103

Park Ki-woong interview: Two-faced never looked so good

We’ve covered the hero, so next on the Gaksital interview circuit is villain Park Ki-woong. Well, next and last. It’s a short circuit.

I have loved watching Park Ki-woong come into his own over the past several years, even though he’s been around for close to a decade at this point. He was first seen in 2004 in a K2 music video for “I Hear Love” (you can watch here, though the video itself is pretty lame), and made his acting debut in a 2005 Japanese horror movie [괴담 / 怪談] that seems to be, from my inability to rustle up much info on it, a project that faded into obscurity.

But it was a 2006 CF for a Sky cell phone that launched him to stardom, hilariously (watch the awesomeness), and he followed that up with a leading role in My Tutor Friend 2, which was a cute fluffy movie co-starring Ramyun Shop’s Lee Chung-ah. He was cute as the second lead in 2008’s rom-com Love & Marriage (where he had a very sweet parting with the heroine as they left their first loves behind to go on to their next).

Then he took on the role of an autistic genius in 2009’s dark, intense Story of a Man, and I think that’s really when he started his career as an ‘actor.’ He followed that with Chuno, Bow: The Ultimate Weapon (aka War of the Arrows), and now Gaksital. (We’ll choose to ignore the travesty that was The Musical, which should just be stricken from the record.)

Notably, his most memorable roles have all been villainous, enough to have some calling him a villain specialist. He joked on a recent appearance of talk program GoShow that when he’s a bad guy his projects are hits, and when he’s the nice guy they flop. He was awesomely chilling in Bow, playing a sadistic Manchurian prince who liked to toy with his spoils of war, with a leer on his face and while speaking a different language. (Park has said that for Bow, he was so frustrated and embarrassed after shooting NG after NG on his first day that he spent hours on end nailing his dialogue, and was thus gratified at the praise he received for his language performance.)

Even so, he singled out the latest role as the toughest: “Of all the characters I’ve played, Kimura Shunji was one of the most difficult. It’s a drama that has left me with a lot, on an acting level. I really worked a lot on it, and learned so much.”

(Side note: Gaksital is Park Ki-woong’s fourth time working with this director, which explains both why he was cast and why he and the director had good rapport. They did a Drama Special episode together, then Love & Marriage where the PD was a B team director, then Story of a Man.)

The role of Shunji required Park Ki-woong to travel between good guy and bad guy; he started out with a pure heart, but the situation brought out his dark side.

“Nice Shunji and bad Shunji. I thought a lot about the double-sidedness and how to act them. It wasn’t a matter of acting extremely good-natured, and then extremely evil. Out of this extreme situation he changes into being truly bad, and that is what provides motivation and justification for Kang-to and Gaksital’s actions.”

Yet it wasn’t a simple linear progression but a frequent back and forth, and Park worried a lot about how to adequately depict the character’s duality.

“Rather than calling Shunji absolutely evil, he’s a person who undergoes a complete transformation. It was the process of changing from a good person to a bad one that we showed. There were parts where it’s expressed as pain birthed by the era. Despite their different nationalities Kang-to and Shunji were friends, though they became antagonists, and it was the middle ground that was difficult to express. Because it was the gray area I had to show, not a side that was too evil, or too good.”

On set, shooting would frequently have to stop for the two leads, Park Ki-woong and Joo-won, to allow them a chance to get a handle on their emotions—they would be so overwhelmed that the tears would keep coming.

On the Gaksital website, there was a recent behind-the-scenes clip posted of Shunji’s torture scene with Kang-to. In it, Park Ki-woong had trouble holding back his tears as Kang-to tells him how he became Gaksital, although his character wasn’t supposed to cry. (It begins around the 4-minute mark below.)

“The tears kept coming. Shunji and Kang-to may have been incredibly close friends, but turning into enemies was unavoidable. Kang-to killed Shunji’s brother and father, Shunji’s brother killed Kang-to’s brother and mother, and Shunji’s father killed Kang-to’s father. These situations were heartbreaking. More than the dialogue being sad, it was the situation that just naturally brought the tears to my eyes. In the scene in the last episode where Kang-to and Shunji sit down for a drink together, we had to stop filming because we couldn’t stop crying.”

As for his own real-life personality, Park described it as reserved: “I don’t like going out much, and I tend to only be friends with people I’m close to. For example, I don’t really enjoy parties or that kind of thing. It feels awkward and uncomfortable.”

He describes his relationship with Joo-won as that of a close hyung and dongsaeng: “Because of shooting schedules, we haven’t been able to meet much outside of work, but while on set we were always glad to meet.”

