Indonesia to raise food security financing at 2nd ASEAN AFMGM

Jakarta (ANTARA) – Indonesia, as the chair of ASEAN this year, will raise the issue of financial support for food security at the 2nd ASEAN Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting (AFMGM), scheduled to take place in Jakarta from August 22 to 28, 2023.”This year, Indonesia will address the issue of financial support for food security, which will be presented at the ASEAN Summit,” said Yogi Rahmayanti, Head of the Regional and Bilateral Policy Center of the Finance Ministry, in Jakarta on Monday. She mentioned that the issue of food security was previously discussed during the Joint Forum on Food Security in Yogyakarta on July 17. The forum was one of a series of AFMGM activities at the working group level. Through the forum and other AFMGM activities, Indonesia aims to create guidelines on food security that can serve as a reference for ASEAN countries. She added that each ASEAN country can anticipate and address its own food security situation. Following discussions on food security issues, the next step is to seek funding support, she said. “We will discuss funding support next. This issue will be addressed by the cross-sectoral committee,” she added. Indonesia has initiated the 2nd AFMGM to convene ASEAN finance ministers and central bank governors to monitor progress toward the goals set during the 1st AFMGM and discuss global issues and common economic challenges. The 2nd AFMGM will focus on three priority economic deliverables (PED): recovery and rebuilding, the digital economy, and sustainability. The 1st AFMGM meeting discussed three priority agendas in the ASEAN Financial Track, namely local currency transactions (LCT) and cross-border payments, cooperation in finance and health, and food security.

Source: Antara News Agency

(LEAD) N. Korean leader visits navy unit, inspects cruise missile test aboard warship

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has visited a navy unit and inspected a cruise missile test aboard a warship, Pyongyang’s state media reported Monday, in an apparent bid to respond to joint military drills between South Korea and the United States.

The North’s leader inspected the Guards 2nd Surface Ship Flotilla of the East Sea Fleet of the navy of the Korean People’s Army (KPA), the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said, without disclosing the time of his visit.

He also watched the seamen on the patrol ship stage a drill, in which it test launched “strategic” cruise missiles, verifying the ship’s “regular posture for mobilization and offensive ability.”

“At the drill aimed to reconfirm the combat function of the ship and the feature of its missile system and make the seamen skilled at carrying out the attack mission in actual war, the ship rapidly hit target without even an error,” the KCNA said in an English-language report.

South Korea and the U.S. kicked off the annual Ulchi Freedom Shield (UFS) exercise Monday, featuring various contingency drills, such as the computer simulation-based command post exercise, concurrent field training and Ulchi civil defense drills. The exercise will run until Aug. 31.

Kim vowed to strengthen the North’s navy to make it an “all-round and powerful” service group with improved combat efficiency and modern means of surface and underwater offensive and defensive capabilities, the KCNA said.

North Korea will “put spurs to the modernization of naval weapons and equipment including the building of powerful warships and the development of shipboard and underwater weapon systems,” he said.

The inspection came amid expectations that North Korea could carry out major provocations, such as the launch of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), in a bid to protest the allies’ joint military drills. The North has long denounced the Seoul-Washington military exercises as a rehearsal for an invasion.

The North’s leader called for a “drastic boost” of the country’s missile production capacity and war contingency preparations in an “offensive” manner during his latest visit to major munitions factories.

The leaders of South Korea, the United States and Japan held a trilateral summit at the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland last week, where they adopted a series of documents that outlined their commitments to enhance security cooperation and called for the three countries’ leaders to meet annually.

In particular, they agreed to consult one another in the event of common threats amid the security and economic challenges posed by North Korea and China.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Blue Jays’ Ryu Hyun-jin wins 2nd straight start, extends unearned run streak to 14 innings

Toronto Blue Jays starter Ryu Hyun-jin has won his second straight start while increasing his stretch of not giving up an earned run to 14 innings.

Ryu gave up two runs, both unearned, on four hits in five innings against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Sunday (local time), helping the Blue Jays to a 10-3 victory. Ryu struck out a season-high seven batters and walked just one.

The South Korean left-hander improved to 2-1 for the season and lowered his ERA from 2.57 to 1.89 across 19 innings.

Ryu has now thrown four starts since returning from Tommy John elbow operation at the start of this month. Since allowing four earned runs in five frames in his season debut against the Baltimore Orioles on Aug. 1, Ryu has not been charged with any earned run over his next 14 innings. He has given up only six hits in that process.

