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  1. Lee Man-hee (October 6, 1931 – April 13, 1975) was a South Korean film director who worked prominently in South Korea's film industry during the 1960s and early 1970s. His works include Assassin (1969). He died in 1975 from liver cancer. His daughter, Lee Hye-young, is an actress. Movies. Kaleidoscope (1961)

  2. Since the events of The Seven POW’s, Lee Man-hee’s film world underwent serious evolvements. His new films since 1966 still continued possessing his unique cinematic characteristics, but unlike...

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0497802Lee Man-hee - IMDb

    Lee Man-hee was born on 6 October 1931 in Seoul, Korea. He was a director and writer, known for Road to Sampo (1975), Marine Battleground (1963) and Ilbon haejug (1972). He was married to Moon Jung-suk. He died in 1975 in Seoul, South Korea.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lee_Man-heeLee Man-hee - Wikipedia

    Lee Man-hee (Korean: 이만희; Hanja: 李萬熙; born 15 September 1931) is a Korean religious leader. Lee is the founder of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, a South Korean religious group with teachings derived from Christianity that is considered a pseudoreligion or cult by some mainstream Christian churches.

  5. Filmography. LEE Man-hee. Director. One of the most important Korean filmmakers in the 1960s and 70s, LEE Man-hee established his reputation as a master of genre cinema, at a time the industry had yet to embrace horrors and thrillers, which have since become staples of the local film scene.

  6. m.koreanfilm.or.kr › mobile4 › jspLEE Man-hee

    Born in 1931 as the youngest of eight children, LEE took part in the Korean War as a codebreaker before entering the film industry in 1956, working as an assistant director for filmmakers such as AHN Jong-hwa, PARK Gu and KIM Myeong-je.

  7. Nov 20, 2011 · Lee Man-hee. Lee famously got into trouble with the authorities more than once – he was, for example, arrested for his Seven Female POWs (1965) – in which North Koreans rescue some South Korean nurses from the Chinese during the Korean War: Lee’s crime was being too sympathetic to the communists.