Showing posts with label Kang-ho Song. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kang-ho Song. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
THE FOUL KING
Original Title: Banchikwang
Year: 2000
Director: Ji-woon Kim
Writer: Ji-woon Kim
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0261552/
Genre: Comedy, Action
synopsis:
Dae-Ho is an unproductive bank clerk who is late to work every morning and the object of his manager's frustrations. He was a fan of TV wrestling as a child, but can't get out of a headlock. He finds a local wrestling trainer and through a series of events eventually starts to train. He is slowly transformed as he begins his second job as the cheating villain wrestler known as the Foul King. He starts to stand up for himself in odd ways that are not really in his own best interest. Events get out of hand as conflicting influences come together.
All good things must come to an end, and Kang-ho Song month(plusalittleextra) is one of those things.
And what better way to end than a film about pro-wrestling??
Really, the film uses pro-wrestling more as a backdrop and vehicle for showing a common salaryman's issues with confidence and the doldrums of life, and how he attempts to overcome them.
Kang-ho Song is really fantastic again here as the bank clerk Dae-ho. (I apologize in advance for leaving out other actors as they are not properly listed on the IMDb site, and I am too lazy to research further heh). Song displays his slapstick/physical humor side in this film, but still has some nicely done dramatic scenes as well.
Dae-ho begins the film as an awkward guy who is beat up by seemingly everything in life, including literally his boss. Dae-ho is also noticeably frustrated by this, and seeks to change it. Tae-kwon-do is not for him, but professional wrestling is! He begins training at a local wrestling school that only has two students with an alcoholic teacher who used to be a famous rule breaking heel called Ultimate Tiger Mask. Eventually donning a mask, the audience can begin to see changes in Dae-ho as he gains confidence, for better or worse.
Ji-woon Kim handles wrestling comedically for much of the film, but seems to have a respect for the business as well. Sometimes a weird line is drawn between what is real and what is not, as we see some fighting in the matches crossing the line to real punches, kicks, etc., but I think this works into the theme of the film. As I have seen in the past with the Mexican lucha films, having a story centered on a masked wrestler can dive into the campy cheese quite easily. But Kim's writing and directing keep it out of there. Yes, there are comedic elements, but the story for the most part stays focused on the emergence of this new personality in Dae-ho... a theme that seems common in the Korean cinema I have seen.
Dae-ho begins to do things in the film that he normally would have avoided, but hides behind his mask when he does so. He uses his pro-wrestling identity as a crutch in a way, even though the matches are scripted for the most part, and can't seem to find the right balance between this newfound confidence and his everyday reality.
I felt the editing of the film was a definite strong point. There are some scenes that are just cut very well, particularly the wrestling stunts. Either Song took some nasty bumps in the ring, or Kim did an outstanding job subbing in stunt doubles at just the right times. There is a fantastic scene where Dae-ho as Foul King stabs an opponent in the shoulder with a fork. In a closeup over the opponent's shoulder, the "wound" is very briefly off camera as Dae-ho strikes, then comes back into frame with the fork protruding out. It looked really great and fucking painful!
Dae-ho being a rule breaker to mask his lack of wrestling ability adds to the humor of the film as well. This is often the case in real life as you can see certain wrestlers still today that rely on gimmicks such as weapons, deathmatches, etc. to get over with audiences. He is frustrated in his wrestling life also that rule breakers end up on the losing side of things, but is determined and almost trains himself to be stronger, more agile, more confident, and more skillful. Where Dae-ho is late for his miserable job everyday, he waits outside the gym before the sun even rises to practice his back-drop.
The film at times feels a little overlong. It clocks in at 1:51, and I really think it could have had 10 or 15 minutes shaved off to be a little more brisk. Another issue I mentioned was the line drawn between what is real and what is not in pro-wrestling. While entertaining, there are some scenes of real violence during matches portrayed. It seems that in real-life pro-wrestling, if one performer starts actually hitting his opponent, that the match will break down. It takes loads of cooperation in the ring for two guys to make a match flow and work properly. If both of them aren't on the same page, you can typically tell. If a guy legitimately punches another, I do not think the punched man will retaliate with a body press and a dropkick.
