Trailer: Jeon Do-yeon is a single mother working as an assassin in Netflix's 'Kill Boksoon'

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

[Source]

Netflix has released the first trailer and a release date for "Kill Boksoon," which stars South Korean actor Jeon Do-yeon.

Jeon plays Gil, a professional assassin and single mother trying to balance her life as a killer while raising her teenage daughter.

Gil starts questioning her contract at her agency before deciding to spend more time with her daughter. However, her dual roles clash as she realizes that her next target is someone at an upcoming parent-teacher meeting.

The film is directed by Byung Sung-hyun, who is known for previous works such as 2017's “The Merciless” and 2022's “Kingmaker.”

More from NextShark: Constance Wu felt ‘betrayed’ by Asian community after Simu Liu joked about her ‘Fresh Off The Boat’ tweets

It will have its world premiere later this month during the Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) Special section, which mostly highlights mainstream projects over indie ones.

Jeon is no stranger to film festivals, having won numerous awards such as the Best Leading Actress prize at the 60th Cannes Film Festival in 2007 for her role in Lee Chang-dong's "Secret Sunshine." Other noteworthy projects include “Happy End,” "The Shameless" and “Emergency Declaration.”

Jeon's supporting characters include “Peninsula” star Koo Kyo-hwan as another hired assassin.

More from NextShark: Darren Criss stars as Superman, Harry Shum Jr. as Brainiac 5 in ‘Legion of Super-Heroes’

“Samjin English Company Class” star Esom and "The Book of Fish” lead Sul Kyung-gu play Gil’s employers.

“Kill Boksoon” will be available for international viewing on Netflix on March 31. Watch the trailer below:

More from NextShark: Former Girls Generation member Jessica Jung set to debut in new Chinese girl group


 

Enjoy this content? Read more from NextShark!

‘Actual hell’: Ryan Reynolds recalls experience on South Korea’s ‘Masked Singer'