“Usually I’m not really one for giving or receiving massages, but I became fond of Joo-won’s aegyo. I received energy from Joo-won a lot as well. Joo-won and I are a bit different. He’s the type to immerse himself fully, and he’s got energy and great concentration. Whereas I take care to be half-immersed, and half-awake. With him, I think we had great synergy, and when I acted with him we’d both lift each other up. Our emotions would build on each other and get stronger.”

[SPOILERS FOR FINALE] It’s for that reason that the final episode showdown between the two resulted in an endless string of NGs. It’s the scene (as if we could forget!) where they meet knowing that one of them will die tonight, and instead of challenging Kang-to, Shunji sends him out and kills himself.

“I don’t think the director wanted flowing tears from either Kang-to or Shunji in the suicide scene. What he wanted was for Kang-to to send Shunji off with resolve, and for Shunji to show a complex range of emotions and then let the tears flow as he died. But the NGs came because both of us kept crying.”

“In the fist-fighting scene in Episode 27, and the suicide scene of 28, I had the thought, ‘I want to do more with him. It would be fun to work with him more.’ He was a really great partner.”

“I’m really thankful to Joo-won. Acting in Gaksital as a whole, the energy level is pretty intense, and we had a lot of give-and-take with each other. If I came into a scene with an acting tone thinking ‘This amount is enough,’ Joo-won would meet me and both of us would elevate. We helped each other out.”

What about the female co-stars?

“I’m sure she asked advice of the other actors too, but Jin Se-yeon called a lot to ask me this and that. She’s a motivated actor. For me, it was actually the first time I’ve given someone acting advice. It’s a sensitive area, so I didn’t say much but she would draw out my responses. She worked really hard.”

Then there’s Han Chae-ah, scenes with whom he said he enjoyed shooting the most for those reasons because it gave him a chance to speak frankly to a sympathetic ear. “Shunji was always stressed from not being able to catch Gaksital that wherever he went, he would suppress it all and not express it. But when I was in scenes with Han Chae-ah noona, we would be like companions in misery and our conversations would be plain-spoken, which was really nice. And whenever the other person is delivering their lines, she’s the kind of actor to always offer a kind reaction.”

He added, “She was the one person I could express my feelings to. Acting with her felt refreshing. Because of Hong-joo [Rie], I survived.”

(Park has been quoted recently saying Han Chae-ah is his ideal woman, ha.)

Emotionally: “Gaksital was really emotionally draining. We’d cry a lot and become enraged, but then had to come down from that. Acting became exhausting, especially when I’d grab Kang-to’s throat and fight him. Joo-won told me to grab his throat for real, and I found myself actually doing it. I could actually feel my emotion taking over.”

“All the torture scenes were the most difficult. I really hate hitting other people, but there were quite a number of scenes where I’m hitting women. It particularly drove me nuts to do the drowning torture scenes with women. If you have an outtake in a water torture scene, you have to dry their hair when there’s very little spare time to go around, and grab your co-star’s hair and just shove them around without mercy. It was psychologically rough.”

Yes. It was psychologically rough to watch them, so one can only imagine how dark a headspace you had to be in to act them out: “All the scenes in that room were very intense, and you get pulled into that space. Because of the emotions involved, I’d come out after filming the torture scenes and not be myself.”

More than your average historical drama, it seems this one carried an extra burden, perhaps because the pain is so recent, so raw with yet-unhealed scars. So I’m not surprised to hear that the crew took their burden seriously; that was evident just by watching the show.

“In order to express these historical events like the comfort women issue, it wasn’t a sense of obligation we felt but a real obligation. I wasn’t personally involved in the comfort women storyline, but the other hyungs [playing officers] had to intervene and act out very violently. When we read that script, everyone had a hard time with it and felt uncomfortable while shooting it.”

For instance, there’s co-star Yoon Jin-ho, who played one of Shunji’s most prominent sidekicks, Koiso, and was a sympathetic ear for him. “Since this is a drama that requires so much emotion and expressiveness, you get used to that state and find that your emotions surge and well up. I’m thankful to Jin-ho hyung, both in and outside of acting. I sought acting advice a lot from him, and while it may be presumptuous for me to say it, he’s a sunbae with really strong acting skills.”

Park admits that there were times he overacted, singling out the scene of Damsari’s execution as an example of overdoing his facial expressions. As a result, he’d had nightmares at the time and even wanted to run away from it all.

