The Definitive Voice of Entertainment News
Subscribe for full access to The Hollywood Reporter
See My Options Sign Upsite categories
site categories
The Definitive Voice of Entertainment News
Subscribe for full access to The Hollywood Reporter
See My Options Sign Up
Patrick Brzeski
Asia Bureau Chief
Contact or follow this author
Patrick Brzeski is The Hollywood Reporter's Asia Bureau Chief. Based in Tokyo, Brzeski works closely with THR's team of Asia correspondents to cover some of the world's fastest growing and most dynamic entertainment markets. He is a Southern California Journalism Award winner and National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards nominee for feature writing. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, South China Morning Post, Financial Times and elsewhere.
More from Patrick Brzeski
Tokyo Film Festival to Honor Yoji Yamada With Lifetime Achievement Award
With 91 films over 64 years — including the beloved 'Tora-san' series and Oscar-nominated 'The Twilight Samurai' — Yamada will be celebrated for his tireless contributions to Japan's cinematic heritage.
- By
Warner Bros. Discovery, Korean Studio CJ ENM Forge K-Content Partnership
The Korean entertainment powerhouse behind 'Parasite' and 'Crash Landing on You' is joining forces with WBD to create a pipeline of original K-dramas for HBO Max.
- By
Paul Thomas Anderson’s 10 Movies, Ranked From Worst to Best
With PTA back in theaters with 'One Battle After Another' — a critical and commercial high point — The Hollywood Reporter takes a look at the California master's remarkable 10 feature films to see how they stack up against one another.
- By
Park Chan-wook on ‘No Other Choice,’ Capitalism and the Black Comedy of Self-Delusion
The Korean maestro behind 'Oldboy,' 'The Handmaiden' and 'Decision to Leave' unpacks his long-gestating comedy thriller, starring 'Squid Game' actor Lee Byung-hun — and why it might finally earn him his first, long-overdue Oscar nomination.
- By
‘No Other Choice’: First Trailer for Park Chan-wook’s Latest Masterpiece Reveals a Korean Dad Driven to Darkness
Neon dropped the first official look at the Korean maestro's buzzy black comedy thriller, which stars Lee Byung-hun, of recent 'Squid Game' fame, as an unemployed everyman who decides his only choice is to eliminate the competition.Â
- By
Meet the Women Reshaping Global Television
In a year marked by disruption, these leaders from Lagos to London are driving the future of small-screen storytelling.
- By
Japan’s Most Influential Film Critic Curates New York Showcase Tying Together Ozu, John Ford, Mizoguchi and Michael Mann
Shiguéhiko Hasumi — mentor to Kiyoshi Kurosawa and Ryusuke Hamaguchi — will present the Japan Society retrospective, which is tied to the long-awaited English release of his signature book, 'Directed by Yasujiro Ozu.'
- By
Tokyo Fest Unveils Lineup: Fan Bingbing, Tadanobu Asano, Rithy Panh and Palestine Epic Among Competition Highlights
Other highlights at Tokyo's 38th edition include Chloé Zhao 'Hamnet,' Brendan Fraser's Japan-set 'Rental Family,' acclaimed doc 'The Ozu Diaries,' loads of anime, and the much belated local premiere of Paul Schrader's cult classic 'Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters.'
- By
Paul Schrader’s ‘Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters’ to Finally Screen in Japan After 40-Year De Facto BanÂ
After decades of political sensitivities and threats kept it from screens, Schrader’s Yukio Mishima biopic, considered by many his masterpiece, will finally play for Japanese audiences.
- By
Oscars: China Picks Nanjing Massacre Film ‘Dead to Rights’ as Best International Feature Film Submission
The summer blockbuster, directed by Shen Ao and starring Liu Haoran, dramatizes the horrors of the Nanjing Massacre and has earned over $417 million at China’s box office.
- By
Warner Bros. Begins Production on Korean Remake of ‘The Intern’ Starring Choi Min-sik and Han So-hee
The remake of Nancy Meyers’ 2015 comedy-drama marks the first project from WBD’s recent first-look pact with longtime Asia exec Jack Nguyen.
- By
Park Chan-wook’s Critically Acclaimed Comedy Thriller ‘No Other Choice’ Opens in First Place at Korea’s Box OfficeÂ
The director’s long-gestating satire, starring Lee Byung-hun, delivers Korea’s second-biggest local opening of 2025, providing some much-needed domestic energy to the country’s box office.
- By
THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER is a registered trademark of The Hollywood Reporter, LLC.