Following his period epic The Tiger, director Park Hoon-jung scales down his ambitions for the North Korea-themed investigative thriller V.I.P., a brooding procedural that lumbers its way through a serial killer tale mired in political intrigue. Much like his hit gangland opus New World, several (male) actors share top billing but each struggle in cliche-riddled roles.
Showing posts with label jang dong-gun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jang dong-gun. Show all posts
Monday, August 21, 2017
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Review: TAEGUKGI: THE BROTHERHOOD OF WAR is a Heartbreaking Tale from the Korean War
By Chris Horn
You would be hard-pressed to find a more compelling and
difficult to portray subject than war. Having successfully proven himself with
his 1999 action film Shiri, director
Kang Je-gyu once more took a look at the breakout of violence between North and
South Korea in Taegukgi: The
Brotherhood of War. While comparisons to Saving Private Ryan (1998) are inevitable, Taegukgi cuts to the heart of a different kind of war with less
clearly defined lines and much more personal stakes for its characters.
Monday, January 26, 2015
Review: Straightforward Action in NO TEARS FOR THE DEAD
Writer-director Lee Jeong-beom made a big splash in 2010 when his confidently made action feature The Man from Nowhere became a box office hit in South Korea. It made a believable action star out of its lead, Won Bin, and had an emotional core that helped it lean closer towards other, well-established action films of its ilk such as Luc Besson’s Leon: The Professional (1994) or Tony Scott’s Man on Fire (2004). Lee follows a similar format with his newest ultraviolent follow up, No Tears for the Dead, which at times feels like it could have been another Tony Scott film.
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