There are some humorous, and some great looking wrestling moments in the film. I like Kim's handling of the mood of the film... the dramatic elements and violent elements are always at least touched at some point with comedy (and not in a negative way)... so the film stays even throughout.
I may like this film more because of my bias in enjoying professional wrestling, but I think it's solid and can be enjoyed by just about anyone into a more physical type of comedy.
It's not perfect, but better than many, many, many wrestling films!
Score: 6.75 / 10
Saturday, December 5, 2009
SECRET SUNSHINE
Original Title: Milyang
Year: 2007
Director: Chang-dong Lee
Writer: Chang-dong Lee, Chong-jun Yi (novel)
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0817225/
Genre: Drama
synopsis:
Sin-ae moves with her son Jun to Miryang, the town where her dead husband was born. As she tries to come to herself and set out on new foundations, another tragic event overturns her life.
Two things on the top here...
One, I am not exactly sure how to review this film. The major plot points are really the shifts in the main character's "religious journey" instead of just events happening. For this reason, you may want to assume that there are spoilers contained within. I will try my best though to keep it spoiler-free.
To be fair though, it is difficult to spoil this film as the performances are the driving force as opposed to the actual events.
Secondly, the posters for this film are goddamn atrocious.
This is the most understated, quiet Kang-ho Song film I will review here. In trying to figure out what I was going to actually say about Secret Sunshine, I read a review with director Chang-dong Lee. You can read that here. In it, he explains the journey of faith and says that Song, while almost presented as a secondary character, is actually the main focus of his film.
Song plays Jong Chan, an average if a bit awkward guy living in the smaller city of Milyang. Almost immediately, he meets Shin-ae, played by another very popular Korean actress Do-yeon Jeon, when her car breaks down just outside of the city when she is moving herself and child there from Seoul.
Of course in my rookie ways, this is the first time for me seeing her.
From this point on, Jong follows Shin-ae around like a puppy following its master. No matter what she does, Jong is there to attempt to help her - even if she is pushing him away. We learn through conversation that Shin-ae is moving here because her recently deceased husband was born there and wanted to move back. We also learn through Shin-ae's brother that her husband was perhaps quite a bastard that cheated on her. So it is already curious that she wants to move here, as if confronting the source of her problems in Seoul will help her with closure?
An event occurs almost halfway through the film, just as Shin-ae is finally settling in and making friends in the new area, that sends her world into a tailspin. The only eventual solace she finds is at the church, with Jong following her close behind. She embraces her new religion and the friends and peace it brings her, and Jong is still there taking part alongside her, even as his friends poke fun.
Already in Shin-ae we see a drastic transformation, but just as quickly as her faith take shape, on a "trip of forgiveness I will call it, she loses her confidence and sense of peace completely as she spirals into a self-doubting, self-loathing mess. She has a breakdown...she is hospitalized...
And Jong is still there.
"His eye is always on her, but she keeps looking up at the sky. And when she walks, she can only go in one direction, straight ahead, she can't look back. He has to follow her from a distance - if she looked behind her, she would see him."
After Shin-ae finds religion, she never seems to lose faith that something is out there watching her. Only her relationship with whatever or whomever that is is constantly in flux. Her shifts and inner turmoil, as well as Jong's unrelenting desire and will to remain by her side in some way, however pathetic it may seem, are the true plot points of the film.
Being one of little or no faith in the supernatural, it was difficult for me to relate to Shin-ae's journey. However, Lee's portrayal is quite amazing as we see Shin-ae adopting this faith not necessarily for the right reasons. Really, who is to say what are the right reasons in this case, but her's seem simply self-serving and always on the verge of collapse in a way. Lee has these layers of her faith slowly unfold and reveal themselves as things move on.
Coming into this from my point of view, I see tragedy initially as Shin-ae latches on to Christianity. Immediately red flags went up for me, as I just had a feeling that things would not and could not possibly last. That may be an unfair assessment, but obviously my bias is attached there.
Perhaps someone of faith would view her spiritual journey as tragedy slowly building as she drifts farther away from her peace, love and forgiveness that she initially finds in her faith.
Jong is a character I more closely identify with and was more interested in. My heart went out to this guy and his unrequited love for Shin-ae. Almost always with a near-goofy smile on his face, he would follow her anywhere she wanted... or did not want. I saw this relationship in a way as her being God to him. Not literally, obviously, but his journey in faith was more an earthly one.
