Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Rough Cut (Yeong-hwa-neun yeong-hwa-da)

Rough Cut (Yeong-hwa-neun yeong-hwa-da) (Director: Jang Hun): The Korean title of the film trans­lates roughly as “A Movie is a Movie” and that cap­tures a bit of the fla­vour of this gangster/buddy movie set within another film shoot. Written by Korean master Kim Ki-Duk (dir­ector of 3-Iron), it’s essen­tially the story of two men: Soo-ta is an action movie star, playing tough gang­ster roles. Gang-pae is an actual gang­ster, who has often wished he was a movie star. Their lives come together unex­pec­tedly when yet another co-star quits Soo-ta’s latest film, annoyed that the star has failed to pull his punches in their fight scenes. Soo-ta remem­bers Gang-pae after the gang­ster had one of his henchman ask for an auto­graph. The movie star pro­poses that Gang-pae join the pro­duc­tion and the gang­ster agrees on the con­di­tion that they fight for real. It’s a macho show­down that neither man can resist.

And for most of the movie, it’s played for laughs, with the film’s dir­ector wor­riedly asking “Soo-ta, are you alright?” after each of Gang-pae’s punches con­nects and draws blood. We also see the gang­ster lose some of his ruth­less­ness, thanks to a female co-star who falls for him. But he seems to resist making him­self so vul­ner­able and repeatedly reverts to his old per­sona. Dreaming of another life seems futile to him, and working on the film is taking him away from important work he’s doing for his imprisoned boss, whose trial is upcoming. And that work isn’t pretty.

The final third of the film is breath­taking. There is a cli­mactic fight scene for the film-within-a-film that takes place on a muddy beach, and both actors hold nothing back. By the end of it, it’s dif­fi­cult to tell one man from the other, which seems to indicate that some sort of bond has formed. Instead, the last scene rein­forces in the most brutal way the dif­fer­ence between the gang­ster and the movie star.

In keeping with Korean film tra­di­tion, the melo­drama is amped up, including the schmaltzy guitar soundtrack. The female char­ac­ters aren’t really developed much, either. But the end result is still effective; you want these two guys to become friends, to learn from one another. You want there to be the pos­sib­ility of redemp­tion. The ending isn’t so much frus­trating and shocking (though it is both) as it is incred­ibly sad.

Rough Cut has been picked up for dis­tri­bu­tion in Canada by Evokative Films. Look for the­at­rical and DVD releases next spring.

7/10(7/10)

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