Park Jin-pyo was born in Seoul in 1966. Upon graduation from Chung-Ang University's Film Department, he began working in television in 1991 as a documentaryproducer and director, eventually making over 30 documentaries for SBS and ITV. In 2002, he made his narrative feature film debut with Too Young to Die, based on the real-life story of Park Chi-gyu and Lee Sun-ye, a man and woman who fell in love in their early seventies then rediscovered sex. It became controversial for its sensitive yet honest depiction of sex between the elderly couple, and was initially banned from release by the Korea Media Rating Board. Park said, "I wanted to break the preconception about the elderly. Even if the body ages, desire for sex and thirst for love do not fade away. I wanted to capture the "moment of love," and the audience accepted it as a cinematic expression of pure love. Some sees the scene as a challenging of taboos, but I just wanted to deliver a love story." Too Young to Die drew praise domestically and internationally, and was invited to various film festivals, including Critics' Week at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. Park was among six directors who participated in the 2003 human rights-themed omnibusIf You Were Me. His short filmTongue Tied focuses on a young boy whose education-obsessed parents want him to undergo tongue surgery that will purportedly enhance his ability to speak English. His second featureYou Are My Sunshine was a humanistic tearjerker about an innocent yet awkward farmer who falls for a dabangsex worker, then they later discover that she's HIV/AIDS-positive. Jeon Do-yeon and Hwang Jung-min won several acting awards for their lead performances, and Park was named Best Director at the 26th Blue Dragon Film Awards. Aside from the critical acclaim, the film ranked ninth overall on the year's box office chart, and became the highest grossing Korean melodrama at the time. Park continued to blend reality and fiction in Voice of a Murderer, based on an actual 1991 kidnapping case of a young boy whose distraught parents receive threatening phone calls for 41 days. The boy's parents granted Park permission to make the film, with which he hoped to advocate extending the statute of limitations for child abduction-murders to longer than the current 15 years. Regarding the perpetrator, Park said, "You know what, I really hope he gets to watch this film. We want to tell him that we have not forgotten his wrongdoings. I focused on expressing what the parents might have gone through. So that 'he' can watch it and feel something." Closer to Heaven, another unconventional romance between a man with Lou Gehrig's disease and his funeral director wife, also became a commercial success in 2009 and garnered acting awards for Kim Myung-min and Ha Ji-won. In a marked change from his previous work, Park's Love Forecast was a romantic comedy about a feisty weather reporter and her best friend of 18 years, a mild-mannered elementary school teacher. He said he made the film in the hopes that it will "encourage young people to think more deeply about romantic relationships."