What Time is it There?

City of Violence Review

by Todd Brown, October 14, 2006 8:50 AM

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What follows is my earlier review of City of Violence updated with details on the new Korean DVD release. Yes, there are a good number of people with a higher opinion of this film that I have myself, but having just re-read the review I still hold to everything contained within.]

The problem with big expectations is that they often lead to big disappointments and the sad reality is that Korea’s “action kid” Ryoo Seung Wan has followed the best film of his career – Crying Fist – with his worst. Though City of Violence does indeed deliver on the promise of plentiful martial arts action from Ryoo himself and co-star / fight choreographer Jung Doo Hong the film as a whole is positively crippled by a less-than-half baked script.

Jung stars as Tae Soo, a cop based in Seoul who returns to his hometown when he learns that his closest childhood friend, a reformed gangster named Wang Jae, has been killed. While at the funeral Tae Soo is reunited with other childhood friends Pil Ho – Wang Jae’s slightly greasy brother in law and successor as gang boss – and Suk Hwan, a hot tempered minor thug played by director Ryoo himself. Following the funeral Suk Hwan, driven by a desire for revenge, and Tae Soo, unable to shake the feeling that there’s more to the story then he is being told, set out to find Wang Jae’s killers and take them down.

The most immediate problem with the film is the most immediately glaring and also the most significant: there is absolutely zero chemistry between the major players which is a huge problem considering they are all supposed to have been close from childhood and more than a little perplexing considering that Ryoo and Jung and real life long time friends and frequent collaborators. When the buddies don’t click in a supposed buddy film you have a major, major problem.

Issue two is a script that frequently relies on major leaps of logic to propel the plot along. Tae Soo’s belief that there is more to Wang Jae’s death is based on precisely nothing and makes no sense whatsoever despite being correct. The mass street fight between Tae Soo, Suk Hwan and several gangs of teenagers – though providing one of the film’s major set pieces – also utterly defies any semblance of logic. If you cared about the characters you’d be willing to take things like this with a wink and a nod and a sense of fun but with neither character nor logic to hang your hat on there’s not much of anywhere left to turn.

Issue three is a shocking lack of subtlety to the script, again surprising turn considering just how strong Ryoo’s writing was for Crying Fist. Cliches abound and the primary villain is telegraphed the moment he appears on screen – hell, if you’ve seen the trailers you probably know who he is – which is problematic considering that you’re not really supposed to know until the half way mark or so.

What the film does well is the martial arts, though several sequences are shot too closely to fully appreciate. Jung is by far the best fight choreographer working in Korea today and a seriously talented fighter while Ryoo has trained in tae kwon do since childhood and can more than hold his own. The fight sequences – even the crazy extreme sports / breakdance sequence – are played almost entirely naturally with minimal CG or wire assist and none whatsoever when it comes to the nuts and bolts of combat. They are fast paced, inventive, and kinetic – very impressive stuff. The final climactic battle – set to a fantastic spaghetti western score – is truly epic, a last man standing brawl pitting the two leads against a cast of hundreds.

With so much talent both behind and in front of the camera and a tried and tested plot line City of Violence had a chance to be, if not groundbreaking, at least a very strong buddy action film and just a bucket of fun. But this is a film that was simply not ready to be made, the talent largely wasted on a script that needed at least a couple more revisions to tighten the story and really find the characters. The up sides are very good but they sadly mostly serve to remind what the rest of the film could – and should – have been.

On to the DVD release! A two DVD set packaged in a gatefold digipack with a cardboard slipcase this thing sports the fantastic poster designs that we've been prasing for months now. This is a pretty release and what's contained on the discs is every bit as solid as the package that holds them.

Disc one - which sports a natty 70's style menu design, very nice - contains the feature itself. The transfer is what you would expect from a brand new film shot on HD which thus doesn't need to be transferred from analog film to the digital world: that is to say absolutely spotless. Included audio options are a standard stereo mix and a beefy DTS, plus directors commentary. English subtitles are offered on the feature only and are crisp and easy to read.