Immediately upon meeting Shin-ae, Jong is enamored with her and wants to devote his time to her in any way. Even when she pushes him away, Jong loves her in his own way, just as those of faith will still love God even when his will may seem very questionable. He rarely questions her, and she is shown as working almost independently of him despite his always being there.... a very deist portrayal if you want to look at this relationship as mirroring a relationship of faith. I thought it was fitting that Jong is a mechanic because he would love nothing more than to repair Shin-ae, but in the meantime he is willing to stand closeby and let her attempt that for herself first.
Secret Sunshine was a bit of a struggle for me. I don't necessarily mean that in a negative way, as I greatly respect what Lee has done. But it is a very delicate subject matter and the emotional trip is not always a simple one to immediately grasp. Only in writing this have I worked out for myself some of the directions I saw the characters moving in.
I really believe this is a film that bears repeated viewings. And I think my score would be higher if I were to watch this again. It is most definitely not a quick paced popcorn flick in any way shape or form, but I would highly recommend this to anyone willing to be "Jong Chan patient" with it.
Score: 7.5 / 10
Labels:
Chang-dong Lee,
film review - drama,
Kang-ho Song
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
THE HOST
Original Title: Gwoemul
Year: 2006
Director: Joon-ho Bong
Writer: Chul-hyun Baek, Joon-ho Bong, Won-jun Ha (as Jun-won Ha)
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0468492/
Genre: Sci-Fi Thriller
synopsis:
On 09 February 2000, the American military base of Yongson releases toxic chemicals in the drain to the Han River under the direct order of an arrogant coroner. Six years later, a mutant squid monster leaves the water and attacks people on the side of the river. The teenager Park Hyun-seo is carried by the creature and vanishes in the river. While grieving her loss, her slow father Park Gang-du; her grandfather and owner of a bar-kiosk nearby the river Park Hie-bong; her aunt and archery medalist Park Nam-Joo; and her graduated unemployed uncle Park Nam-il are sent by the army with all the people that had some sort of contact with the monster to quarantine in a facility. During the night, Gang-du receives a phone call from Hyun-seo telling that she is alive in a big sewage nearby the river. Gang-du tell the militaries but nobody believes on his words, saying that he is delusional due to the shock of his loss. The Park family joins forces trying to find Hyun-seo and rescue her.
OK, not my favorite synopsis ever. I'm too fucking lazy right now to come up with one of my own.
Here is another film that felt like a truggle for me to get through, and it really shouldn't have been in any way. Oh how I wish that the blockbusters here in the U.S. were like this one.
Kang-ho Song again is a stand out. I really think the man can do it all. He has comedic timing and even some slapstick skills, good dramatic skills, I've really become a fan. Here he is playing kind of a lovable loser, the somewhat slow Gang-du Park. He is a single father of Hyun-seo (Ah-sung Ko) who owns and co-operates a riverside snack bar with his older (and also single) father Hie-bong (Hie-bong Byeon). He has his humorous moments throughout the film (even his blonde hair and saggy jogging pants), but also can be very driven or distraught, and is very believable in every case I thought.
The other members of the family were pretty good, but nothing really stood out for me except for Ah-sung Ko as the 13-year-old daughter. She was about 14 when this film was released, but is very mature in her portrayal. I grew to care for this character despite her somewhat limited screen time. The others are believable, but don't seem to display the range that a Kang-ho Song brings.
I think my favorite part of the film was actually the family interactions and growth during their challenges. The Park family ties seem a bit strained, but we don't get much background as to why outside of the father mentioning something about staying out at night when Gang-du was very small. Their mother was not present. Hyun-seo's apparent death has reunited the family, but when Gang-du gets a broken call from his daughter asking for help, they start working together bringing their respective skills to the table to help how they can: Gang-Du's heart, Nam-Joo's (Du-na Bae) reserve and archery, the unemployed but educated Nam-il's (Hae-il Park) technical abilities, and Hie-bong's fatherly love. There was an awkward moment near the beginning of the film as the family mourns Hyun-seo which I think was meant to be humorous, but just felt really awkward to me as the family roll around on the floor openly bawling. Maybe someone with a better understanding of Korean culture would get this, but I just wanted it to stop as soon as it began.
