Friday, October 28, 2016

Movie Review - Oldboy

gray-hairedboy is a sec Korean thriller directed by Park Chan Wook. I watched this moving picture a year ago when my friend Mahad nearly constrained me to watch it. At the quantify I wasnt into foreign scenes, unless Oldboy surprised me. The movie was peculiar but yet a powerful story of revenge that would never be essay by a better-looking american studio. The brilliant acting, fearsome build up, and dark strain made this movie a cult favourite(a) and genius of my solely times favorite movies. This movie is about Old Dae - Su who is a drunk that fights with his wife. ane night magical spell he was heading home to springtime his daughter her birthday surrender he is captured. He is enwrapped for 15 years in a small dwell and then released. This movie centers some his journey to unwrap his capturer and find out the honor about why he was imprisoned. Min Sik Choi is amazing in his transformation from a elaborate drunk to a monster. He makes you sympathize wit h him even when he show his faults. Ji tae yu is eerily creepy in his fibre as Lee tap jin, keeping his calm end-to-end the whole movie while acting like a maniac. The acting from the cast makes the auditory sense fully invested in reckoning out the mystery. What makes this movie uncomparable is the buildup that happens that leads to the ending. The director does a smashing job of building up the tension while soft revealing the big secret. He did that by times in the story for comic allayer that endeargond us to the characters so you are invested in the characters. Also this movie had some of rawest fighting scenes of all time making it a complete movie.\n eventide though I find the game unique, the storys twist can roam off many flock that watched the movie. Also the times of fierceness can be real bloody and gruesome. Some mint can non back watching it all to find out the mystery. The theme of requital can also be confusing to people who did not watch the earli er films of the trilogy. Even though the stories of the trilogy are disparate the movies share a jet ...

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