Disc two contains an ample feature set which, as is nearly always the case with Korean films, features no subtitles whatsoever. The features are divided over far more pages than are absolutely necessary - all the better to show off the spiffy poster art - with the first five being extended interview pieces with all of the significant players. Director Ryoo drops Scorsese into the conversation more than once, but other than that I was completely clueless, not speaking Korean. There are, however, some various nice features that will appeal to even non-Korean speakers. The key option is the thirty five minute behind the scenes reel that takes you point by point through every major action sequence, from the earliest walk throughs to the full speed real takes. You also get a 'just the fights' menu option that offers up the fight sequences with Korean-only commentary. Then there are nine deleted and alternate scenes, plus a reel of footage from the premiere at Venice and a collection of promotional materials.

While the US rights holder for the film - the Weinstein's Dragon Dynasty - has done well with their releases so far (bad name changes notwithstanding) there is, as yet, no plan announced for when or how this film will be made available to audiences outside of Korea. If you are the impatient type, not real pleased at the idea of waiting a year or two for it to make it on to domestic release schedules, then this Korean edition is an excellent option.

 
 

13 Comments

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His worst? It can't possibly be worse than Arahan, surely? :)

Seriously, I can imagine agreeing with you or disagreeing, based on Koreanfilm.org's review, and I almost wish you'd drawn some comparisons to Arahan since that would give me some better idea of how you're appraising CoV. I thought Arahan tried to take itself very seriously - while bearing in mind it's a comedy, I felt it really thought a lot of itself - and fell down owing to terribly sub-par choreography (I don't care how famous Jung is, his work on that was grindingly average at best IMO), characterisation that went nowhere yet seemed to hinge on the viewer liking the hero(es), average direction and non-existent pacing, so on, so forth...

whereas with City of Violence I got the impression from Koreanfilm.org it's not trying to take itself particularly seriously in that way, that's it's an intentional takeoff of cheesy 1970s Korean action flicks, that it's intended as spectacle and little else and whether or not you actually care about the cast is neither here nor there.

I could very well end up agreeing with you, obviously. :) I'm just interested in any extra opinion in light of this - I'd never have dreamt anyone would be comparing this to Crying Fist - that would have me... refining my expectations further? Hope this isn't rambling too much.

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I actually really enjoy the goofy energy that Arahan has, but yeah - this film is very different from either that or Crying Fist and has no desire to be either. The biggest problem to me is that it wants to be a buddy film and the buddies just don't work. At all. There's no real sense of fun to it as a consequence, there's no camaraderie, no joking around, not even a real sense that Ryoo and Jong were enjoying themselves on set, though I'm sure they were. Somewhere the energy just got lost.

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It seems that the DVD release will be much later than expected. I so want to see it >It seems that the DVD release will be much later than expected. I so want to see it ><

btw, I thought Arahan was really fun and Crying Fist was more serious and mature. But when I see the City's trailer, it looks more like pointed at some old action flicks, in a way that Ryu wanted it to show what moved him and inspired him in his younger times. So, as a hommage to old action movies, I hope this will be a great piece, or even just a good spectacle.

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Recommending A Bittersweet Life as the solution for action fans is like recommending Pirates of the Caribbean as the solution for comedy fans. Yes, there are funny bits in Pirates but that doesn't mean it really satisfies as a comedy. Similarly, there are action/violence bits in A Bittersweet Life, but the movie as a whole does not deliver as an action movie. Save for ABL's opening restaurant brawl, the film has none of the joy or exquisite mayhem in its staging that would make it satisfy the way that a true action film would. ABL is more like a Scorcese/crime film that has more fights than usual.

I want to be clear: A Bittersweet Life is an amazing movie. Recommending it to action fans as their next "fix" however, is likely to lead to disappointment.

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Yes, i know what you mean, ABL is not an action film per se, but in terms of being a crime thriller/drama is certainly one of the best that has come out from asia in recent years. In that area i prefered over SPL, with the late i find myself just jumping in the DVD to the last two fight scenes, not a bad thing per se but i was expecting a bit more than just two cool fight scenes and nothing more.

So yeah, i guess my recommendation was a bit misguided, but even so, i just felt is a film that deserves praise from any asian movie fan, wheter they dig action flicks or not.