Another interesting element, and one I read about on the film's wikipedia page, was an anti-American military stance, as well as a portrayal of the Korean government and bureaucracy in general as being somewhat inept. There was an actual occurrence of a Korean mortician working for the U.S. military pouring large amounts of formaldehyde down a drain, and this seems to be what the film is referencing as an older American doctor orders his subordinate to pour old, dirty chemicals down a drain, which eventually leads to the growth over time of the fish squid monster of doom.
After the monster comes out of the water and runs rampant on the banks of the Han river, and a U.S. military man is injured and eventually dies, the U.S. government claims he died of an unnamed and very dangerous virus. Korean officials scramble to find everyone who may have come in contact with the creature, quarantining them and running tests and such alongside the U.S. military to find the virus. Seeing the images of the citizens now walking around with surgical masks is definitely reminiscent of the SARS scare from 2002-2003. The Korean police and military let our main characters escape and cannot find them, presumably letting the virus remain out in public. The U.S. military eventually intervenes with a plan to release an anti-biological chemical called Agent Yellow, obviously a reference to the use of Agent Orange in Vietnam.
I thought the film also could be seen as pro-demonstration... almost an urge to act out. The demonstrators in the film, while only a very small part, were the only outside force not really shown in a negative light. The overbearing U.S. military, the bumbling Korean government, the salaryman who has debt and doesn't care for his job. The educated son Nam-il is unemployed, envies his 9-5 friend for having a job, but really seems to find his true calling in a beautifully shot slow-motion sequence involving Molotov cocktails.
Maybe I am reading too much into this...
The plot was nothing outstanding, as it is definitely the side stories, ideas, and character development that were the driving force for me here. While being a different sort of monster film for these reasons, the main plot just felt kind of standard. This isn't really a complaint so much as an observation. If you've seen a monster film, the monster portions of the film will feel familiar in a way.
While we are on the monster, I felt like the special effects were very well done considering the budget constraints that a Korean film would have unlike a blockbuster US film. ou can see some issues in the animation when the monster swims or interacts with people, and some hazy lines around his limbs at times, but for the most part it looked great. At times, the monster's interactions with people could look really good.
The creature design itself looked awesome, realistic, and the layered mouth was great. I like that the monster was kept small in relation to other movie-monsters (he sits on a truck at one point and is about the same size as it) and shown in detail at all times. There was no real mystery as to what was causing the problems. Almost from the beginning we are presented this mutation and it is around for most of the film.
Joon-ho Bong returns as a director here to the blog, as I previously covered his film Memories of Murder. This film is very different, and shows definite promise of Bong being a very diverse filmmaker. He gets a fantastic performace from Song, although I'm not sure how tough that might be, and another from the youngster Ah-sung Ko as I mentioned as well. The structure here is more straightforward than Memories of Murder, but that probably comes with the territory. This is a monster film at heart, afterall, and not an introspective mystery. Still, he does very well in some fantastic shots, some nice tension created in some quieter moments with the monster and young girl in the sewer, and in showing the characters develop in their own ways. One little

This film was good stuff, and I would recommend it to anyone really. While it has a strong sci-fi element, the character development and underlying themes can make this more accessible for those that would normally shy away from this sort of film.
Score: 7.5 / 10
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
THE QUIET FAMILY
Original Title: Choyonghan kajok
Year: 1998
Director: Ji-woon Kim
Writer: Ji-woon Kim
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0188503/
Genre: Dark Comedy
synopsis:
A family decides to buy a lodge in a remote hiking area. Their first customer commits suicide and the distraught family buries his body to avoid the bad publicity. But their luck gets worse, the bodies start piling up, and the family becomes frantic to rectify the situation.
While not exactly a Kang-ho Song vehicle, I threw on The Quiet Family last night and had quite a different experience than the previous films I have covered here this month. Faster paced, less stylistic and darkly funny, this one was quite enjoyable! (Obviously the other flicks have been enjoyable for me, just not in the same way)
No delicate shifts going on this time. Right off the bat you get a good sense of the direction this film is headed. A family has purchased a somewhat remote lodge along a hiking trail, work hard to fix it up, but then get no customers. They all sit around awkwardly, watch people walk by without stopping, eat near-silent dinners together.