“After thinking those thoughts, I doubted myself, wondering, ‘Will I be able to hang in there?’ There were ten episodes left at that point, and I felt that I wouldn’t be able to manage if I didn’t figure out how to draw back on my facial expressions. That’s when I, the total computer illiterate, learned how to use Twitter and started to use it with Koiso hyung. On set, I started to purposely joke around more. This was my fourth time working with director Yoon Sung-shik and most of the staff were people I’d worked with before, and when I started to goof around more things got better. Rather than approaching everything overly seriously, I think it’s necessary to enjoy yourself too.”

As we know, the cast of Gaksital took a ton of goofy, cute, aegyo-filled photos when not filming. We can imagine that it was a relief to break character when possible. And while looking at the photos makes Park Ki-woong seem just as inclined toward natural aegyo as Joo-won, it’s fascinating seeing just how different they are. Similar outer expressing, worlds apart on the inside.

Park said, “I took a lot of those kind of pictures. After doing this work constantly, I found myself looking for fun in the smallest things. If I didn’t, I wouldn’t be able to enjoy myself.”

Park Ki-woong was one of the folks who took care of others on the set as a leader, which Joo-won said was something he learned over the course of this drama. Park said he in turn learned it from Park Yong-ha (RIP), his co-star from Story of a Man.

“Yong-ha hyung took care of everyone around him, and when the drama wrapped the whole cast and crew took a photo and wrote our names on it. If you don’t work with the staff a lot, you tend to just greet them and leave it at that, without learning everyone’s names. But hyung did all that. He was a really good hyung.”

Asked if he’s thinking of awards, Park said no. “If I’m given an award, of course I’d be grateful. But awards, you know… There’s a part of me that’s like an old soul. To be honest, sometimes I think people will think I’m acting too much like an old adult that I try to live more free-spiritedly. That makes me more comfortable. What I like best is to do my best in a tough situation. If I try too hard and struggle with everything, it just makes me more tired.”

Via TV Report, My Daily, My Daily, Newsen, Hankook Ilbo, TV Daily

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , ,

103

Required fields are marked *

Shunji is on my top list of favorite villain in kdrama. and this is the hardest character to let go. I feel for him after read some his twitter and interviews.
Big credit to Javabeans to post this article and mention some of his previous works. when I saw Gaksital, I have no idea that PKW was in Story of A Man. I mean, he was the cutie adorable autistic boy? he looked so different and more skinnier in Gaksital. I watched Full House 2 trailer, I was like, WTH what's with his weird blonde hair? well his character is a kpop idol, I def not gonna miss it!
btw, He was totally badass and evil in Arrow and I noticed he spoke in different accent there coz he's the manchurian prince.
I'm curious what will he do next. I hope another wide variety of roles again for Ki Woong. ;-)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Waah he is handsome im the 1st picture heehe
Well after reading this recap I was able to recall all moments that he was talking about even felt the anger and darkness again

I don't know how to express my feelings coz i suck in english :P
So I'll just stop

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

don't stop! :)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I actually watched Park Ki Wong on Kim Sun Ah's when the night comes he was Sun Ah's younger brother in that series and he was the culprit in stealing all the relics of which I think was a nice role too.. He resembles one of the actor in the Philippines the name is Dennis Trillo at one look you may say they're twin brothers specially with his hair in Gaksital... I did like him on his acting genius at The story of man with that headphone...

But I just loved him more on Gaksital and Joo Won

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

First, thank you for the compilation of interviews! PKW's was the one I was looking forward to the most.

I'm glad both JW and PKW are getting so many interviews because people just aren't over them in Gaksital and I thought we'd have to wait 'til their *next* drama to see their beautiful faces again

BTW... PKW models so well! Like even during BM I didn't notice. But does it like really well. He really has some kind of duality thing going on there -- I don't know how he manages to keep that intense look while smizing at the same time. Give that boy some magazine spreads to keep him busy

Agreed that we got to love him for working so hard to become a serious actor -- it'd be great to see him land a movie role with him as the leading man again (loved him MTF2).
And I love that he says playing the villain was tough -- some people think it's cool and fun to be a villain but he made it so much more meaningful and heartbreaking -- plus a lot of villainous stuff he did -- he did most of that with his own hands. So yeah, he must have really hated himself at times, even if it was just acting. That had to take a toll on him.