For the second straight outing, a defensive miscue allowed the opposing team to score against Ryu.

The Blue Jays spotted Ryu a 1-0 lead before he even took the mound, with Bo Bichette, after hitting a triple, scoring when second baseman Matt McLain couldn’t handle a groundball by Brandon Belt.

After Ryu worked a clean inning in the first, his Blue Jays teammates put up a four-spot in the second, behind a pair of two-run homers by Kevin Kiermaier and Belt.

Up 5-0, the Blue Jays gifted a couple of runs to the Reds in the second.

With runners at the corners and one out, Ryu got Noelvi Marte to fly out to left fielder Daulton Varsho. Then after receiving a throw from Varsho, third baseman Matt Chapman tried to nab Christian Encarnacion-Strand going from first to second. Chapman instead made a wild throw and the ball rolled all the way toward the warning track in center, allowing two Reds runners to score on the play.

Later in the same inning, first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. made an errant toss to Ryu covering the bag on a grounder by TJ Friedl, though nothing came out of that error after Luke Maile lined out to right field.

The Reds didn’t score again off Ryu in this one.

Ryu pitched around a one-out walk in the third inning, getting a couple of strikeouts in another scoreless frame.

Toronto bats erupted for another four-run inning in the next inning, with Bichette and Belt going back-to-back with solo shots and George Springer joining the party with a two-run blast to put the Blue Jays up 9-2.

With a comfortable lead, Ryu retired the side in order in the fourth, which included a strikeout of Marte.

Ryu got into a jam after allowing two straight singles to begin the bottom of the fifth but then retired the next three batters.

TJ Hopkins was called out on strikes on a 3-2 fastball on the inside corner. McLain popped out to the catcher, and Elly De La Cruz struck out for the second time against the left-hander, after looking at a 0-2 curveball that found the lower part of the zone.

Ryu’s day was done after 83 pitches, 56 of them for strikes. Genesis Cabrera worked a scoreless sixth, and Bowden Francis covered the final three innings for the win.

Ryu threw 38 fastballs, 18 changeups, 16 curveballs and 11 cutters. He averaged 87.4 mph with his fastball, 1.3 mph below his seasonal average, but he didn’t need to throw hard when he made Reds hitters look uncomfortable all day with an array of secondary pitches.

Ryu induced three whiffs on 10 swings against the changeup, and three misses on 10 swings against the curveball.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

3 S. Koreans qualify for final PGA Tour playoff event

A record three South Korean players will compete in the final PGA Tour playoff event in Atlanta this week.

Im Sung-jae will make his fifth consecutive appearance at the Tour Championship starting Thursday to close out the annual FedEx Cup playoffs, and he will be joined by countrymen Tom Kim and Kim Si-woo.

The trio will represent the largest South Korean contingent at a single Tour Championship since the current playoff setup was introduced in 2007.

The Tour Championship is open only to those inside the top 30 in the FedEx Cup standings following the conclusion of the BMW Championship in Olympia Fields, Illinois, on Sunday (local time).

Im was the top South Korean at the BMW Championship, where he shot a 10-under 270 to finish alone in seventh place. After carding a 66 in the final round with five birdies and one bogey, Im jumped 11 spots in the FedEx Cup rankings from No. 28 to No. 17.

By qualifying for his fifth Tour Championship, Im has broken a tie with Choi Kyoung-ju for the most Tour Championship appearances by a South Korean player.

“I hit my driver really well all week. You can’t afford to miss fairways on this course, and I was able to play well all four days,” said Im, who ranked seventh in driving accuracy in the field after hitting 66 percent of the fairways (37 out of 56). “My putter let me down a bit. I could have had more birdies, but I missed a lot of relatively short putts.”

At last year’s Tour Championship, Im finished one stroke behind the champion, Rory McIlroy, in second place, the best showing by an Asian player in that tournament.

“I have some good memories of that tournament, especially after finishing in second place last year,” Im said, with the tournament returning to East Lake Golf Club for the 20th consecutive season. “I am really looking forward to this upcoming week.”

Tom Kim, whose Korean first name is Joo-hyung, tied for 10th at seven-under 273, after a blistering bogey-free round of 63 on Sunday. At No. 16, Kim is the highest-ranked South Korean in the FedEx Cup standings and will make his Tour Championship debut.

