Part of MKC's coverage of the 18th Busan International Film Festival.
Right from the get-go, the film announces itself as a slick and clever thriller, with dynamic pacing, strong lensing and a particularly strong use of space. Rarely has Seoul been used to such great effect on screen. Korean cinema has been rightly lauded for its production design work over the years, a skill that was perhaps born out of necessity, as Seoul (as well as other Korean towns) lacks the big city feel of places like New York, London and Hong Kong. Though a bustling metropolis, it is without a skyline or many architectural distinctions. Cold Eyes uses the city to marvelous effect by crisscrossing the infrastructure of the town and playing with levels in innovative ways. Subways, traditional markets and a glitz-less (and realistic) Gangnam are all used to great effect.
Firmly rooted in Hollywood genre cinema, the makers of Cold Eyes have done their homework by recognizing what makes those films tick. It borrows from the styles of films like Micheal Mann’s Heat (1995), the cold open of The Dark Knight (2011), which the former inspired, and the Johnny To-produced HK thriller Eye in the Sky (2007), which it was based on. The construction is mechanical and the execution serious (though never overly so) but the result is thrilling. The camerawork and editing are uniformly strong, if not groundbreaking. In the midst of it all, the only weak point is the soundtrack, with its standard mishmash of pulsating guitars, drums and decks, which is far too derivative (and a rung below) of similar pictures without adding anything new to the mix.
As dynamic as the investigation is, there is a slight issue of balance regarding the antagonist. The villain’s scenes, while entertaining, don’t tie in to the main thread of the narrative until much later. Having Jung Woo-sung play a villain is a treat but perhaps aligning his arc with the surveillance team’s mission earlier on would have tied things together a little better. As things stand, we follow two strands that run parallel but don’t combine until the final act. It may be two sides of the same crime, but the villain doesn’t know he’s being chased and the cops don’t know who they’re chasing. It’s a shame because more interplay between Seol and Jung would have been a rare treat.
While some of this year’s thrillers have been gimmicky (The Terror Live), ambitious (Snowpiercer) or throwbacks to earlier Korean films (the child kidnap-themed Montage), Cold Eyes works by being shorn of melodrama and universal in its execution. Joh Ui-seok has been around for a while (The World of Silence, 2006) but the addition of co-director Kim Byung-seo (they studied cinematography together in university) has made them a tag team to be on the lookout for. Informed by the best and with a beat of its own, Cold Eyes is most certainly worth a gander.
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★★★★☆
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I've watched this movie and I strongly agreed about two parallel strand. I just a little bit disappointed because the character James and his crime organization is given a little.
ReplyDeleteBut still, the movie is one of my favorite :)