

Hong Sang-soo
Acting
October 25, 1960
Seoul, South Korea
Hong Sang-soo (born October 25, 1960) is a South Korean writer-director. He has directed 33 films as of 2025. Certain elements are commonly found in Hong's films. A typical Hong film highlights a theme of domestic realism with many of the scenes set on residential streets, cafes, hotels, schools, and in the stairwells of apartment buildings. Characters are seen walking around the city, drinking soju, and having sex. The main characters are often movie directors or actors, and scenes typically consist of a single shot, often beginning and ending with a camera zoom. The budgets for his movies average about $100,000. Hong is often spontaneous when shooting, delivering the day's scene on the morning of the shoot and frequently changing stories while on set. He rarely prepares scripts in advance. Hong's style has been compared to Eric Rohmer's, and it has even been argued that allusions to Rohmer's films appear in some films directed by Hong.
The Filmography


By the Stream

A Traveler's Needs

In Our Day

In Water

Walk Up

The Novelist's Film

In Front of Your Face

Introduction

Hong Sangsoo – Winner of the Silver Bear for Best Screenplay

The Woman Who Ran

Hotel by the River

Grass

The Day After

On the Beach at Night Alone

Right Now, Wrong Then

Hill of Freedom

Our Sunhi

Nobody's Daughter Haewon