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Just seen the DVD. Absolutely loved it!! So much more than a rubbish film with good fight scenes (begone! SPL & Ong-Bak - named & shamed), it's a good film with superb fight scenes. I'll be watching this repeatedly until Exiled or The Host come out on DVD. I haven't seen Die Bad, but far from Ryoos' worst, for me City of Violence is his best so far. Now his fists have got that sissy crying fit out of their system, it's time to do martial arts right, like his earlier films have hinted at, but not quite delivered. Ryoo says he was looking at Pecks again before making this. It shows in the climatic restaurant battle, which has almost as many Wild Bunch-isms as John Woo's The Killer. Yes, not many laughs, but I'm down with sickos like DragonEyeMorrison, who don't want, bah!, joy or fun in their martial arts films. Tsui Hark's The Blade...mmmm... The action is well grounded too. Ryoo successfully captures the vibe & geographics of this medium-size Korean city, often deploying the sodium-bathed, noir atmosphere much beloved by To-fetishists. Jung Doo Hong is "a bit" wooden, but the main thing is he looks sharp as he pulverizes x-treme sports punks into the ground. (A fashion hint though - tie clips are inexpensive, and can prevent neck-wear becoming soiled with blood during head-cracking orgies of brutality). I'd put money on this being another Bittersweet Life-style sleeper hit in the West (sorry...made that comparison again...). And if there was an Oscar for best promotional artwork, this wouldn't win, but it bloody well should do.

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Guys, think we are looking at things a bit too seriously here, once again attempting to catagorise a movie rather than just taking it at face value. Personally, when I really want to see a movie I usually just watch one trailer, to give me a general idea, to watch/read too much info before a films release really dulls the experience in my opinion. Arahan taking itself seriously, I think not, its a great fun movie, billed as an adventure/comedy, much like the indiana jones films, and on that level it succeeds, in that I laughed at parts as well as being wowed by some of the effects and action sequences, so job done. ABL is totally different, a serious gangster film noir above all else, and excellent I may add. Im looking forward to city of violence for the fights, nothing more, as with ong bak, B13 and Dragon Tiger Gate, its all I am really expecting, and if the action sequences are good, which you say they are, then its done its job. Its a very hollywood atitude to look for something more from a movie than what it offers, I think asian/korean film making is brutally honest, and thats what I love about it. Here's a list of what I look for from:


An Action Movie: Great action scenes


A Drama: A great story and great acting


A comedy: That I laugh


A Martial Arts Movie: Good fights


A Horror: That I'm scared at some point

Shallow as that may be my limited expections have never let me down.

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I finally had the opportunity of viewing the 2-disc dvd of City of Violence and I too had mixed-emotions about the final results. Like Todd equated in his thought-provoking review I think the script could have been refined more as to characterization. Those extreme sports/breakdance sequences really threw out the logic quotient as to the probability of surviving such a barrage, but whom am I too quibble? As the film progressed I did find myself enjoying the fight sequences especially in the palace at the end where all "hell breaks lose." The music definitely helps back-up the film, along with the kinetic editing and stylized transition wipes/split-screens el al. My expectations based on "Crying Fist" and "No Blood, No Tears" left me a little disapointed but entertained none-the-less.


(Glad I pulled up this early review posted in August to read others feedback, but Todd, you might want to consider re-posting this again since the dvd release in late October). Anyone gonna comment on the extras on the dvd?

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While I agree that the script is pretty weak, it's worth a look just to see Jung Doo-Hong in a lead role. He's not the best dramatic actor, but he's very charismatic and a truly amazing fighter.

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Better than Arahan, definitely. But it's still not as good as the stuff coming out of HK, and that includes Dragon Tiger Gate, which has better fights than this one.

Also, the DVD transfer. It isn't as spotless as Todd says. It's quite grainy, and on top of that, the image is often soft. I was expecting more from the transfer, given Korea's immaculate DVD presentations. The DTS sound is rock solid though.

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I'd say any grain or softness in there is a result of the camera. There literally is no transfer to blame anything on, this was shot and edited purely in the digital domain so there can be no degradation going from camera to DVD. It's never gone analog, therefore no transfer issues. No dirt, no scratches, no fading of the image. What you get on the DVD is what was shot.

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I believe they started shooting on HD (As was the project) but then switched to 16MM.

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Actually, the logic behind the main character thinking there is more behind his friend's death is better 'felt' if you know Korean. The way they talked about his friend, grammatically and emotionally, led me to believe that he was the main badass of their group of friends, and it was only logical that a group of three kids could in no way take him down. It made mucho sense to me, so maybe the subtitlers are to blame?
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