Kim Si-woo will be playing at the Tour Championship for the second time in his career after finishing in a three-way tie for 31st at the BMW Championship at an even-par 280. He dropped from No. 17 to No. 20 in the FedEx Cup standings, still safely inside the top 30.

The fourth South Korean in the field at the BMW Championship, An Byeong-hun, will miss the final playoff event after ending in 43rd place at five-over 285. He arrived in Olympia Fields ranked 38th in the FedEx Cup points but slipped six notches to stay outside the top-30 picture.

Under the “starting strokes” system, the higher the players’ positions are in the FedEx Cup standings, the bigger the advantage will be for them at the start of the Tour Championship.

The FedEx Cup points leader will begin the season-ending tournament at 10-under, and the No. 2 player will start at eight-under, and so forth. Players between sixth and 10th will be at four-under at the start.

Im, Tom Kim and Kim Si-woo are all between 16th and 20th in the FedEx Cup standings, and they will start the Tour Championship at two-under.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Klinsmann proud of Son Heung-min, Kim Min-jae as ‘ambassadors of Korean football’

South Korea head coach Jurgen Klinsmann is now linked to his two best players on the men’s national football team in more ways than one.

Klinsmann, one of the world’s premier strikers in the 1990s, spent the latter part of his club career with Tottenham Hotspur in the Premier League and Bayern Munich in his native Germany. Those two clubs now employ two South Korean stars.

Longtime South Korea captain Son Heung-min was given Tottenham’s armband before the start of the 2023-24 season, his ninth with the North London club. Bayern Munich, the most successful club in Bundesliga history, signed South Korean defender Kim Min-jae during the summer transfer window, prying him away from Napoli, where Kim helped them win their first Italian Serie A title in 33 years.

Both players have enjoyed success in Europe already. Son won the Premier League Golden Boot in 2022, becoming the first Asian player to lead the top English league in scoring, while Kim, in addition to lifting Napoli to the top, was named the best defender in Serie A last season.

In an online interview with South Korean media Thursday, Klinsmann said he was “very proud” of both players.

“They are the ambassadors of Korean football in the global football world,” Klinsmann said from his Los Angeles home. “I think Korea can be really, really proud of this.”

Klinsmann, still considered a Spurs legend despite playing just two seasons in two separate stints, has visited Son a few times on his multiple European trips since taking over the South Korean team in March. Klinsmann was on hand for Son’s debut as Tottenham’s captain in their season opener against Brentford on Aug. 13.

“We are very, very proud that Sonny became captain of Tottenham Hotspur,” Klinsmann said, referring to Son by his widely-used nickname. “This is a very a wonderful achievement for Sonny to be captain of such a big club in England.”

As for Kim, considered one of the top center backs in Europe, Klinsmann said he has no concerns whatsoever.

“I don’t worry about Min-jae at all at Bayern Munich because he’s in a good place,” the coach said. “That’s one of the best teams in the world. He’s one of the best defenders in the world. He’ll do well at Bayern Munich.”

Klinsmann said he and Kim text each other “all the time” to stay in touch.

“He feels happy there. His family feels happy there,” Klinsmann added. “It’s exciting. I think it’s something to be very, very proud of.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Klinsmann trying to strike balance with Asian Games looming

As he gears up for a pair of friendly matches in September, South Korea head coach Jurgen Klinsmann is feeling lucky.

That’s because he can have the services of some of the country’s top young talent for his men’s senior national team, and then still have them available for the under-24 squad at the Asian Games later in the same month.

Players’ availability for the senior national team and the underage Asian Games or Olympic teams has often caused friction between the coaching staffs. But with the way match fixtures work out for both sides this time, Klinsmann and Hwang Sun-hong, bench boss for the Asiad team, likely won’t have to fight over players.

Klinsmann’s team will play Wales in Cardiff, Wales, on Sept. 7 and then Saudi Arabia in Newcastle, England, on Sept. 12. The first Asian Games match for Hwang’s team is Sept. 19 in China.

One player regarded as an important piece for both national teams is the 22-year-old midfielder Lee Kang-in. A new summer signing by the French champions Paris Saint-Germain (PSG), Lee is considered the most talented U-24 player in South Korea today, and one of the country’s most skilled midfielders in any age group, period.

Hwang put Lee on his final Asiad roster in July, hoping he can help South Korea win their third consecutive gold medal. On the other hand, Klinsmann will also count on Lee to help him get his first victory as South Korea’s head coach, after posting two draws and two losses so far.

