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The Show Must Go On (Uahan segye) ***
Han Jae-rim, 2007
Korea
@ IFC Center (New York Asian Film Festival)

Song Kang-ho here exhibits the same brilliant befuddledness and inner frustration that mark his performances for Bong Joon-ho (Memories of Murder, The Host). He plays a hapless gangster trying his best to provide for his family despite inept and ungrateful associates and several dangerous rivals. A plot synopsis would probably look pretty bleak, but Han plays the hardships for laughs, albeit tastefully--we're not talking Todd Solondz here, or anything.

See also: Koreanfilm.org

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Watched on 6/29/2007 |0 comment(s)

Dog Bite Dog (Gao ngau gao) *
Soi Cheang, 2007
Hong Kong
@ IFC Center (New York Asian Film Festival)

Nasty, brutally nihilistic, and very loud. It's also rather thrilling with moments of effective but extremely dark comedy. Bizarre, distended epilogue. Not sure I could or would stomach this again.

See also: NYAFF

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Watched on 6/23/2007 |0 comment(s)

12:08 East of Bucharest ***
Corneliu Porumboiu, 2007
Romania
@ Film Forum

They handed out a few DVDs of the director's short film, Liviu's Dream, beforehand--this is his first feature. Terrific, depicting the awkwardness of young lust and its consequences in a mid-sized, working-class city in Romania. The feature is hilarious and paced more briskly from what I'd expected per the reviews. While the recording of the television show is funny in a lot of ways, for my money the firecracker gag is the best bit in the film.

See also: IMDb | Metacritic | J. Hoberman review

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Watched on 6/22/2007 |0 comment(s)

Exiled ***
Johnnie To, 2007
Hong Kong
@ Museum of the Moving Image

Stylus Review

Exiled is Johnnie To's second film to open in the United States in 2007, and not due to any Weinstein-esque stall tactics either. The man regularly completes multiple films per year from his Milkyway Studio in Hong Kong, and also contributed a section of the omnibus HK action film, Triangle, a project which included directors Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark and premiered last month at Cannes.

Chock full of memorable scenes and sequences, Exiled opens with two separate pairs of hit men knocking on a woman's door, asking about a man called Wo. She denies his existence both times and then retreats to the bedroom window on the second floor, where she can keep an eye on both her baby and the street, where her husband is, in fact, set to show up any minute with a truckload of furniture for their new house.

As anticipated, Wo soon arrives home and a claustrophobic shootout commences in and around the small living room, although the animosity seems forgotten the moment after—all hands pitch in to help unpack and make dinner, the only lingering reminder of the earlier violence a hilariously conspicuous bullet hole in the teapot. Whether through old friendships or basic professional admiration, it's clear that the dynamics of the situation are much more complex than simply, "Kill or be killed."

Much of the charm of the film comes from moments like these, when a sense of camaraderie unexpectedly arises between murderous men who ought to be lunging for one another's throats. Just prior to the climactic showdown, for example, the hit men stumble upon a gold heist in which they initially assist the last remaining security guard, then genially convince him to share in the riches and sail off with them into the sunset.

Apart from the notorious meat-grinding scene in Triad Election, the violence here is similarly intense to that in To's earlier 2007 US release, but this uncommon sense of companionship imbues the carnage with a much more comical tone. Both Election and Triad Election depicted a single ruthless boss striving to gain and maintain the top position by eliminating the competition (read: anyone and everyone) by any means necessary, a path to success which would inevitably doom the winner to a reign marked by ceaseless strife. By contrast, the four hit men here, along with Wo, find themselves looking for that big final score after which they can turn over a new leaf, a sentiment that seems almost charitable by comparison. The realization that, despite the constant infighting, they're all in this thing together goes a long way toward making some sense out of what is usually a mindlessly brutal environment.

As the tension rises along with the body count, we're shown that the consequences of underworld bloodshed are not visited only upon the men who cause it but by the women they associate with. Wo's wife, and mother of his child, is furious that he's been recruited by his executioners, holding him in limbo, to come along on a side-job, even though he's trying to secure the black market equivalent of life insurance policy for them by his participation. Her counterpart is an opportunistic prostitute associated with "the bad guys," the arch-rivals of our anti-hero protagonists. These women emerge as nominal winners after the cataclysmic final shootout, although any victory in such a dismal milieu is bound to be a pyrrhic one.

We, on the other hand, all benefit when distributors continue to release foreign films as funny, smart, and thrilling as this. I'm as on board with pretentious art-pap as the next festivalgoer but there doesn't have to be a law against fun, even in imported cinema. Heck, at this pace we could see five more To pictures here by the end of the decade!

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Watched on 6/10/2007 |0 comment(s)

The Boss of It All (Direktøren for det hele) ***
Lars von Trier, 2007
Denmark
@ IFC Center

This film contains possibly the most hilariously absurd ending I know of. Edited in computer-directed Automavision (seemingly random cuts to slightly different shots within scenes) and shot almost entirely in an antiseptic office environment, it's about as far as you can get from beautiful, but that fits the ugly behavior. The narrative is based on the idea that the head of some software company hates to be disliked and thus created the imaginary titular figurehead to take all the blame. He finds an actor to play the role when it's time to sell the company, though the actor becomes much more emotionally involved than either party planned on. Von Trier makes very clever use of omniscient voiceovers in a few key places, hypermediating the experience for us.

See also: IMDb | Metacritic

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Watched on 6/06/2007 |0 comment(s)