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Community reviews
From TMDb members · 2 total- Reno7/10
**The longest 10 minutes of the princess' life!** The story that sets in the 1961, but most of the film was a flashback narration that takes us to the 30 years earlier, in the 30s. This is a biographical film of the last Korean princess to be crowned. Though the film clearly b…
- CinemaSerf7/10
Bertolucci’s acclaimed “Last Emperor” (1987) gave us an indication of the Japanese colonial aspirations in Manchukuo, but there aren’t so many features that tell of their similar dismantling of the Korean state. Ruled by the Joseon dynasty, their last emperor had declined to acce…
Full text & links on TMDb in the reviews section below.
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The Last Princess
“Based on the true story of the last princess of the last empire.”
67%
Movie
2h 6m
AI Analysis
The Last Princess (2016) — AI movie analysis
WatchMind AI generated this AI analysis of The Last Princess (2016) — a movie tagged as Action, Drama, and History with epic moods and fast-paced pacing.
Story & themes: Under the oppressive Japanese colonial rule, Deok-hye, the last Princess of the declining Joseon Dynasty, is forced to move to Japan. She spends her days missing home, while struggling to maintain dignity as a princess. After a series of failed tries, Deok-hye makes her final attempt to return home with help of her … Our models also surface themes such as ai from synopsis and genre signals.
Watch context: Best suited for general audiences. Expect fast-paced storytelling (~126 min).
Community signal: TMDb members rate The Last Princess 67% (68 votes) — solid community ratings for this movie.
AI verdict
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Algorithmic AI analysis from genres, synopsis, pacing heuristics, and TMDb community scores — not a generative chatbot. How WatchMind works.
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TMDb audience score
67%
from 68 TMDb votes
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Synopsis
Under the oppressive Japanese colonial rule, Deok-hye, the last Princess of the declining Joseon Dynasty, is forced to move to Japan. She spends her days missing home, while struggling to maintain dignity as a princess. After a series of failed tries, Deok-hye makes her final attempt to return home with help of her childhood sweetheart, Jang-han.
Quick facts
- Type
- Movie
- Status
- Released
- Release date
- 2016-08-03
- Runtime
- 2h 6m
- TMDB rating
- 6.7
- TMDB ID
- 408360
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Where can I watch The Last Princess (2016)?
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Is there an official trailer for The Last Princess?
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What is The Last Princess about?
Under the oppressive Japanese colonial rule, Deok-hye, the last Princess of the declining Joseon Dynasty, is forced to move to Japan. She spends her days missing home, while struggling to maintain ... This is the official synopsis available via TMDb community metadata.
Is there an AI analysis for The Last Princess?
Yes. WatchMind publishes an AI analysis on this page — tone, pacing, audience fit, and community scores from TMDb metadata and recommendation models (not a chatbot). Scroll to the AI Analysis section or read the meta description summary.
How long is the movie The Last Princess?
The official runtime for The Last Princess is approximately 126 minutes.
Cast & crew
Names and photos from The Movie Database (TMDb). Follow links on themoviedb.org for full filmographies.
Directors & writers
Cast