Hwang has yet to have Lee in any of his training camps or tuneup matches in the leadup to the Asian Games. Hwang’s team will play qualifying matches for the 2024 Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-23 Asian Cup on Sept. 9 and 12 in South Korea, which would be the final opportunities for Lee to get into match action with the rest of his Asian Games teammates before the competition. But these matches overlap with the senior team’s friendlies.

In an online interview with South Korean media Thursday, Klinsmann said he will have Lee on his team for the Wales-England trip and then send him over to China in time for the Asian Games.

“We will utilize Kang-in first with the ‘A’ national team, and then he will go straight to the under-24 team in time for the Asian Games,” he said. “The lucky thing for our two games and the Asian Games is that we play the games beforehand. There’s no conflict. We’re lucky because the time window works out fine.”

Klinsmann said the same applies to other members of the Asiad squad who could earn a callup to the senior team next month, such as Dynamo Dresden defender Park Kyu-hyun and KAA Gent midfielder Hong Hyun-seok.

“In general, whoever is part of my team comes to me first and then they go to the under-24 once the second game is played (in Newcastle),” Klinsmann said.

As for Lee’s lack of training opportunities with the Asiad team, Klinsmann said, “I think the two games with us will prepare him much better for the Asian Games than just training.”

Because Asian Games matches aren’t part of the FIFA international calendar, European clubs are under no obligation to release their players for the event, which falls in the middle of their season. Lee’s status for the Asian Games had seemed to be a question mark because of that, and Hwang acknowledged in July that he was still trying to convince PSG to send Lee. However, Klinsmann revealed that Lee had put a clause in his contract with PSG that will allow him to be released for the Asian Games.

“He was smart enough to put it in his contract to be released,” Klinsmann said, adding that the situation may prove to be trickier for Park and Hong.

Klinsmann said it comes from a lack of understanding on the European teams’ part for the importance of the Asian Games to South Korean male athletes. Winning a gold medal at the continental competition grants those athletes exemption from mandatory military service. This can set them on course for a long, uninterrupted career.

Two of South Korea’s best football players today, Son Heung-min of Tottenham Hotspur and Kim Min-jae of Bayern Munich, both earned their military exemptions by winning the gold at the 2018 Asian Games.

Klinsmann admitted he himself had to learn this particular element about Korean football.

“The military situation is a very unique situation in Korea. It does not exist probably anywhere else in the world,” he said. “For me and for a lot of people in Europe, it’s difficult to comprehend how important the Asian Games are for the players, because of that military situation. I had to learn it first and now I have to try to explain this to people in Europe.”

One potential issue that worries Klinsmann is that European clubs may demand their players back during the seven-day window between the South Korea-Saudi Arabia match and the first Asian Games match.

“Theoretically, the clubs can say, after our game on Sept. 12 in Newcastle, that their players have to go back to the clubs to play one game and then go to the Asian Games,” the coach said. “We hope that the club teams won’t utilize that game.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Klinsmann waves off criticism over remote working: ‘I’m a workaholic’

Jurgen Klinsmann, head coach of the South Korean men’s national football team, is a firm believer in the effectiveness of remote working, someone who takes advantage of technology to stay connected with his backroom staff even when he is not in South Korea.

In response to recent criticism that he isn’t around the country that employs him as much as he should or as his predecessors, Klinsmann insisted the nature of his work is “international” and he can work just as diligently while staying overseas.

In a wide-ranging Zoom interview with South Korean media last Thursday, Klinsmann defended his style of running the national team, while also discussing his experience in South Korea so far and his learning of the Korean language.

Klinsmann, who left for his Los Angeles home at the start of August and also spent some time in Europe for personal and professional commitments recently, said he understands where criticism against him comes from. The coach that Klinsmann succeeded, Paulo Bento, lived in South Korea year-round even when the national team didn’t have matches. For earlier foreign coaching hiring, the Korea Football Association (KFA) made living in South Korea one of the requirements of the job.

“Maybe it’s something new to people that are used to doing it differently. I don’t blame anybody when they say, ‘Where is he?'” Klinsmann said from Los Angeles. “The work of a national team coach is international. I need to know what goes on in Europe. I need to be in touch with the coaches of the (Korean) players in Europe. I need to always understand what the best teams and the best nations do, and what we can do better.

