Honey Lee, interview for the movie ‘Ghost’
Park Cha-kyung, employee of the Government General
‘Phantom’ Lee Ha-nui, “Baby fight with Sol Kyung-gu”
‘Phantom’ Lee Ha-nui, “Baby fight with Sol Kyung-gu”
Actress Lee Ha-nui (40) spoke about her bare-bones fight scene with her senior Sol Kyeong-gu (56).

Lee Ha-nui told stories about her work and life in an interview with the movie 'Ghost' (director Lee Hae-young) at a cafe in Samcheong-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul on the 12th.

In 'Ghost', Lee Ha-nui played the role of Park Cha-kyung, the person in charge of secret text records at the Government General. Cha Kyung is a cold, gray-toned character on the outside, but inside she is bubbling with a passionate desire to reclaim her country. In the play, he showed off intense action acting, including a bare-bones fight with Junji (Sol Kyeong-gu), the supervisor of the communications department at the Government General of the country.

Lee Ha-nui said she had a lot of fears about the bare-bones fight scene with Sol Kyeong-gu, who plays Junji Murayama. "I had a lot of fear and anxiety during the bare-chested fight scene with senior Sol Kyeong-gu. It's the weight of weight lifting. I thought this scene would be a failure if there was a difference in gender or weight class between men and women. When the two people faced each other, they had to be equal. The two beings are dragons and tigers. “I thought it would be nice if it was a final fight against death, like the upper arm.”

Regarding the casting of 'Ghost', Lee Ha-nui said, "I was very grateful that they gave me this book. You may think that actors choose the work, but I think there are more times when the work chooses me." "When it's right. There's a set prime time for action, and the length and width are just right, so I'm very lucky to have come across a work like this," he said.

In particular, the scene at the beginning of the movie where Nan-young (played by Lee Som) shares a cigarette on a rainy day was selected as "the best cost-effective scene." Cha-kyung and Nan-young meet on the street and exchange cigarettes, and the gaze and temperature they look at each other are intensely drawn. He is considered an impressive god.

"I don't think the chemistry in the work is divided into male-female chemistry and female-female chemistry, but they named it that way. I think the chemistry between actors is a bit more subtle between women. It's broader than when it's between men and women. It's situational. “There was a setting, but it’s not enough to express it as love or friendship. It’s a more complex and nuanced feeling.”
‘Phantom’ Lee Ha-nui, “Baby fight with Sol Kyung-gu”
‘Phantom’ Lee Ha-nui, “Baby fight with Sol Kyung-gu”
In particular, Lee Ha-nui said, “I believe that as the distribution of women increases, the perspective on women can broaden,” and added, “I think the extent to which women embrace women is a prerequisite for creating a happy society. It will go up at least one degree. “I think it can be done,” he said.

'Ghost' is a story about the desperate struggle of suspects trapped in a remote hotel under suspicion as 'ghosts', spies planted by an anti-Japanese organization planted at the Japanese Government-General of Korea in Gyeongseong in 1933, and the unstoppable operation of the real 'ghosts' to overcome suspicion and escape. .

Released on January 18th.

Choi Ji-ye, Ten Asia Reporter wisdomart@tenasia.co.kr