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Bittersweet
Life, A
 |
|
Country
: |
South-Korea |
| Year: |
2005 |
| Genre: |
Action,
Drama |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H54 |
| Distributor: |
Tartan |
| Date
reviewed: |
05/13/06 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Lee
Yo-Jin, Oh Jeong-Wan |
| Director: |
Kim
Jee-Woon |
Cast: Kim Young-Chul, Lee Byung-Hun,
Shin Mina |
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Story:
Sunwoo is the very trusted right hand man of underworld
boss Kang. When Kang plans to goes away for three days
he asks Sunwoo to keep an eye on his young girlfriend
whom he suspects may be cheating on him. Sunwoo keeps
an eye on the girl who begins to intrigue him, while
keeping things under control at his boss’s hotel.
Sunwoo is a man who likes to remain in control at all
times – using whatever means are necessary. One
day he makes an uncharacteristically merciful decision,
the result of which changes his life completely.
Review: It would be too easy to class A BITTERSWEET
LIFE just as yet another revenge thriller coming out
of Korea, too easy to compare it to Chan Wook-Park’s
powerhouse ‘Vengeance’ trilogy. A BITTERSWEET
LIFE does have a plot in which revenge becomes the
central aspect, but the film doesn’t really
fit into the same category as OLD BOY because other
than the revenge theme it is quite different. A BITTERSWEET
LIFE casually re-writes the ‘gangster needs
to get payback’ plot with lashings of John Woo,
Layer Cake, Taxi Driver - and even Tarantino - but
mixes it all up to give us something quite extraordinary.
To give too much of the plot away would be a crime
against the film - although it’s actually fairly
simple and straightforward without much sub-plot.
This really works in the films favour as it always
feels direct, building slowly throughout up until
its amazing ending.
The cast is fantastic. Lee Byung-Hung gives another
memorable performance as the straight faced Sunwoo,
looking as sharp as hell in his tailor-made suits
and also performing the action scenes with an unnerving
energy. Kim Young-Chul is also very good as boss Kang,
bringing one of those performances that only older
actors can really pull off – confident in his
age and experience. All other performances in the
film are equally good.
Kim Jee-Woon, director of the marvellous A Tale of
Two Sisters embellishes the film at every opportunity
with fancy camera work and a brilliant soundtrack.
Like A TALE OF TWO SISTERS, A BITTER SWEET LIFE has
something of an eerie almost ghost-like quality which
makes sense in the films attitude towards ‘life’
and also manages to push it up into a ‘heightened’
sense of reality. Long tracking shots and moments
of silence are punctuated with violence – check
out the scene where Sunwoo should be trying to fall
asleep and is casually flicking the light on and off.
Every shot in the film looks like it has been meticulously
planned and painstakingly created. The ‘cool’
suits that gangsters wear in these films look even
crisper than ever, lit as if they were in a commercial
and Jee-Woon isn’t afraid to make the most of
his architecture and colour schemes.
If you enjoyed the way in which A TALE OF TWO SISTERS
subverted its genre, then A Bittersweet Life does
the same for the gangster film. Simple on the surface
but complex underneath, it’s one of those films
that you will probably re-watch fairly quickly. As
much a referential piece to other films as a fresh
take on familiar material, it’s a film that
is a genuine pleasure to watch throughout. Sometimes
you can’t help smiling, because you know it’s
just that good.
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DVD
[ PAL, Region 2
] :
This disc from Tartan provides as sharp a picture as
you could hope for. The picture often contrasts light
and dark and the disc handles this well. The subtitles
are excellent although a few lines of Russian aren’t
subbed but this could be the intention of the director.
Sound wise we have 2.0, 5.1 and 5.1DTS.
Extras consist of ‘Cast and Crew Interviews’
in which the cast actually ask the director the questions,
a featurette on the films showing at the Cannes Film
Festival, the original theatrical trailer (which gives
away WAY too much of the film), Justin Bowyer filmnotes
and the usual trailers for other Tartan DVD releases.
This is a nice tidy disc, but with a film that’s
so technically polished I suspect that there may well
be another release in the future – personally
I would have wanted to have the two commentary tracks
and bonus features from the region 3 version.
Reviewed
by Martin Cleary
|
| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 4 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
5 |


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| © 1999-2005 by KFC
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