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・ Battles of Tarain
・ Battles of the Clans
・ Battles of the Eighty Years' War
・ Battles of the Imperial Japanese Navy
・ Battles of the Isonzo
・ Battles of the Kinarot Valley
・ Battlefield Earth
・ Battlefield Earth (film)
・ Battlefield Earth (novel)
・ Battlefield Evolution
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・ Battlefield Germany
・ Battlefield Hardline
・ Battlefield Heritage Park
・ Battlefield Heroes
Battlefield Heroes (film)
・ Battlefield High School
・ Battlefield House (Stoney Creek)
・ Battlefield Line Railway
・ Battlefield Mall
・ Battlefield management system
・ Battlefield medicine
・ Battlefield Mod Development Toolkit
・ Battlefield Network
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Battlefield Heroes (film) : ウィキペディア英語版
Battlefield Heroes (film)

|director = Lee Joon-ik
|producer = Oh Seung-hyeon
Jo Cheol-hyeon
Lee Jeong-se〔
|writer = Oh Seung-hyeon
Jo Cheol-hyeon〔
|starring = Jung Jin-young
Lee Moon-sik
Ryu Seung-ryong
Yoon Je-moon
|music = Kim Jun-seok〔
|cinematography = Chung Chung-hoon〔
|editing = Kim Sang-bum
Kim Jae-bum〔
|studio = Achim Pictures
Tiger Pictures〔
|distributor = Lotte Entertainment
|released =
|runtime = 118 minutes〔
|country = South Korea〔
|language = Korean〔
|budget =
|gross =
}}
''Battlefield Heroes'' () is a 2011 South Korean war comedy film directed by Lee Joon-ik. The film is a sequel to the 2003 film ''Once Upon a Time in a Battlefield'' and stars Jung Jin-young, Lee Moon-sik and Ryu Seung-ryong. The film is set in 668 and chronicles the war between the southern Korean state of Shilla against the larger northern Korean state of Goguryeo. The film's box office returns were lower than expected in South Korea, which prompted Lee Joon-ik to announce his retirement shortly after the film's release. The film has been shown at the New York Asian Film Festival and Fantasia Festival.〔〔
== Plot ==
In Korea, AD 668. Kim Beob-min (Hwang Jung-min) is the king of the small southern Korean state of Shilla and makes a deal with China's Tang dynasty officials to have a combined strike against the larger northern Korean state of Goguryeo. The conditions of the agreement involve Shilla being given back the Korean state of Baekje. The combined troops march to Pyongyang Castle, where Goguryeo's Yeon Gaesomun (Lee Won-jong) dies and hands over command of the army to his second son Yeon Nam-geon (Ryu Seung-ryong). This action upsets his first son, Yeon Namsaeng (Yoon Je-moon) who is not as war-hungry as Nam-geon.
The Goguryeo soldiers defending the castle succeed in fighting off the Allied Army's first assault by catapulting honey and bees onto the Shilla soldiers. Meanwhile, the Shilla grand general Kim Yushin (Jung Jin-young) holds back sending his main force to join the advance Allied Army, preferring to deal directly with Yeon Gaesomun's sons than the Chinese. Yeon Namsaeng is expelled from the castle by his elder brother. The Chinese commander Yi launches a full-scale attack on the castle but is beaten back by the Goguryeo secret weapon. An allied soldier, Thingamajig (Lee Moon-sik) from Baekje, is captured. Thingamajig, who has suffered under Chinese rule, broadcasts a demoralizing message to the Allied Army. Thingamajig is rewarded by being allowed to marry the brave Goguryeo female warrior, Gap-sun (Sunwoo Sun), against her will.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Battlefield Heroes (film)」の詳細全文を読む



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