After a strange seemingly-insane woman comes up to their lodge screaming at an invisible head on the roof, they finally get their first customer. I loved the scene as the family crowds around him, watching him sign the registry, in disbelief that after so long they have their very first customer.
He is mysterious and creepy, and the morning after they literally stumble upon his corpse. He has brutally committed suicide. The father, Tae-gu Kang (In-hwan Park), believes that a police investigation will ruin their already tiny business, so he makes the decision to bury the lonely man's corpse and pretend it never happened.
And hijinx ensue! Ahhh, good ol' hijinx.
What follows is a dark, gory, and often funny romp where one tragic moment leads to another. It made me smile seeing the characters bothered and exhausted from initially hiding bodies, to it becoming just a thing as they become increasingly desensitized to the craziness going on. There is a great moment later in the film where the son Yeong-min, played by Kang-ho Song, brags about his ability to quickly dig a hole. He even offers to quickly bury a kim-chee pot which gets a laugh from his family.
Kang-ho Song is not the main character here... as that is essentially shared by everyone in the 6-member family, but he is definitely funny. He creeps about the lodge, spies on couples having sex, and acts often like a 13-year-old.
What I may like most about Song's role is his facial expressions when irritated or ecstatic. He will talk with his mouth full and laugh a high pitched laugh. I laughed a lot at just some of his deliveries.
A role I really enjoyed was the mother played by Mun-hee Na. She looks like a sweet, older lady, but this mystique is broken quite early with some snarky comments she makes toward people that pass the lodge without actually coming in. I really laughed when she yells after a guy that he will never get laid acting like he is. A standard film would have the mother of the family be hysterical or in denial or something, but Mrs. Kang gets her hands as dirty as the rest of them. I think Na is very good at sometimes giving a deadpan, sarcastic delivery while still showing shock and surprise at some pretty horrific things that pop up throughout the film.
There are some nice moody shots and closeups dispersed here, but largely this film is straight forward in its presentation and its storytelling. Director Ji-woon Kim, who would later go on to direct A Bittersweet Life which I have mentioned, as well as The Good, The Bad, and The Weird which I reviewed, started his directorial career with this film. It's interesting to see him getting his start in dark comedy such as this, and also his film Foul King which I will cover as well, before moving on to films deeper and broader in scope.
I really like his handing of character interactions in the film, and the quick cutting, especially in scenes of violence, really keep the film feeling nervous and frenetic, unlike the name of the film may let on. It's a constant comedy of errors as the family must correct one gruesome mishap after another. As with most comedies, you just take many things with a grain of salt as there are some coincidences that occur to keep things moving along, but ultimately it works.
I enjoyed Kim's choice in music for the film as well. It is largely American artists... punk sounding music and even a song I could sing along with - So Alive by Love and Rockets. Silly, but I love when that happens!
This film is as light-hearted and silly as possible given the subject matter without ever getting ridiculous. There are corpses and fires and people getting stabbed and smashed with shovels, but it never gets heavy and just borders on absurd. It's not perfect, but i definitely enjoyed it for it's quirkiness.
Recommended.
Score: 7.25 / 10
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
MEMORIES OF MURDER
Original Title: Salinui chueok
Year: 2003
Director: Joon-ho Bong
Writer: Joon-ho Bong, Kwang-rim Kim, Sung Bo Shim
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0353969/
Genre: Crime, Drama
synopsis:
South Korea in 1986 under the military dictatorship: Two rural cops and a special detective from the capital investigate a series of brutal rape murder. Their crude measures become more desperate with each new corpse found. Based on a true case.
Kang-ho Song month, limited as it may be, rolls on with another fantastic entry in Memories of Murder. This film, for various reasons, took me forever to finally finish, at no fault whatsoever to the film itself. But I am so glad I finally finished it today!
Since it is his month here afterall, we will start with Mr. Song and his again phenomenal performance. He plays a rural detective, Doo-man Park, who is a little chubby, a little lazy, and a little too sure of his investigative skills. What has fallen into his lap in his little Korean village is a serial murder case that immediately feels much broader in scope than what his limited police office can handle. He doesn't seems to take things as seriously as he should, but the case that finds its way to him sets a change in motion.