Sorry, Lee Min Ho -- but kindly move over. PKW is taking your spot on my list of Top K-drama actors

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sorry, Lee Min Ho — but kindly move over. PKW is taking your spot on my list of Top K-drama actors

Oh no you didn't! :P

For a moment, I felt like placing Park Ki-woong on my number one list too. Then Faith comes along and I have to say, LHM's acting in recent episodes has impressed me a lot (especially after someone on Soompi gave details about the scripts and how LHM portrayed those scenes).
But PKW was so damn good in Gaksital.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

"But PKW was so damn good in Gaksital."

Amen to that

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Will look forward to anything he does in the future. Hopefully as the leading male next time!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Love him since Love & Marriage and i hope that after Gaksital he get offered more leading roles, he's a good actor so i hope people give him a chance.

I really like his interview, Park comes off as humble and frank, i also love that he mentioned the late Park Yong Ha, i miss him a lot and yesterday i was just watching old clips of him. Anyway i'm looking forward to Park Ki-woong's next projects.

Thanks JB.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

JB--you the BOMB!!! (nothing new...) Thanks so much for this huge spot for PKW!!! I really enjoyed him in Tutor 2, a loveable jerk/softee to Lee Chung Ah--they were both adorable in it!! Of course that cell phone CF, great timing with the goofiness. For all his work--I've watched 'cuz of PKW, 'seen all his work 'cept Musical--just couldn't get past Ep3... In Love/Marriage the boyfriend who wanted to be an ex was heartbreaking... He was just awesome on Story of Man, the cast there were great! PKW shone brightly, he was one of the reasons I watched Chuno--umm, I was stunned at his character--he wasn't in it for long but he was gooood!!! And Gaksital, our PKW has come a long way, I'd like to see him out more in variety shows, he'd be a blast...

Thanks JB for this story on multi faceted gem-PKW!! Fighting!!!

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Versatile indeed. Ki-Woongie's the Johnny Depp of Korea and PD Yoong Shik Sung is his Tim Burton. Can they break the record by working *five* times together?

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I mean, in Korea. I don't know how normal it is for actor and PD to work together frequently

It'd be miraculous if they actually broke Depp/Burton's record of working together

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

No doubt they will work together again because their teamwork has been successful, I hope it's something goofy because he can be such a comic!!! Oh yeah he was a cutee in the KBS Drama City Love minus 30 minutes, it's hard to find, only an hour of this charming young man... but enjoyable. PKW was partnered with Kwon Sang Woo's spouse prior to their marriage. Pkw & JB, love you guys!!!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i really admire and respect him for his work ethic. reading about yongha broke my heart, i admit ): ahh... park kiwoong TT^TT you're really awesome! fighting!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agreed. As much as I love hi good looks, he does also have awesome work ethics. That combined with his charismatic face makes him a strong actor to reckon with. It doesn't matter what his next project will be IMO -- even if his acting seems subpar or average, at least we know he tried his best and that's all that matters. Gaksital will always be the best thing on his resume and we'll never forget it

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This was such an awesome interview. *sniffles* I really want him to get a happier role next. He's such a darling.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

He's an actor with so much range, but I can see why his villainous roles take the cake; he's not the archetypal K-hero. He's just a lot more unique so the roles he take should be equally as interesting.

My three favorite and most memorable PKW scenes are:

1. When he unmasked Kang-To.
2. When Kang-to tells him how he became Gaksital (after the torture scene).
3. When he committed suicide.

He does subtle so well and those scenes, so bittersweet, just broke my heart.

PKW, you rock my world.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

Those are mine as well!

If allowed to add a 4th favorite scene, I'd add the bare-fist fight from episode 27. Actually I love the fact that the physical version of the final showdown between Shunji and KangTo was in the penultimate episode instead of the final episode. The real face to face finale should be as it was -- emotional, calm, and heart-breaking.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

just want to add another my fav PKW moment was when his shunji the first time expressed his feeling towards Rie, scared that his life would be in vain.
His loneliness look, his fear, his regret, it all shows from his expression, and that expression strange enough was killing me! That suddenly brought tears to my eyes without realizing it.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Dang you're right. That or the scene where he is having a drink with Rie and he reciprocates and pours the drink for her and tells her that he forced Chairman Ueno to spare her life I love how prior to that scene, he once told her "If you ever need a place to run to, come to me. I could take you in." He probably meant that in a degrading kind of way (like picking up a prostitute). But he did end up saving her life -- and that, too, out of actual concern for her after realizing she is not Japanese, but more like KangTo -- trying to be Japanese, but is actually Korean to the roots like MokDan. After all, the Korean land and people have always been his obsession and soft spot. I never realized it but in the beginning of the drama, Shunji was already a bit possessive and obsessive with Korean things -- at first it was just mere objects like pots and dolls and small things like that. But then that expanded to conquering MokDan as he progressed to becoming a Superintendent with no boundaries

Maybe this list is the top FIVE PKW moments :)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Just following up to my own post -- lame, but sometimes I just got to talk to myself here:

Now I kind of understand why Shunji was mad as hell when he found out KyeSoon -- the misguided spy girl -- betrayed him and lied to him. It felt like he couldn't conquer any Korean -- not even by *buying* her loyalty. Everyone (Korean) he trusted just slips through his fingers like sand... his one weakness.

