Meg Ryan Returns to Romantic Comedies as Star, Writer and Director 

Meg Ryan. (AFP)
Meg Ryan. (AFP)
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Meg Ryan Returns to Romantic Comedies as Star, Writer and Director 

Meg Ryan. (AFP)
Meg Ryan. (AFP)

Meg Ryan, the actor who charmed audiences in "Sleepless in Seattle," "When Harry Met Sally" and "You've Got Mail," is returning to the big screen in a romantic comedy she also wrote, directed and produced.

Eight years after her last Hollywood film, Ryan stars in "What Happens Later" as Willa, a woman who reunites with a former partner ("X-Files" star David Duchovny) when they are both snowed in at an airport.

Ryan said she spent three years working to bring the project to the screen. It premieres in theaters on Friday.

"It takes me a long time to do anything," she said in an interview, "so three of the eight years were just labor on this."

"What Happens Later" is among several films from independent production companies to receive waivers from the SAG-AFTRA actors union, meaning the actors were free to speak about the movie despite the ongoing strike.

Duchovny praised Ryan's work in all of her different roles on the film.

"Meg wears that responsibility really lightly, which is nice," he said. "You never got the sense that she was overwhelmed or feeling the pressure, which I'm sure she was from time to time."



South Korean Fans Soak up Nostalgia with Vintage Japanese Superheroes 

This picture taken on February 15, 2025 shows merchandise from Japanese superhero series "Choudenshi Bioman" displayed for a fan meeting at a concert hall in Seoul to mark the 35th anniversary of its release in South Korea. (AFP)
This picture taken on February 15, 2025 shows merchandise from Japanese superhero series "Choudenshi Bioman" displayed for a fan meeting at a concert hall in Seoul to mark the 35th anniversary of its release in South Korea. (AFP)
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South Korean Fans Soak up Nostalgia with Vintage Japanese Superheroes 

This picture taken on February 15, 2025 shows merchandise from Japanese superhero series "Choudenshi Bioman" displayed for a fan meeting at a concert hall in Seoul to mark the 35th anniversary of its release in South Korea. (AFP)
This picture taken on February 15, 2025 shows merchandise from Japanese superhero series "Choudenshi Bioman" displayed for a fan meeting at a concert hall in Seoul to mark the 35th anniversary of its release in South Korea. (AFP)

Die-hard South Korean fans cheer and clap as their favorite superheroes strike poses in brightly colored uniforms to the sounds of a soulful Japanese ballad, a nostalgic throwback to the days of VHS.

It has been decades since Japanese superhero series "Choudenshi Bioman" was last on TV, but its epic stories of good versus evil still resonate deeply for these South Korean millennials.

And while their masked heroes are now well into their sixties, a chance to meet them in person at a sold-out concert hall event this month in Seoul was too good to pass up -- even with ticket prices starting at 300,000 won ($210).

"Most of us here are office workers, and though the ticket price wasn't cheap, it wasn't beyond our means as lifelong fans," said Oh Myung-hoon, 39.

"It wasn't a matter of choice for fans like me. It was a must."

Part of the "Super Sentai" series, better known to Western audiences as the inspiration for the "Power Rangers" phenomenon of the 1990s, "Choudenshi Bioman" and its companion shows tell the story of a group of people with special powers fighting supervillains intent on world domination.

The show was broadcast at a time of Japan's transformation into a global cultural powerhouse, its animation and film studios producing content seen the world over.

But many Korean fans of "Choudenshi Bioman" were initially not even aware the show was Japanese.

- Japanese imports banned -

For decades, South Korea imposed sweeping restrictions on Japanese cultural imports due to historical tensions stemming from Tokyo's colonial rule over the peninsula in the early 20th century.

It was not until 1998 -- more than half a century after Korea's independence -- that Seoul began lifting its ban on Japanese media content.

Japanese superhero series -- best known in South Korea through "Bioman" and "Flashman" -- were among the few exceptions to the ban and imported on VHS tapes, making them a rare and cherished phenomenon in the 1980s and 1990s.

Even so, authorities required all Japanese text in the series to be replaced with Korean and the voices dubbed, effectively erasing any trace of their Japanese origins.

This allowed the series to thrive in an era when anti-Japanese sentiment remained strong, media columnist Kim Do-hoon told AFP.

"The media that dominated my youth was all Japanese, like the animation 'Galaxy Express 999', but they had to appear Korean through dubbing," the 49-year-old said.

"The 1970s and 80s were an era of peak anti-Japan sentiment, with the belief that anything related to Japan was bad."

But "thanks to South Korea's strong cultural exports and vibrant economy" times have changed, he added.

Some scenes managed to avoid the censorship and showed Japanese characters in the background -- puzzling young Korean kids.

Cha Jeong-in, a 39-year-old game developer, admits she was confused by the "unrecognizable letters".

"I asked myself 'what is it?'" she told AFP.

"I later learned it was all made in Japan."

- Good triumphs over evil -

For the actors who starred in the hero series, the heartfelt reception in Seoul was both exhilarating and perplexing -- especially in a country where Japanese content was once heavily censored.

"I had never expected something like this to happen 40 years after filming, so I was really surprised," said Kazunori Inaba, who played Red Mask in "Maskman".

The 68-year-old former actor, who now runs a ramen restaurant in Tokyo, said it was "difficult" for him to account for the devoted following his decades-old fantasy drama still enjoys in South Korea.

"If this work that we did can be a good bridge between Japan and Korea, then we have done a really good job," he told AFP.

"I think heroes are really important, especially when you're a child. As you grow up, you forget about them," he said.

"But rewatching them can help bring back the memories."

Game developer Cha said she spent $1,500 to come to Seoul from the Philippines, where she now lives.

"I thought that if I missed this chance, I'd never be able to see them face to face in my lifetime because of their advanced age," she told AFP.

"They all taught me that good always triumphs over evil and that I must not choose the path of wrongdoing," Cha said.

"They instilled those values in me."