Song is so great as he portrays a gradual transformation in Detective Park as the story unfolds. Very funny at times and very frustrated and confused at times, he goes from the corner-cutting clod to a more introspective, serious man as he becomes increasingly involved in this seemingly unsolvable murder. His character is played off nicely against the more serious Detective Seo Tae-Yoon, played by Sang-kyung Kim.

We can almost see the exact point when the investigation has Seo and Park passing like two trains, as Park grows up and Seo's emotions and frustrations surface and he begins problem solving with his heart as well.
Kim plays an understated role here, almost the opposite of Song's character, until he begins to bubble over as the case frustrates him as well.
Joon-ho Bong does a great job here in constructing this story for the screen. While an ordinary film would have gone the route of the detectives simply trying to solve a case, Bong here makes this story just as much about these two very different detectives morphing as this case becomes more and more frustrating. As with many of the Korean films I have seen from this time, Bong's gradual and delicate storytelling can seem to meander initially, but things compound upon themselves and the ending, while not explosive and decisive, is very impactful.
Is impactful a word? There are a few dropkicks in the film which are definitely impactful. Awesome!
Bong's characters are very interesting, and often shot very closeup in emotional moments. Lesser actors would definitely be exposed in scenes such as these. This along with some beautiful camerawork in outdoor locations make the film a true joy to watch. Cinematographer Hyung-ku Kim definitely deserves much credit for the lighting in some fantastic dark and rainy scenes.
As I said, the story in the first third of the film does feel like dragging feet in a way. As characters are established, I really felt like this was going to be a generic detective story with the little twist of one of the prime investigators being lazy and the other very driven. A little patience goes a long way, and it does seem that this may be a common element in Korean film structure. I do not want to give away any plot points really, but the story is never overly complex, but instead the character interactions are. The true plot becomes the relationships and transformations.

I have to highly recommend this film for Kang-ho Song's and Sang-kyung Kim's performances, for it being beautifully shot and very well told. I think any imperfections I may have noticed can come down to a difference in American and Korean storytelling in cinema as well as my watching it unfortunately in a broken schedule.
Grade A filmmaking.
Score: 8.75 / 10
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
JSA: JOINT SECURITY AREA
Before I begin here, I want to thank Mr. Coffin Jon of Varied Celluloid (a weekly genre-centric videocast on Livestream) and Large William of The Gentlemen's Guide to Midnite Cinema for helping me out with Korean name structure (?) this week. I honestly had no clue which name was first or last, and was calling people by their first names instead of last simply out of confusion.
So Mr. SONG, this is your theme month.
And Jon and Will, this review is dedicated to you both!
Original Title: Gongdong gyeongbi guyeok JSA
Year: 2000
Director: Chan-wook Park
Writer: Seong-san Jeong, Hyeon-seok Kim, Mu-yeong Lee, Chan-wook Park, Sang-yeon Park (novel "DMZ")
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0260991/
Genre: Drama
synopsis:
In the DMZ separating North and South Korea, two North Korean soldiers have been killed, supposedly by one South Korean soldier. But the 11 bullets found in the bodies, together with the 5 remaining bullets in the assassin's magazine clip, amount to 16 bullets for a gun that should normally hold 15 bullets. The investigating Swiss/Swedish team from the neutral countries overseeing the DMZ suspects that another, unknown party was involved - all of which points to some sort of cover up. The truth is much simpler and much more tragic.
I want to be very careful with this review as not to give away the delicate story that unfolds here. This slow reveal of elements of this tale made this truly great to me, and one of the best films I have seen in a long, long time. So at the same time I am wanting to go on and on about it.
I'm also afraid my ramblings will not do the film justice. How about this; if you run into some BS of mine that you just can't get past... just go watch this now.
It is worth your time.
JSA is still part of my Kang-ho Song theme I have running here, and he appears playing a North Korean soldier and one of the three individuals in the middle of an investigation of what exactly happened the one night when two North Korean soldiers are mysteriously killed. If for some odd reason I wasn't a Song fan before, I definitely would be after this role. He is simply phenomenal as Sgt. Oh Kyeong-pil, at the same time fiery and dedicated/loyal. You can see the wide range of emotions he goes through, but at the same time manages to still keep the character private and emotionally even for the most part.

