Oldboy

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Based on the Japanese manga of the same name, the film tells the horrific tale of Oh Dae-su (Choi Min-sik), a businessman who is inexplicably kidnapped and imprisoned in a grim hotel room-like cell for 15 years, without knowing his captor or the reason for his incarceration. Eventually released, he learns of his wife's murder and embarks on a quest for revenge whilst also striking up a romance with a young, attractive sushi chef, Mi-do (Kang Hye-jung). He eventually finds his tormentor, but their final encounter will yield yet more unimaginable horrors. (Arrow Films)

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JFL 

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English Revenge can take many forms. It can be cold-blooded, sadistic, brutal, chaotic or even systematic. For South Korean director Park Chan-wook, it is mainly problematic on every possible level, from its conceptual and moral aspects, to the pleasure of carrying it out. In a gripping stylised form, Park maps the protagonist’s bloody odyssey to uncover the sense of his long imprisonment and the person who orchestrated it. In the ingeniously constructed story, the viewer is in the same position as the tragic hero, whose ideas about the course and further development of his revenge are constantly frustrated by his nemesis. At the time of its release, much attention was focused on the extreme scenes, but it has already been forgotten that Oldboy brilliantly combines excess, tense emotions, coolness, pathos, wrenching catharsis and humorous exaggeration, all of which work superbly here. In addition to that, Park goes much deeper in his screenplay and revenge thus becomes only a McGuffin in a wrenching treatise on anger and its ability to blind the one feeling it, the toxic nature of machismo, and the painful journey toward seeing the light. Here, the epiphany has the meaning of both transcending one’s own egocentric point of view and seeing what one has done to others, as well as the utterly devastating impact that it has on one’s own conscience and personal happiness, which can then be found only in oblivion. ____ Oldboy was Park’s first collaboration with Jung Jung-hoon, who subsequently became Park’s court cinematographer, and their symbiotic ambition, manifested in outrageous camera compositions and staging challenges, pushed the film, Park’s filmography and even international cinema to a new level. After all, it is no coincidence that many years later Edgar Wright chose Jung to shoot Last Night in Soho, which features incredible camerawork, where two versions of one character alternate in one shot without the use of digital effects, but thanks solely to the choreography of the actors and the movement of the camera. ()

Lima 

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English I have a problem with Asian films because their emotionality is beyond me. I don't deny the camera finesse, a few visually memorable scenes (although judging by the reviews I was expecting a much, much more visually striking work), but a three-minute fight in one uninterrupted shot, a close-up of teeth being pulled and a live octopus being eaten don't make a memorable film. First and foremost, it's about the story, and the story here – told in a somewhat incomprehensible way for my taste – couldn't quite reach me, as well as the twist and emotional outpourings in the last twenty minutes. I can't help it, Oldboy is overrated in my eyes, which is not to say it's not worth watching. ()

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Zíza 

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English I can't help but find it unnecessarily overly violent, transparent (when the two met in the bar and she told him he reminded her of someone, my first thought was what the guy learned at the end) and a bit of boiling water. Yeah, the filming probably wasn't easy, and while there is something to be gained from the film, it's nothing world-changing, for me it's an average film. Basically, I don't even know what to admire about it or what I really liked about it. Too bad, I was looking forward to it quite a bit. ()

novoten 

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English Asian miracle, which didn't affect me. The music accompaniment is flawless, but visually, even the highly praised scenes reach the limit of mediocrity. If there is something brilliant, it's the punchline, too bad that right after it, director Park "adds blood" and loses me again on the way to the climax. I understand everyone who was moved by the last minute or captivated by the film as a whole. I understand them, but I will never belong with them. ()

POMO 

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English A simple story told in a needlessly incomprehensible way. The visual aspect is captivating, the music is amazing and the actors are great, but the story itself, particularly its conclusion, left me cold. The Asians are simply different, as they express themselves differently and perceive things differently – and with Oldboy, whose story otherwise has something to it, I didn’t experience what the individual dramatically escalated scenes were trying to tell me. But I’m very curious about the American remake. ()

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