
What case of Kim Soo-hyun and Kim Sae-ron says about how South Korea treats celebrities
Advertisement
This week, South Korean actor Kim Soo-hyun publicly denied allegations that he
dated the late actress Kim Sae-ron when she was under the age of sexual consent. His emotional press conference followed Kim Sae-ron's suicide in February, which reignited allegations that they were romantically involved.
Here's what we know about the case.
Who was Kim Sae-ron?
Kim Sae-ron was once one of South Korea's most promising film stars. She began acting aged nine in A Brand New Life (2009), which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. She gained further recognition with The Man from Nowhere (2010) and A Girl at My Door (2014), also invited to Cannes.
Her career was halted in May 2022
after she crashed her car in Seoul while drunk . Despite offering a public apology and reportedly paying compensation to shops that lost power because of the crash, she faced relentless negative attention.
South Korean actress Kim Sae-ron arriving at the Seoul Central District Court in South Korea, in April 2023. Photo: AP
Media and online commentators scrutinised her personal life. YouTube gossip channels accused her of exaggerating financial difficulties and questioned her sincerity. Critics, and her family, say it contributed to her declining mental health.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
US director Spike Lee on Highest 2 Lowest, his latest movie with Denzel Washington
Months have passed since the premiere of his latest work, Highest 2 Lowest, at this year's Cannes Film Festival, but US filmmaker Spike Lee is still revelling in the memories of the glitzy May 19 event. 'I've had a love relationship with the Cannes Film Festival since 1986 – they've loved all my films that have been there,' says Lee, 68, speaking on a recent video call from his residence at Oak Bluffs in Martha's Vineyard, in the US state of Massachusetts. 'May 19, 2025, was a continuation of that. I don't think it was a mistake that the world premiere of Do the Right Thing was May 19, 1989. I don't think it was a mistake that May 19, 2025, was Malcolm X's 100th birthday. 'For me, some things you just cannot explain. They just happen. And to add to that, this is the first time [actor] Denzel [Washington] has ever been to Cannes with a film.' He pauses: 'It was ancestral spirits, whatever you want to call it,' he says, adding with a mischievous cackle, 'But not voodoo!' A reimagining of Japanese auteur Akira Kurosawa's 1963 thriller High and Low, Highest 2 Lowest stars Washington as a wealthy music mogul whose livelihood is threatened by a life-or-death ransom demand.


HKFP
a day ago
- HKFP
J-pop idol Kenshin Kamimura fined HK$15,000 after molesting interpreter
Japanese pop idol Kenshin Kamimura has been fined HK$15,000 after he molested a female interpreter in Hong Kong. The ex-member of boy band ONE N' ONLY was arrested in March and pleaded not guilty to indecent assault in April. According to the Associated Press (AP), Kamimura allegedly touched the woman's thigh repeatedly during a celebratory dinner in Mong Kok and invited her to a bathroom elsewhere. The court heard that the interpreter dismissed his advances and told him she had a partner. On Wednesday, Judge Peter Yu said the singer touched the woman in a caressing manner, implying a sexual undertone and indecent intent. 'The defendant's acts are obviously disrespectful toward women… Such behaviour should be condemned,' Yu said, according to the AP. During the trial, Kamimura's defence told West Kowloon Court that the claims were exaggerated and that the alleged invitation to the bathroom may have been innocent, the AP reported. The maximum penalty for indecent assault is 10 years in prison, though Kamimura avoided a jail term after his lawyers argued that he had a promising future and had already paid a heavy price. Kamimura's contract with ONE N' ONLY was terminated in March.


HKFP
3 days ago
- HKFP
12 arrested in Hong Kong-Shenzhen joint operation targeting suspected fake concert tickets
Hong Kong and Shenzhen authorities have arrested a total of 12 people in a joint operation targeting the manufacturing and sale of suspected fake concert tickets. More than 400 high-quality counterfeit or half-finished fake concert tickets were seized by Hong Kong and Shenzhen police in a recent crackdown on a cross-border syndicate, the city's police force said at a press conference on Sunday. Four men, aged between 24 and 39, were apprehended in Shenzhen, including a Hong Kong man who mainly resides in mainland China and is said to be the mastermind of the syndicate. During the raid in Shenzhen, local authorities seized suspected counterfeit tickets for ongoing and upcoming events, printing machines, invisible ink, cutters, envelopes, and other equipment used to produce the suspected fake tickets. In Hong Kong, seven men and one woman, aged 19 to 65, were arrested for offences including conspiracy to defraud, possession of false documents, obtaining money by deception, and money laundering. They were linked to at least 16 cases of fake concert tickets, with total estimated losses exceeding HK$100,000. Local media reported that the tickets included the concert of South Korean pop star Kwon Ji-yong, also known as G-Dragon. Police said last week that his fans were scammed out of more than HK$610,000 worth of fake tickets to his sold-out Hong Kong concerts. Police said the seized tickets were highly convincing, with the font, anti-counterfeit features, and paper quality closely resembling those of genuine tickets. However, there were minor flaws that could be spotted with the naked eye, for example, differences in the wording of the English terms and conditions, as well as variations in the placement of punctuation marks in the Chinese text. In June, eight people were arrested for allegedly selling high-quality counterfeit tickets to concerts by Cantopop star Nicholas Tse, Taiwanese singer Jay Chou, and four other musicians. The eight suspects were part of a cross-border syndicate involved in at least 40 suspected scams, according to local media, with total losses estimated at around HK$650,000.