“I am a workaholic. I love to work like Koreans love to work,” Klinsmann added with a smile. “If I’m not maybe 24/7 in the country, I still work 24/7, calling people, observing, and watching videos about opponents. I talk to a lot of people outside my working environment in order to pick up new information of trends in professional sports, not only in football, to learn from other sports.”

While he is outside South Korea, Klinsmann leans on two Korean members of his staff, Cha Duri and Michael Kim, to scout the domestic K League. Klinsmann, a former German World Cup star, uses his considerable network in Europe to stay on top of that side of the globe.

Klinsmann claimed that he had seen his share of K League matches in person, enough that he and his staff now have “a very good picture” of the players in the pool for future national team consideration.

Perhaps Klinsmann wouldn’t have been under so much heat for traveling around the world had he produced better results on the field. Klinsmann has yet to win a match as South Korea’s head coach, with draws against Colombia and El Salvador, and losses to Uruguay and Peru so far.

Starting in early September, it will be a long series of matches lined up for Klinsmann. South Korea will play Wales in Cardiff City on Sept. 7 and then travel to Newcastle, England, to take on Saudi Arabia on Sept. 12. They have two more friendlies coming up in October, followed by World Cup qualifiers in November.

Klinsmann will hold an early training camp with K Leaguers to prepare for the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Cup kicking off in January in Qatar.

“I am a competitor. I want to compete,” Klinsmann said, reiterating his oft-stated goal of winning the Asian Cup. “I can’t wait until these games start.”

When Klinsmann travels to Europe, he makes sure to visit with at least some of the Korean players plying their trade there. He said he was recently in Ireland for the 80th birthday party of a close friend with whom he built a football facility in Los Angeles more than a decade ago. And while he was in the area, Klinsmann flew to Brentford, England, to watch the national team captain Son Heung-min open the new Premier League season for Tottenham Hotspur. Klinsmann also had a chance to speak with Brentford’s new South Korean defender, Kim Ji-soo.

While he coached the U.S. men’s national team, Klinsmann helped some American players take their talent to Europe. He is ready to do the same for South Korean players if they are willing.

“When I had the players in training camp, I made it clear that I am always there for them,” he said. “If they need anything in terms of their career, they can always come. The way I work is I always offer my services to the players. Whatever they need, they can come and I will help. That’s my job.”

Though Klinsmann has spent more time overseas than in South Korea since taking the national team job in early March, the multilingual German native has been learning Korean while he could.

Klinsmann, who speaks German, English, Italian and French, said he is still only learning the Korean alphabet, hangeul.

“I am not learning the words necessarily yet. Once I hopefully get to be able to read the alphabet, then I can start actually to say the words and translate the words into English or German or Italian,” Klinsmann said. “So that’s why I am still very shy and quiet with speaking it. But I’m actually excited because when I now drive through the streets in Seoul or wherever I go, I can read a lot of advertising boards, names, signs on the streets. So it’s coming along. Compared to where I was three months ago to where I am today, I’m actually proud but I don’t speak it enough yet.”

Klinsmann was no stranger to South Korea even before he became the national team boss here. He spent a few weeks here in 2017 when his U.S.-born son, Jonathan, played for the United States at the FIFA U-20 World Cup hosted by South Korea. Klinsmann said the polite manner of the South Korean people never ceases to amaze him.

“Politeness of the people is something I adore,” said Klinsmann, who also said he appreciates the safety and cleanliness of the country. “You have a very special way of making people feel welcome and feel comfortable.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Gyeongbok Palace opens for nighttime viewing

Nighttime tours of Gyeongbok Palace will begin next month, allowing visitors to feel the serene autumn night mood of the old palace nestled in downtown Seoul, the program’s organizer said Monday.

The Cultural Heritage Administration (CHA) said it will open its annual autumn night tours of the palace from Sept. 1 to Oct. 29.

Every spring and autumn, the Joseon-era (1392-1910) palace opens its gates at night, when it is usually closed to the public, for a limited time, allowing visitors to enjoy the beauty of the illuminated palace under the moonlight. This year’s spring program attracted 112,820 visitors, according to the CHA.

The night tours run from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and admission closes at 8:30 p.m. The tours are not available Mondays, Tuesdays and the substitute holiday on Oct. 4.

