Original title: 반드시 잡는다 (ban-deu-si jab-neun-da)
When first we encounter him, locksmith and owner of a surprising number of
small apartments Sim Deok-soo (Baek Yoon-shik) seems to be a typical example of
the very unpleasant elderly landlord type, being an asshole to everyone he
meets, for reasons and without them. However, he’s not at all as nasty as he
pretends to be, so he never actually throws anyone out who is behind on their
rent and is really willing to help people in his rough-shod way.
One of Deok-soo’s tenants, former police detective Choi (Son Jong-hak), tells
him about a terrible suspicion: he believes a series of accidental and suicidal
deaths of elderly, mostly homeless, men happening in their town right now is the
work of a serial killer; worse still, it seems to mirror a series of crimes that
happened thirty years earlier whose perpetrator worked his way up from weak old
men to young women. Deok-soo is sceptical but when he finds Choi dead in a
supposed suicide the next day, the whole thing doesn’t sit quite right with him.
However, he only becomes truly involved when he encounters Park Pyeong-dal (Sung
Dong-il), a former, also retired, colleague of Choi’s who shares the dead
man’s theory and drags Deok-soo into his investigation, if the old man wants it
or not. Outrageous twists are in their future.
And if I say, outrageous twists, I really mean it, for Kim Hong-seon’s
comedic mystery certainly goes in a different direction than any comparable
odd-couple mystery not made in South Korea would. There’s one - highly effective
and fitting in a film about men of a certain age, mind you – twist in particular
in the middle of the movie no American or British film would dare use quite this
way, out of a misunderstood sense of good taste and propriety.
Event though this is one of the rare South Korean movies that doesn’t turn
from a comedic start to drama or horror later on and stays an action/mystery
comedy throughout, that doesn’t mean there’s nothing serious here either. The
serial killer is indeed doing horrible things, maggoty corpses make an
appearance, and the threat level for the characters is considerable. Kim does
make light of certain things but he’s certainly setting up high stakes and
danger for life, limb and mind for his characters. The mixture of – often really
funny – old men humour, thriller, and mystery is very effective, not wont to let
down any one side, and later – this is a movie from Korea after all – also adds
quite a bit of melodrama. While this sort of mixture can end up a bit of a mess,
Kim is always in control of the disparate elements and weighs them just
right.
The performances by Baek Yoon-shik and Sung Dong-il are pretty wonderful too,
both projecting the sadness and loneliness that lies behind their respective
kinds of bluster very well, but also realizing which parts of that bluster still
are pretty damn funny.
I also have to say that for once, I found myself enjoying a very twisty plot
a lot, Kim timing theoretically absurd, and often pleasantly surprising,
revelations so well, they never seem to be too silly.
Thursday, February 28, 2019
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