Son Ye-jin
Princess Deok-hye

Park Hae-il
Kim Jang-han

Ra Mi-ran
Bok-soon

Jung Sang-hoon
Bok-dong

Kim So-hyun
Teenage Deok-hye

Baek Yoon-sik
Gojong of Korea

Park Joo-mi
Yang Gwi-in

Ahn Nae-sang
Kim Hwang-jin

Naho Toda
Lee Bang-ja

Yoon Je-moon
Han Taek-soo

Kim Jae-uck
Takeyuki So

Yeo Hoi-hyeon
Teenage Jang-han

Shin Rin-a
Young Deok-hye

Lee Hyo-je
Young Jang-han

Kim Dae-myung
Kim Bong-guk

Keum Sae-rok
Park Ju-ok

Go Soo
Prince Lee Woo

Rie Akiba
Matsuzawa
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Community reviews
Written by TMDb members — same catalogue as our movie & TV metadata. API terms
**The longest 10 minutes of the princess' life!** The story that sets in the 1961, but most of the film was a flashback narration that takes us to the 30 years earlier, in the 30s. This is a biographical film of the last Korean princess to be crowned. Though the film clearly briefs her power struggle over the foreign power. The entire tale was told from her perspective as she saw everything. So, it was real, but historical facts were compromised in places with additional characters or events that more cinematised. That's what the film declared at the opening. To be honest, any biopic would be the same. You can't expect a perfect, a flawless portrayal of a person or the event. Since films are just a recreation to spread the truth, whether they are good, bad or nothing important. There are lots of Japanese dialogue as the story required it. I have seen other Korean historical films, especially about freedom fight. In this too, you could see that phase of the history, but in a different angle. The 2 hour long film, most of it was drama, but there are some action sequences too. A little love story, but overwhelmed by the princess' own struggle throughout her adult life. Probably one of most misunderstood person for her actions by her own people. Because they have seen only from their own eyes, not the truth, what their princess had gone through. Sooner or later, the truth always comes out, and that's where the narration draws its curtain. While the Korean is being under the rule of Japan, the 13 year old princess, Deokhye witnesses her father's assassination for his objection over some matter brought by the Japanese officials. Now the grownup princess was forced to go to Japan for her higher studies. But she pledges to return home to her mother and people. That's not what happens, she sees many Koreans trapped in there as the slave workers. Her fight for their freedom becomes her next target, though things take twists and turns, leaving her in the tight spot. The remaining story is to reveal her rest of the life after a long struggle. > ❝Never give up until the end. Spring will come again to fields stolen from us.❞ Usually a good Korean film will be recognised well in the international stage. Especially for like this, having a wonderful cast and crew, I did not expect the under-notice. As I have seen it, definitely the film deserves more appreciation. Well, I did not like the film either in the beginning. I thought it was too slow, too long and the events were uninteresting. But the real value of the film came in the later part. Yes, the narration picked up the speed with all the sudden developments. Basically what we would call such film is: a slow start, but concluded strongly. So you have to wait till the end to come to any judgement. One thing I did not mention so far was the emotions. If I'm saying I liked it, that's mainly because of the sentiments. I did not anticipate that, it was like came from nowhere. As I always say, emotions are a big part of Korean films. In that, sometimes I hated for overusing it, though not in this case. Usually a film inspired by real do have such things strongly. The film did not cover any war events, except orally declaring the details for the viewers to get everything happening around. Son Ye-jin is the most familiar face from the Korean films and as usual her execution was amazing in this. She was the right choice to play the title role, along with the director that seems he's back in the action with this like his earlier films. Its nothing lesser than any kings and queens films you had seen from the west. Since it was about a princess, her movements were strictly restricted within the walls. Which was one the reason she had nothing big to accomplish than being a puppet, except when she stepped into the Japan. Her Japan visit changed her approach, despite it was done against her will. So there are many things about the princess that you could learn through this film. Definitely a must see if you like biopics and history. _7/10_
Bertolucci’s acclaimed “Last Emperor” (1987) gave us an indication of the Japanese colonial aspirations in Manchukuo, but there aren’t so many features that tell of their similar dismantling of the Korean state. Ruled by the Joseon dynasty, their last emperor had declined to accept the Japanese annexation of his kingdom and so something toxic was added to his vermillion cordial. This left his daughter Deok-hye (Son Ye-jin) at the mercy of the manipulative counsellors who had her shipped to Japan for “integration” into the Japanese Imperial family. Used occasionally to assist their puppet-mastery, she is soon disgusted by the way her country folk are being used and abused by their new government, so determines to resist and to find some way to get back home. With the eventual defeat of Japan, her hopes of returning home don’t look so much better as the new Korean republic doesn’t want to stoke any hopes for dynastic restoration so she is still forbidden her homeland. Might she ever return home? This is a well crafted costume drama that epitomises quite well a scenario in which a spirited young woman is manoeuvred by threats against those she loves and her people whilst the Second World War rages and political ambitions remain unchecked. Son Ye-jin delivers quite powerfully and the supporting cast offer us glimpses of the megalomania and the freedom fighting that surrounded her throughout her adult lifetime. Of course there are certain historical facts underpinning this, but most of it is speculative drama and that still proves quite effective at telling of a formidable woman who could clearly have opted for a far simpler life had she played the game.
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