• _Assassination_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 27 20:23:33 2021
    I was just complaining elsewhere that the U.S. art-house
    critics have been force-feeding us bad Korean action movies
    for 20 years.* And then I caught this really impressive
    Korean WWII spy drama! It was predictably dismissed by the
    New York Times. Why are the critics doing this to us?
    _Assassination_ has members of the WWII Korean Liberation
    Army (KLA) go to Seoul to kill a Japanese general and his
    Korean collaborator. Another Korean double agent gets wind
    of this and hires a hit-team led by "Hawaii Pistol" to stop
    the assassins. The multiple double crosses, handsomely
    mounted period sets, and bravura camera movements remind me
    of _The Black Book_, although the department store shootout
    set-piece at the end surpasses anything there; it smacks of
    de Palma, with echoes of John Woo as well. This is such
    confident movie-making; the two romantic leads don't even
    show up until the 10, 20 minute marks. Like many viewers,
    I tune in to catch Korea's cinematic icon Gianna Jun play
    against type as a stone-faced army sniper who barely lets
    out any emotion. She is so disciplined she seldom even
    moves her head and lets her sideway glances tell her story,
    like Hannibal Lector. She cannot be more different from
    the reckless lead in _My Sassy Girl_ or the floozy in _The
    Thieves_, also directed by Choi Dong-Hoon, although she
    gets to show off some serious stunts here. At one point
    she falls off a second floor balcony, grabs her machine
    pistol, and just keeps firing. She also gets to play the
    assassin's twin, who is improperly a Japanese bride; here
    the film veers towards fantasy territory, but the
    divided-soul-of-Korea motif is evocative. Historically,
    the KLA was very small, but I have no doubt the resentment
    towards Japanese colonization was near universal.

    The original score is bombastic and really reminds me
    of _The Black Book_, but in the background there are faint
    strains of Wagner, Dvorak, and Brahms too. Much of the
    film takes place in 1933 Shanghai, which is a French
    territory. There is even a cafe called Mirabeau. French
    music would have been welcome!

    It is a pity that the 2015 film did not receive a wider
    following in the US; it would have given the proto-"woke"
    crowd a reality check on the troubled history regarding
    Koreans, Japanese, and Chinese. They were frequently
    at war over the last 1000+ years. I remember reading
    a Chinese history textbook (written in Chinese for the
    locals) which celebrated the beheading of 10,000 "eastern
    barbarians" by a Tang Dynasty Emperor. Those war crimes
    were committed against the ancestors of Koreans, of course!
    As recently as 1937 and 1950, Japan invaded China and
    China invaded Korea. A while ago some Korean-American
    pop singer, who did not experience much racism himself,
    wrote in the NYT that he poked around history books
    to go along with our "woke" climate, found that Chinese
    immigrants were discriminated against in 1871 in the US,
    and therefore exhort that "Asians" should stand together!
    I'm sure he meant well, but the level of ignorance is
    shocking. Most of us are alive today because our ancestors
    were war criminals. If you really care about your "Asian
    heritage," start by making a stand for those languishing
    in concentration camps in China.

    *This culminated in _Parasite_ winning Oscars. I will
    don't need to see that, thanks to director Bong Joon Ho's
    _Snow Piercer_, a disgusting, cannabilistic, vulgar
    action film that gleefully out-tortures the European and
    U.S. torture porns by a wide margin. Just in case that
    isn't offensive enough, it has Tilda Swinton in a
    yellow-faced, buck-toothed caricature of "Asian" stereotype.
    That's the kind of stuff art-house cinema has been raving
    about last decade instead of the transcendental films by
    Terrence Malick. What more can you say.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)