Name

Christine Yoo

Ethnicity
Korean
City San Diego
Category , ,
Keywords    
Description

Christine Yoo​ is a non-fiction TV producer, independent filmmaker and volunteer at San Quentin State Prison. As a TV producer, she has worked on series for National Geographic, History, Oxygen, KCET/PBS, LinkTV and The Africa Channel. As an independent filmmaker, she is committed to telling stories of the under-represented.

She is currently in post-production on her first feature documentary, “2​6.2 to Life: The San Quentin Prison Marathon,” which she shot independently inside the prison for over three years. She is a Logan Non-Fiction Fellow and has received grants from the Rogovy Foundation and recently a Sundance x Marshall Project grant for a new short that continues her work to tell the human impact of mass incarceration inside San Quentin. Christine got her start in narrative filmmaking. 

She co-wrote the anime series ​”Afro Samurai​” starring Samuel L. Jackson for Spike/Fuji TV and her original feature screenplay ​”For Steppers Only,”​ also featuring a diverse cast, was optioned by Lionsgate. Her thesis film “Yellow Belle” was a coming of age story about growing up as a Korean-American in America’s South, which aired on POV and screened in the Busan International Film Festival as well as Asian American film festivals.

Her feature film debut “W​edding Palace”​ (2014), which she directed, produced and co-wrote, broke ground featuring an all Korean-American and Korean cast, won several festival awards, and was sponsored by Korean Air, Hyundai, Jinro/Hite and The Face Shop. When distributors told her that a rom-com featuring an all-Asian cast was not marketable, Christine self-distributed the film to US theaters in 6 major markets where it had a 14-week theatrical run. The film can now be seen streaming on Amazon and Warner VOD.

Since October 2020, she has also joined the Media Advisory Board for the Asian Culture & Media Alliance non-profit organization, where she has shared her knowledge and experience with young filmmakers and future creators alike.