong-gun
    Toru Nakamura
    Distributed by CJ Entertainment
    Release date(s) February 1, 2002 (South Korea)
    Running time 135 min.
    Country South Korea
    Language Korean / Japanese
    Budget $5,600,000 US (est.)

    2009 Lost Memories is a 2002 South Korean science fiction action thriller film, directed by Lee Si-myung. It was distributed by CJ Entertainment, and was released on February 1, 2002. Japanese filmmaker Shōhei Imamura plays the role of a historian in the film.[1]

    Contents

    [edit] Plot

    In an alternative future where the Korean peninsula is still a part of the Japanese empire, Sakamoto, a Japanese Bureau of Investigation (JBI) agent of Korean heritage and Saigo, his Japanese partner, try to solve a strange case where Pro-Korean nationalist "terrorists" attempt to steal a strange archaeological artifact. Initially Sakamoto is valuable to the case because of his ability to communicate with the terrorists. He is later removed from the case when it is discovered that his father had some previous involvement with the terrorist group. Sakamoto's desire to solve the mystery involves threatening the powerful Inoue Foundation. This only makes him more passionate about its resolution and after uncovering more on his own, he discovers that reality isn't how it should be. It then becomes his new mission to restore history to its rightful path.

    [edit] Background

    The film shows an alternate history supposing that Hirobumi Itō was not assassinated by An Jung-geun in Harbin, China, in 1909; this change results in Ito's leadership guiding Japan as a military and industrial power that allies with the USA against Germany in World War II (dropping an atomic bomb on Berlin in 1945) and retains all of its wartime conquests and peacetime annexations, including Korea. The film takes place in 2009, one hundred years after Ito should have been killed. Author Tom Vick says that the theme of the film represents a desire in Korean cinema to "transcend time and memory", a theme he says is also reflected in such contemporary films as Flower Island (2001), Il Mare (2000), and Bungee Jumping of Their Own (2001).[2]

    [edit] Historical differences

    The opening sequence shows the following differences in the historical timeline:

    • The March 1st movement is referred to as a terrorist uprising.
    • Japan joins U.N. Security Council as a permanent member in 1960.
    • Japan launches the Sakura 1 satellite in 1965. (Indicating that it was a huge player in the space race).
    • Nagoya is awarded the 1988 Olympics (instead of losing by one vote to Seoul).
    • Lee Dong-Gook is depicted in a Japanese soccer uniform playing in the "2002 FIFA World Cup Japan" (not 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan).
    • Korea is never referred to as Hanguk 韓國 as the entity which came to use that name, the Republic of Korea, never existed. Instead it's called Chosen in Japanese, and Choson in Korean.

    Differences in Seoul:

    • 2009 Seoul is introduced as Kyŏngsŏng (경성,京城 in Japanese Keijo,京城,けいじょう), an old name for Seoul that fell out of use after Korea gained independence from Japan in the actual timeline.
    • The Governor General Building still stands in front of Gyeongbok palace (instead of having been demolished in 1996).
    • Gwanghwamun was never restored (instead of having been restored during Park Chung Hee's presidency).
    • A statue of Toyotomi Hideyoshi on a horse in full samurai gear stands in downtown Seoul (instead of a statue of the man credited with defeating him, Yi Sun Shin).
    • The Chungmuro district of Seoul, where Sakamoto lives, is still called Honmachi, as it was during the Japanese rule.
    • Traffic flows on the left side, instead of on the right.

    [edit] See also

    [edit] References

    1. ^ "今村昌平 - Imamura Shōhei" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. http://www.jmdb.ne.jp/person/p0122340.htm. Retrieved 2008-07-03. 
    2. ^ Vick, Tom (2008). "Korea: Rising from the Ashes of History" in Asian Cinema: A Field Guide. Collins. ISBN 9780061145858, p. 161.

    [edit] External links

    Change language: Polski|English


    Wikipedia jest zarejestrowanym znakiem towarowym Wikimedia Foundation
    CBOE to take first step towards IPO
    The Chicago Board Options Exchange, the world's last big member-owned exchange, filed an application with US regulators for an initial public offering
    Data theft hits 24,000 HSBC clients
    HSBC has revealed that a former employee stole the personal details of around 24,000 clients of its private bank in Switzerland in a major security breach three years ago.
    Old Mutual puts US life business up for sale
    Insurer confirms it is exploring a sale of its US life assurance arm, adding that it also envisages an initial public offering of shares in its US asset management business
    Standard Life eyes pension growth
    David Nish, the chief executive of the insurance group, says there are 'great' opportunities in the UK pensions business as it reports better-than-expected full-year profits for 2009
    Tullett Prebon shares soar on bid approach
    The interdealer broker headed by Terry Smith disclosed that it was in 'preliminary discussions with a third party' in a deal that could value the company's equity at ÂŁ840m
    Materiały pochodzą z Encyklopedia Wikipedia, obięte są licencją GNU Free Documentation License