Miracle In Cell No 7 Eng Sub Full Movie

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Aug 18, 2024, 11:15:09 AM8/18/24
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Miracle in Cell No. 7 (Korean: 7번방의 선물) is a 2013 South Korean comedy[2] drama film starring Ryu Seung-ryong, Kal So-won and Park Shin-hye.[3][4] The film is about a developmentally disabled man wrongfully imprisoned for murder, who builds friendships with the hardened criminals in his cell, who in return help him see his daughter again by smuggling her into the prison.

The movie is based on the real-life story of a man who was tortured and pleaded guilty under duress to the rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl on September 27, 1972 in Chuncheon before being finally exonerated in November 2008.[5][6][7][8] Its early working title was December 23 (Korean: 12월 23일).[9][10]

miracle in cell no 7 eng sub full movie


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Back in 1997, 6-year-old Ye-sung and her father, Yong-gu (who has a developmental disability), stare into a store window admiring a Sailor Moon backpack. Yong-gu promises to buy Ye-sung the backpack when he gets paid. However, the police commissioner and his daughter purchased it before Yong-gu. When Yong-gu rushes in to grab the backpack, he is assaulted by the police commissioner and kicked out of the store. After the incident, the two return home without the bag, slightly battered, but in high spirits. The next day, after work, the commissioner's daughter spots Yong-gu and tries to show him another store selling the same backpack. In an unfortunate accident, the little girl slips running on the market's icy pavement and a brick drops on her head, killing her. Yong-gu is arrested for rape and murder after his futile attempts at CPR are misconstrued by a female bystander.

Yong-gu is sent to prison, where he shares a jail cell (titled "Room 7") with five other inmates, all of who initially dislike him for his falsely accused crime and his disability. One day, Yong-gu saves the life of his cellmate and prison gang leader, So Yang-ho, from being stabbed by a rival prison gang leader. Touched at this, Yang-ho then offers to help Yong-gu in any way he can to return the favor. Yong-gu tells Yang-ho that he wants to see his daughter Ye-sung. The inmates successfully smuggle Ye-sung into the prison when her choir visits the prison for a performance. Ye-sung is introduced to her dad's cellmates and manages to stay for a night, but is inadvertently found by the warden. Eventually, the warden realises that Yong-gu is not the assailant of the girl after Yong-gu saves him from an attempted arson, and allows Ye-sung to visit Yong-gu every day after school.

Before the trial takes place, Yong-gu is trained by the Room 7 inmates on how to answer potential prosecution questions and he becomes proficient in answering them. Unfortunately, the commissioner beats Yong-gu before the trial in a fit of rage, threatening to kill his daughter if he does not confess. Left with no other choice, Yong-gu sacrifices himself by lying that he killed the commissioner's daughter to protect Ye-sung. Yong-gu is then sentenced to death and the execution date is scheduled for December 23, which happens to fall on Ye-sung's birthday. Feeling sorry for Yong-gu, the inmates decide to build a hot air balloon for Yong-gu to escape. During a prison concert, the inmates send Yong-gu and Ye-sung on the balloon while the guards pretend to be overwhelmed, but the balloon's rope is caught by barbed wire. On the day of Yong-gu's execution, the inmates and Yong-gu celebrate Ye-sung's birthday before he is executed.

In court 16 years later (in the present), Ye-sung, the prison warden and the Room 7 inmates all attend Yong-gu's trial to prove his innocence. The judge exonerates Yong-gu by overturning the previous verdict and granting him a posthumous acquittal, as well as a court order to re-investigate the girl's death, to the joy of the former Room 7 inmates, the warden, and tearful Ye-sung. The scene then returns to the beginning of the film, where Ye-sung has a vision of Yong-gu and her younger self on the hot air balloon waving goodbye. She tearfully says goodbye to her father as the balloon flies away.