Sgt. Oh is a very interesting character who is older and more experienced than the rest of the major players. He seems to be torn unlike the others in the strength of his contradicting loyalties, but he handles the contradictory emotions more maturely than the others might. You really get the sense through how the character is constructed and through Song's performance that Sgt. Oh is a realist where those around him are quite a bit more ideal. Oh's experience and perspective coming from an oppressive regime shapes his outlook on things.
The other role I want to discuss is another repeat performer on Assorted Loaf here as well: Byung-hun Lee's Sgt. Soo-hyeok Lee. (He played The Bad in The Good, The Bad, and the Weird.)
Sgt. Lee is one of those approaching-idealist characters I just spoke of. That might not really be a fair description, as no one in the film really is an idealist. Sgt. Lee just has a more innocent and optimistic view of how things could be.
He is the other main player in the drama that unfolds after the shooting of the North Korean soldiers, and throughout the film you learn that he is much less experienced in life and in the military than Sgt. Oh is. Where Oh knows what is possible and what is not, Sgt. Lee looks at things more as a child would. Or maybe it is as someone who is from a free society instead of an oppressed one.
Byung-hun does a great job with this role as well, and gives quite a touching performance. I associate it more with his performance from A Bittersweet Life, although this is still different as he wears his heart on his sleeve so to speak here. He deals with real, raw emotions, and you really feel for the character in what he is going through.
The direction of the film, as with Good, Bad, Weird, was the true highlight for me, and that's not to take away one ounce of anything from the performances of Song and Lee. Chan-wook Park is masterful here in my opinion.
Ultimately the story is simple, but it is presented in a deep and complex way. It unfolds gradually and as a result, I felt a bond with those involved. It was a story where after it was over, I found myself wanting to know what happened to certain characters as if they live on outside of the film.
Not only do we get endearing characters, and wonderful (and nostalgic in a way) relationships that form, Park creates an anti-war message in the film that never beats you over the head. It becomes a much larger story of brotherhood, innocence, and how trivial certain conflicts can seem when all it takes is a couple people to start a change.
The filmmaking is never flashy, (I think that could have been problematic with how the story was meant to unfold, so subtle is best) but there are little touches here and there... things you will notice once and then again... nuances in setting or whatever that just add perfectly to a scene. It all shows the great amount of care that went into the film's creation.
One element in particular I really liked was the ever-present signs of conflict even between people who are on the outside close friends. They play games not with dice but with live ammunition. They arm wrestle and push one another around. It's boyish and innocent, but at the same time telling of an underlying tension that goes way beyond themselves and the room they are in.
The film is divided into three distinct acts. The first act will have you feeling like you're watching a military set murder mystery. The neutral team from Sweden is investigating this murder that has increased tensions between two countries who are always seemingly on the brink of physical conflict. The Joint Security Area is impossibly small. I had no idea it was this way, but the military forces from North and South Korea are shown here as divided by a simple line... not a grey neutral area. They keep constant watch over one another, and Maj. Sophie E. Jean (Yeong-ae Lee) is told to be 100% subjective in her investigation as to not raise tension any further.
The second act is largely flashback and builds what truly happened that night. This is when the audience grows close to the characters and everything begins to be seen under a different light. Then obviously the third act is the resolution.
The first act in a way feels like a different movie... especially at first. It lasts awhile, and in hindsight I wish the second act flashbacks just happened a bit sooner. But when things shift in perspective and tone, the change is surprising and I think hits home even more, so my criticism here is probably just silly.
Throughout it all, Park keeps the tension high, makes the characters very endearing and complex, and does an A+ job of showing how so much can balance on one single bullet.
Thinking about this film right now, and while writing this review, I get a little choked up. It is touching and a complexly constructed simple story that still manages to carry a much larger message. The young men here are part of something much bigger, and I could feel their struggle at times. That to me is a successful film.
I feel like male viewers may be able to get into this film more than female because of the type of relationships that are built, but really it can be appreciated by anyone into great filmmaking.
Highly recommended. One of the best films I have seen in a long time.
Score: 9 / 10
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