Oldboy

Oldboy (Korea, 2003)

Park Chan-Wook is an incredible director. From the begining to the ending of the movie, he gets our attention. The story is wicked and terribly brutal for the main character Oh Deasu, but nevertheless told in a wonderful fashion.

In short, Oh Deasu (Choi Min-Sik) is taken away on his daughter’s birthday and is held prisoner for fifteen years. After which he is released and given five days to figure out why he was taken in the first place.

As I like to say, everything is in the storytelling. And in this case, so remarkably executed. Some might say there is too much violence, but the said violence serves the movie and its story. The mood set in each scene by the cinematography is not only for style but to help the audience feel what the characters are going through. Not to say it does not have style, it really does.

Jaded moviegoers who are looking for something different will find it there, that is for sure.

Oldboy is the second part of a trilogy from Park Chan-Wook. It is not a sequel per se, it is a trilogy on the theme of vengeance. Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (available on DVD) is the first one, Oldboy (aslo available on DVD) the second and the conclusion is Sympathy for Lady Vengeance (will be in movie theaters in America by the end of summer).

Absolute must-see for lovers of the genre. It really is.

Gog