Box office, November 15-28
  
  
Local box office hit 
A Werewolf Boy continued to perform well during its third and fourth weeks on release, earning almost exactly as much as Hollywood film 
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 did in its first and second weeks. With another 2,142,392 tickets added to its tally (compared to 2,126,503 for 
Breaking Dawn), 
A Werewolf Boy has now passed the 6.2 million admissions mark. It currently ranks as the third best selling Korean film of the year, after 
The Thieves and 
Masquerade, and it should soon pass 
The Dark Knight Rises's total of 6.4 million admissions to become the fourth best selling film of the year overall.
 
Directed by 
JO Sung-hee and featuring popular stars 
SONG Joong-ki and 
PARK Bo-young, the film tells the story of a family in the 1960s who come across a strange boy who initially appears to be a war orphan, but who is later revealed to be something else. The film mixes romance, fantasy, humor and social drama to make for an unusual genre mashup.
 
 
Coming in at #3 in the chart in its second and third weeks on release was 
Confession of Murder with 1,215,003 admissions. A crime thriller about a man who publishes a book confessing to a string of serial murders, shortly after the statute of limitations on his crimes has expired, the film by director 
JEONG Byong-gil has earned broadly positive review ratings on local internet portals. It has now sold a total of 1.2 million tickets.
 
Also opening well was social drama 
Don't Cry, Mommy, which took 711,870 admissions in its first full week on release. This film by debut director 
KIM Yong-han is based on a heartbreaking true story about a woman who seeks justice after her high school-aged daughter is gang raped by several of her classmates. For its first few days on release the film ranked at #1 in the chart, although it was subsequently overtaken by 
A Werewolf Boy and 
Breaking Dawn.
 

Two other Korean films which opened on the same day as 
Don't Cry, Mommy managed to break into the top 10. At #6 was veteran director 
CHUNG Ji-young’s harrowing 
National Security, one of the most talked about films at the 2012 
Busan International Film Festival. The film, which recounts the true story of the torture of a well known pro-democracy activist in 1985, has been very strongly reviewed, but its strong subject matter is believed to have intimidated many viewers. The film took 262,121 admissions in its first week. At #10 was 
Cheolgabang Usussi, another social drama about a man who grows up desperately poor, but who finds meaning in life through helping disadvantaged children. Director YOON Hak-ryul previously worked as a screenwriter and directed the film 
Oh! Happy Day in 2003.
 
Other recent Korean releases that failed to make the top 10 include 
KANG Yi-kwan’s acclaimed 
Juvenile Offender, which picked up a Special Jury Award and a Best Actor award for SEO Young-joo at the recent Tokyo International Film Festival. The film opened on November 22 on 56 screens and has sold 10,360 tickets to date. The film tells the story of a boy who grows up without his parents, but who is reunited with his mother while serving time in a juvenile detention center. Meanwhile another acclaimed low-budget film 
The Winter of the Year Was Warm by distributor-turned-director 
David CHO has sold 8,865 tickets on 37 screens since being released on November 15.