Online ticket reservations are required for all visitors, excluding foreigners.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

S. Korean startup HoneyNaps’ sleep diagnostic software Somnum earns U.S. approval

South Korean digital health care startup HoneyNaps Co. said Monday its artificial intelligence-based sleep diagnostic software, Somnum, has won approval for sale from U.S. drug authorities.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted Section 510(k) clearance, or premarket notification, to Somnum, demonstrating that the medical device is safe and effective. The cleared device does not need to win premarket approval before hitting the shelves.

It is the first FDA approval won by a sleep analysis solution developed by a South Korean company. Two U.S. companies — EnsoData’s EnsoSleep and Cerebra Medical’s Cerebra Sleep System — have received FDA clearance.

“The FDA has strengthened its review process of AI-based health care products,” HoneyNaps said in a release. “We have carried out clinical trials in the U.S. for the past three years to meet the FDA criteria.”

Somnum is software with an AI algorithm that collects and analyzes sleep data, mainly the vital signs of its user, and predicts disease by applying it to a clinical data set. Its AI has been trained with more than 18 million sets of related data over the past eight years.

HoneyNaps said the FDA approval will help the company go public in South Korea and put more effort into expanding its business horizons to include cerebral and cardiovascular diseases.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

(Movie Review) ‘Sleep’ tells bittersweet love story in perfect blend of horror, mystery

“Sleep” takes a refreshing approach to horror by interweaving the bizarre sleepwalking story of a newlywed couple with a romance and mystery thriller, telling a nuanced tale of marriage and family.

Jason Yu’s debut feature film is a unique fusion of genres as it evokes an unsettling sense of supernatural phenomena through the couple transitioning to parenthood.

The three-part story follows a newly married couple, Hyun-su (Lee Sun-kyun), a budding actor, and Soo-jin (Jung Yu-mi), an office worker in the last month of her pregnancy.

Their everyday life in an old apartment is disrupted when Hyun-su begins speaking in his sleep, saying “Someone’s inside.”

Since then, Hyun-su sleepwalks at night but can’t remember what happened the night before.

Soo-jin is frightened by her husband’s eccentric behavior: scratching his skin until blood is drawn, swallowing raw meat from a refrigerator and even attempting to jump from the apartment as if possessed.

Hyun-su soon loses his role in a drama due to a scar on his face and receives treatment at a clinic, but his symptoms only intensify.

In the second part, the family treads a perilous tightrope as Soo-jin is now with a newborn baby in the house.

Overwhelmed with anxiety that Hyun-su may hurt himself or their daughter, Soo-jin can barely sleep and her mother calls a shaman to their house.

The shaman’s diagnosis is ominous. Soo-jin is living with two men in the house: Hyun-su and a mysterious male soul who only wants to live with her, without the sound of a dog barking or a baby crying.

Soo-jin at first doubts what the shaman says. But the more she feeds the idea, the stronger it gets.

Soo-jin tenaciously investigates the cause of his symptoms with a firm belief in the motto written on a wooden plaque hung in the living room: “Together, there is nothing we can’t overcome,” and it unnerves Hyun-su.

Due to a combination of accumulated stress, sleep deprivation and postpartum emotional fluctuations, she shows paranoia and acts aggressively to protect her daughter.

The third part begins with Hyun-su’s doctor telling him that his sleep disorder is finally cured. Soo-jin returns from a psychiatric hospital after weeks of treatment.

The couple is reunited in their house and has an argument over what has to be done to restore peace to the family, heading toward a gripping ending.

Mostly set in an old apartment, which causes inter-floor noise complaints, the newly wed’s cozy home increasingly turns into a place of horror filled with potential hazards.

While the underlying emotion between the couple is love, the firm belief in the marital bond and parental commitment results in an unexpected outcome.

Its ending leaves more questions than answers: What keeps a couple in a marriage? How do supernatural beliefs evolve in one’s life?

Formerly an assistant to Bong Joon-ho, director of the Oscar-winning film “Parasite,” director Yu presents a unique horror story inspired by Korean contemporary culture of apartment living and shamanism, which practices healing rituals focused on spiritual causes of sickness.

Lee and Jung, who co-starred in Hong Sang Soo’s three films — “Lost in the Mountains” (2009), “Oki’s Movie” (2010) and “Our Sunhee” (2013) — vividly portray the couple’s changing dynamics in a movie that blends witty black comedy elements.

“Sleep” was screened at Cannes Critics’ Week section at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, which focuses on the first and second films by emerging directors. It will hit local screens Sept. 6.

Source: Yonhap News Agency