Kakao Jumps into Filmmaking Industry | Be Korea-savvy

Kakao Jumps into Filmmaking Industry


A scene from the movie "A Violent Prosecutor." (image: Showbox)

A scene from the movie “A Violent Prosecutor.” (image: Showbox)

SEOUL, Sept. 23 (Korea Bizwire)South Korean IT giant Kakao Corp., the operator of the country’s top mobile messenger KakaoTalk, has recently taken over two local movie studios to make inroads into the filmmaking industry.

Last week, Kakao M Corp., an entertainment unit of Kakao, said that it has secured a majority share in both Moonlight Film and Sanai Pictures.

Moonlight Film is a midsized studio that has made a number of hit movies, including the period action film “Kundo: Age of the Rampant” (2014) and the crime movie “A Violent Prosecutor” (2016).

Sanai Pictures is famous for genre movies like “New World” (2013) and “Asura: The City of Madness” (2016).

“The takeover will help Kakao M expand its business horizons to film production from making TV drama and digital short-form series,” Kakao M said in a press release.

“Thanks to the filmmaking capacity and know-how of Moonlight Film and Sanai Pictures, Kakao M’s digital content production competence will be upgraded.”

Kakao M has long built its reputation in the K-pop scene for its online music streaming service provider Melon and singer Lee Ji-eun, or IU, under its management.

Now it has been diversifying its business portfolio in the small screen scene through its drama studios and management agencies.

Its drama studio affiliate Mega Monster produced the romantic comedy “Touch Your Heart” (2019) aired on tvN and mystery thriller “Children of Nobody” (2018) on MBC.

The company is now working on three more TV series based on popular webtoons, including “Dead Man Letter,” published on Kakao’s webtoon platform, Daum Webtoon.

On the acting side, moreover, Kakao acquired a number of star-studded agencies earlier this year, such as Management Soop, which manages Gong Yoo and Suzy, and BH Entertainment, involving Lee Byung-hun and Kim Go-eun.

Scenes from the thriller "Strangers from Hell." (image: OCN)

Scenes from the thriller “Strangers from Hell.” (image: OCN)

Insiders said Kakao’s recent business expansion is in line with that of Naver, South Korea’s No. 1 online portal operator, which has also thrown its hat into TV drama production and online content creation.

Studio N, Naver’s drama production unit, has been making its presence felt through creating webtoon-based TV series.

OCN’s “Strangers from Hell” and tvN’s “Pegasus Market,” both of which are based on popular online comics of the same titles and currently on air, are presented by Studio N.

The company announced its plan to dramatize some 10 webtoons in the coming years, with “Vigilante” to be remade into a film.

Also, Naver’s web drama studio, Playlist Global, is behind “A-Teen,” one of the biggest smash hit mini-dramas in the country.

Experts, however, said it is important for the IT giants to create a new platform for their content amid a major change in the global media industry.

CJ ENM, CJ Group’s broadcasting and entertainment unit, has cemented its foothold in the industry as it runs several cable TV channels and dominates South Korea’s film distributing network.

“These days, quality content rushes to platform providers like Netflix, which releases dramas and films in nearly 200 nations simultaneously,” culture critic Kim Heon-shik said.

“But Kakao doesn’t look to have any detailed plans on the issue, whether their content is based on conventional channels or new ones.”

(Yonhap)

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