Plots(1)

Korea in the late 1920s is under Japanese occupation. Lee Jung-chool (Song Kang-ho, Snowpiercer), a Korean-born police captain in the Japanese police force, is given a special mission to infiltrate the armed resistance fighting for Korean independence. He approaches Kim Woo-jin (Gong Yoo, Train to Busan), a leader of the resistance to obtain information to expose their activities to the Japanese authorities. Soon Lee begins to doubt his loyalties, and show sympathy for his countrymen. A resistance plan to obtain explosives in Shanghai that will be used to destroy the Japanese Headquarters in Seoul is set in motion, with Lee caught in the middle. His Japanese bosses suspect his shift in allegiance, and Lee becomes a wanted man. A deadly cat-and-mouse game unfolds in which loyalty is tested and no-one can be trusted. (Madman Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (2)

Trailer 2

Reviews (3)

JFL 

all reviews of this user

English The mastery of directing, or how to turn a nationalist spy drama into a spectacular for viewers using solely formal processes of film language. ()

DaViD´82 

all reviews of this user

English In the opening hour and a half, a lengthy pell-mell like a commedia dell'arte and a spy drama, where each of the many characters trying to play everyone. In order to turn it from a (graded) train journey to the final hour (abruptly, not gradually) into a serious and properly dense fateful resistance movie with everything, which tries (and with closing both eyes actually well) to be the "South Korean Black Book". From technical point of view, the camera and music the movie is simply top. In this regard, hardly anything else can be expected from director with Jee-woon Kim's reputation. The highlight of the "Tarantino scene" of settling account on the train and the party at the police embassy (which, of course, makes the ending of the Inglorious Bastards almost impossible to forget). As a result, an unnecessarily long movie, which was to some extent clearly spoiled by the South Korean trademark's mixing of incompatible genres. And as much as it contains many scenes that cannot be forgotten, the movie that centers about them, on the contrary, will be forgotten faster than would be appropriate. ()

Ads

kaylin 

all reviews of this user

English An example of what a Korean historical film looks like, trying to deal with a situation that was present here, similar to when Eastern Europe was under Soviet domination. In the case of Korea, it was Japan, but the situation is very similar. It's uncomfortably scary how history repeats itself in different places. ()

Gallery (38)