If only he knew how to really rule people's hearts and minds without being so obsessive or buying them... but that was his tragedy

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeah, you're totally right Anabanana. The writer really knew where to place those scenes so the final face off had a strong but calm emotional impact that lingered on and allowed us to accept their ending. Otherwise, I would have cried tears of blood. Also, the action/fight scenes in this drama was some of the best I've ever seen in a drama.

missjb, his scenes with Rie were always so sizzling hot! They understood each other well and when she half jokingly asked him if she should stay, I felt like she would've if he said yes.

You know, I'm really surprised when he said, "I take care to be half-immersed, and half-awake" because before this interview, I always assumed he threw himself completely into character. That's how convincing he is.

I hope he becomes the next Lee Jung Jae. He should go on to do film where he really belongs. TV dramas are too small for his talent.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I got really excited for a minute this morning because there are rumors circulating that he is attached to a new film project. But then I realized: don't believe anything unless it's confirmed by his management agency. Anyway, I read some reports this morning from the film "Covertness" that Ki-Woong would be playing one of the three main leads. At this point, I think he is only *considering* taking on the role. If he does do it, though -- that would be awesome. I'd love to see a movie where he is a main character. In a lot of his films, with the exception of MTF2, he has been a supporting character, so this would be a really nice change and it's not as strenuous as a drama schedule. Ki-Woong-sshi, you should
totally do it! Fighting!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

really!!??? I felt excite! I hope he will get Movie project with huge budget and HIGH Quality like BOW. And he will be the main lead YAY!!!!
when I watched some scene in Gaksital it makes me realize his acting talent really mades for film/movie with good quality directing. In some scene, he burn the scene like no one's bussiness. The camera brought his acting come to life, and his good rapport with PD-nim helped him.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

respect!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Aww we have the same personality. I wish him luck in all his endeavors. And hears to hoping he can be the good guy in his next drama and it will not flop but be successful!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Park Ki Woong. What can I say about this man... nothing besides the fact that he's badass!! He's by far, one of the most outstanding actors that I've ever laid eyes on. There are some A-list actors, who shouldn't even be on that list but this man deserves a climb up that ladder.

His name should be put next to Jung Il Woo, Kang Dong Won, Jang Hyuk, and among many great others (alongside with Joo Won too). But Gakistal was by far my favorite drama of the year and it just topped my top three!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Seriously though, if Bridal Mask were some American cable drama, Shunji and Rie would've had lots of casual/frustration sex all the time.

I definitely felt the chemistry between Ki Woong and Chae Ah hehe.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yup, those two would have had that kind of sex--big time.. ! Their scenes together were always so riveting!!!! Rie, was another complex character that was his perfect foil, in peaceful time, they would have been perfect for each other, I'd like to see them together, they both seem loveable!!!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

to the PKW fandom, after watching him with such heavy hearts, I just had to post this to lighten the mood.. PKW with Lee Chung Ah, his character there was also complex but what a great comic My Tutor 2,here's a teaser:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQpw7VZ9bUs

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

at first, I interested to watch gaksital because joowon, but then pkw'e acting really susprised me, just like you said, his acting was freaking impressed so I started to like him! now, I really like him, even more than joowon, so I'm really glad that you posted his interview too.

and I really hope, SOON, he will get chance to be a lead role and had a pair, really, just once, I wanna see him as lead role in a drama!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I gasped at Park in bridal mask photo. Very handsome guy, very talented actor. And Shunji reminded me of Sasuke Uchiha from Naruto. Should check his Secretly Greatly now. Jeez I'm a fan I guess

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This Ȋ̝̊̅§ the first time I'm seeing his movies and...I'm totally into him

Gaksital...watched it becoz of pkw.. J̶̲̥̅̊u̶̲̥̅̊ƨ̣̣̣̇̇̇̇τ̣̣̥ can't leave shunji ' character...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *