翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ No Really, I'm Fine
・ No Reason
・ No Reason (Grinspoon song)
・ No Reason to Complain
・ No Reason to Cry
・ No Reasons Given
・ No Records
・ No Redeeming Social Value
・ No Reflection
・ No reflow phenomenon
・ No Refuge Could Save
・ No Refunds
・ No Refunds (film)
・ No Regret
・ No Regret (album)
No Regret (film)
・ No Regret (song)
・ No Regret Life
・ No Regret Peak
・ No Regrets
・ No Regrets (All-4-One album)
・ No Regrets (Amanda Lear song)
・ No Regrets (Andrew Copeland album)
・ No Regrets (book)
・ No Regrets (Dappy song)
・ No Regrets (Dope album)
・ No Regrets (Elisabeth Withers album)
・ No Regrets (Elisabeth Withers song)
・ No Regrets (Faye Wong album)
・ No Regrets (Hardcore Superstar album)


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No Regret (film) : ウィキペディア英語版
No Regret (film)

| director = Leesong Hee-il
| producer = Kim Jho Kwang-soo
| writer = Leesong Hee-il
| starring = Lee Yeong-hoon
Kim Nam-gil
| music = Lee Byung-hoon
| cinematography = Yun Ji-woon
| editing = Leesong Hee-il
Lee Jung-min
| distributor = CJ Entertainment
| released =
| runtime = 114 minutes
| country = South Korea
| language = Korean
| budget =
| gross = 〔("''No Regret''" ). ''Box Office Mojo''. Retrieved on 4 March 2012.〕
}}
''No Regret'' () is a 2006 South Korean film and the feature film directorial debut of Leesong Hee-il, based on his earlier short ''Good Romance''.〔 ''No Regret'' is the first commercially released South Korean film to feature frontal adult male nudity (although no genitals are shown), and is also regarded as "the first 'real' Korean gay feature",〔Bertolin, Paolo. "(Korean Presence Strong at 57th Berlin Film Festival )". ''Hancinema'', 6 February 2007; originally published by ''The Korea Times''. Retrieved on 3 December 2008.〕 (although earlier South Korean films, such as ''Road Movie'', released in 2002, have dealt with gay relationships), and is also the first South Korean feature to be directed by an openly gay Korean filmmaker.〔
== Plot ==
Su-min is an orphan who, having turned 18, is required to leave his orphanage. Unable to pay for university, he heads for Seoul where he works various jobs to pay for computer classes. One of those jobs is driving drunks home from bars. After losing his factory job, Su-min ends up taking a job at a host bar. Initially the boss of this host bar is reluctant to take him on, as he knows from experience that openly gay hosts will often leave when they become romantically involved with one of their clients. Having given up on love, Su-min believes that this won't happen to him, until one day a man from his past enters the host bar. That man, Jae-min, is a former driving client, who has fallen in love with Su-min. Su-min refuses his advances, and accepts him as a client only once, and threatens to kill him if he hires him again. Jae-min is undeterred, and after several weeks go by, Su-min gives in. They are very happy in their relationship until Jae-min's mother discovers them together. She orders Jae-min to marry the woman he's been dating halfheartedly. Su-min is angry. With another man from the host bar, they kidnap Jae-min one night and take him to a shallow grave in the forest. Su-min watches passively as his colleague throws dirt on Jae-min, but eventually moves to stop the plan. His colleague already depressed over a two-timing girlfriend, whacks Su-min with the shovel and leaves the two there in the grave. Jae-min later awakens and takes Su-min to the car and they crash a tree while going back. As dawn breaks in, the two of them start to awake at the same time cops show up at the scene but inside, without paying attention to the cops, Su-min and Jae-min silently reconcile.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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