NME.COM | uncut.co.uk
Uncut.co.uk - Music and Movies with something to say
Sign up to the Uncut Newsletter
Film InterviewsFilm ReviewsFilm Special Features
Uncut
DIR: Ryoo Seung-Hwan
ST: Jung Doo-Hong, Ryoo Seung-Hwan, Lee Beom-Soo

With Die Bad and Crying Fist, Ryoo established himself as the Korean Tarantino - a director capable of adding artistic depth to action. If that comparison is accepted, The City of Violence is Ryoo's Kill Bill, a homage to the great Asian martial arts movies. In a film he wrote, produced, directed and stars in, Ryoo abandons plausibility in favour of style.

The story concerns Tae-soo, a Seoul detective returning to his home town for the funeral of a childhood friend. Before long he's chasing shadows in the underworld, and re-examining his friendship with Jang Pil-ho (played with slimy intensity by comic actor Lee Beom-soo). But plot is nothing.

With a soundtrack which flickers between Morricone-esque soundscapes and 70s funk, Ryoo's film is a ballet of gymnastic violence. It starts in top gear and thunders towards a beautifully- choreographed finale of daggers-drawn, swivelling feet and somersaults, which opens up like a Chinese box. Along the way there are split-screens and collapsing scaffolds, slow-mo hockey sticks and starbursts of sugar glass.
It's kinetic and beautiful. But that's all.

ALASTAIR McKAY


Post to Twitter

User reviewsSubmit your review
There are currently no user reviews for The City Of Violence - Add your review here.