Bangkok Post

Parasite investors rake in big money

- YOOJUNG LEE TOM METCALF

Parasite executive producer Miky Lee became an unlikely star of the 2020 Oscars when she accepted the award for best picture, praising director Bong Joon-ho and her brother Lee Jay-hyun.

“I’d like to thank my brother,” she said, for supporting and “building our dreams, even when it looked impossible.”

Her brother has plenty to thank her for, too.

In a twist befitting the dark comedy’s skewering of wealth inequality in South Korea, Lee’s family has become about US$100 million (3.2 billion baht) richer following their big night, when Parasite collected four Academy Awards.

While Lee herself directly holds about 0.1% of CJ ENM, the entertainm­ent and merchandis­ing subsidiary of CJ Group, her brother’s stakes in that and other entities, as well as those held by his two children, are worth $1.1 billion, up 10% since the Feb 9 awards ceremony, according to data compiled by the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. Some of the shares are pledged as collateral.

A spokespers­on for CJ Group declined to comment on the calculatio­n.

The Lees, among South Korea’s richest families, are among Bong’s staunchest backers, even as films like Parasite and the English-language production

Snowpierce­r rail against inequality. “There are some comical elements in

Parasite, and at the same time there are some bitter parts that explicitly reveal the wealth gap in society,” Bong said at a news conference in Seoul. “I tried to make the film as frank as possible to portray the age we live in.” South Korea’s powerful, family-run chaebol — including CJ Group — have long been blamed for exacerbati­ng inequity and entrenchin­g privilege. Lee Jayhyun was pardoned in 2016 after being sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison for embezzleme­nt and tax evasion. Together with his two children, he owns 46% of the group’s holding company, CJ Corp, which reported 30 trillion won in revenue in 2018, filings show. He emerged as the largest shareholde­r in 1998, thanks in part to stock inherited from his mother.

CJ Group, which started as a sugar and flour refiner, invested $300 million in DreamWorks SKG in 1995, winning the right to distribute the studio’s movies in Asia outside of Japan. Since then, CJ ENM has grown into South Korea’s largest entertainm­ent conglomera­te, investing more than 7.5 trillion won in movies, television and music. The Lee family also built the nation’s first multiplex, in 1998.

While CJ has endeavoure­d to promote Korean culture to outsiders, it often has come under fire at home for crowding out small independen­t cinemas. The number of screens operated by its multiplex chain stood at 1,221 last year, about 40% of the country’s total, according to the Korean Film Council.

Its market dominance may not impress South Korea’s most famous director.

“I’ve been in the Korean film industry for about 20 years and have seen astonishin­g developmen­ts,” Bong said at the Seoul news conference. “But at the same time, it has become more and more difficult for young directors to try peculiar and adventurou­s things.”

 ??  ?? Miky Lee, centre, with Heo Min-heoi, left, and Kwak Sin-ae.
Miky Lee, centre, with Heo Min-heoi, left, and Kwak Sin-ae.

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