The film took 4.6 million admissions (the equivalent of more than US$30 million) in its first two weeks due to strong word of mouth. Despite the release of The Berlin File, it drew in 15% more audience members on its third week, with seat booking at 75.8%.[11][12][13] 32 days after its release, it became only the eighth film in Korean cinema history to break the 10 million mark in ticket sales.[14][15][16][17] This was especially notable since Miracle in Cell No. 7 had a modest budget with a break-even point of 1.7 million admissions, making its eventual profit the highest among the films that reached 10 million.[18]

The film exceeded 12 million viewers 46 days after its release.[19][20] On March 15, 2013, 52 days after its release, ticket sales reached 12.32 million, making it the seventh highest grossing Korean film of all time.[21][22][23]

Analysts say among the reasons for its success was the long lunar new year holiday and families going to see the film in groups. The film proved to be especially popular among middle-aged and elderly Koreans.[24]

The film was adapted into a Kannada movie in 2017 titled Pushpaka Vimana.[27]Kross Pictures to produce the official Hindi remake of the movie in collaboration with Indian Film Studios and was directed by Umesh Shukla.[28]

It was also adapted in 2019 in Turkey as 7. Koğuştaki Mucize starring Aras Bulut İynemli in the lead role. This is an entirely dramatic interpretation and adds several story elements and characters. The film was also adapted in the Philippines with the same title, starring Aga Muhlach, Bela Padilla and Xia Vigor.[29][30][31] Indonesia adapted the film with the same title in 2022, while remakes are being planned in Spain,[32] and the United States.[33]

The first incident was insignificant. He had a mild temperature, and being new to sickle cell, I panicked and wanted him checked out immediately. They sent us home with paracetamol, and his temperature was back to normal the next day. However, the incident in March was not so straightforward.

My son woke up his usual bubbly self on a sunny Tuesday morning. He ate breakfast, played with his toys, and watched his favorite TV shows. By midday, I noticed he had become quiet and very clingy, but I brushed it off as him being tired and needing an early nap.

I gave him another dose of paracetamol, and his temperature dropped again, but by morning it was back up again. I decided to take him to the hospital just to be safe, and he was seen a few hours later.

We returned home, and the same cycle repeated itself overnight. However, unlike Tuesday, when his temperature was around 37.8 C, this time it had increased to about 39.3 C (102.7 F) without paracetamol. I panicked and went straight back to the ER.

It took only about 30 minutes to be seen because the duty nurse could see from the records that we had been there the previous night. They checked his temperature, which was 40 C (104 F). They immediately gave him paracetamol and directed us to the doctor on call.

I should mention that during our hospital stay, he was constantly drinking and nursing but still refused food. His oxygen saturation levels remained above 95%, and his temperature had fallen and remained at normal levels. After deliberating with her colleagues, the doctor prescribed antibiotics and decided we could go home, at about 11 p.m., and come back the following afternoon.

Note: Sickle Cell Disease News is strictly a news and information website about the disease. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website. The opinions expressed in this column are not those of Sickle Cell Disease News or its parent company, BioNews Services, and are intended to spark discussion about issues pertaining to sickle cell disease.

This site is strictly a news and information website about the disease. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.

After seven years of living with an aggressive form of lymphoma unresponsive to treatment, Angela Roberts was running out of options. The Knox County resident would find a lifeline through CAR T-cell therapy. Just a month after receiving the treatment at the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center, Roberts was in remission, and she hasn't looked back.

In 2018, the UK Markey Cancer Center became one of the first cancer centers in the country to begin offering CAR T-cell therapy, which harnesses the power of the body's immune system to fight cancer. Since then, the treatment has offered hope to 100 Markey patients with blood cancer unresponsive to standard treatments like chemotherapy or bone marrow transplantation.

For Roberts, every day is now a celebration of life. As outdoor enthusiasts, she and her husband, Arnold, are enjoying an idyllic retirement: a home nestled in the woods with a fishing pond and plenty of land to explore. Roberts finds joy spending time with her grandchildren or curled up with a good book. She's recently combined these passions by visiting their school for storytime, sharing her love of reading with a new generation.

Roberts didn't know it at the time, but because her cancer was unresponsive to three rounds of treatment, she was now eligible for Yescarta, a type of CAR T-cell therapy that had just been approved to treat follicular lymphoma. Markey was one of the only cancer centers in Kentucky to offer it.

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