Top

film

Stories

 

Saving Private Lee: A Gory, Soapy Korean War Epic

Literalizing the phrase "band of brothers," Shiri director Kang Je-gyu's Asian box office smash Tae Guk Gi gives the Korean War the Saving Private Ryan treatment, vigorously blurring the line between splatter-flick prerogative and combat verisimilitude. In the rare moments when a rifle, grenade, howitzer, bayonet, dagger, fist, land mine, or flamethrower isn't being deployed, the film pushes its melodramatic plotline with soap operatic shamelessness. In 1950, semi-literate Seoul cobbler Lee Jin-tae (Nowhere to Hide's Jang Dong-gun, looking very Chow Yun-Fat) and college-bound beloved baby bro Jin-seok (Won Bin) have a hardscrabble but happy life, caring for their widowed mother, Jin-tae's noodle shopkeeper fiancée (Lee Eun-joo), and the latter's various little sibs. When war breaks out, Jin-seok is forcibly enlisted; Jin-tae begs the soldiers to let him go—and gets sent to the front as well. He volunteers for the most dangerous missions, cutting a deal with his commander that if he wins a medal of honor, Jin-seok can go home and tend to the womenfolk.

Details

Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War
Written and directed by Kang Je-gyu
Destination/Samuel Goldwyn
Opens September 3

Related Content

More About

But as the body count shoots through the roof, and his military fame intensifies, Jin-tae becomes a murder machine, and his more sensitive brother rejects his efforts to buy him an exemption. Korean filmdom has its share of notoriously violent offerings, but Tae Guk Gi is wall-to-wall slaughter (you have to admire a script that contains both the line "Where's my leg?" and, much later, "Where's my arm?"), with a sound design that ensures you'll hear every bullet and punch for days afterward. The savagery sometimes transcends overkill, as in a battle royal wherein Jin-tae forces two P.O.W.'s—boys who switched to Communism not for ideology but at the barrel of a gun—to knock each other senseless for the soldiers' entertainment. Though it's hard to imagine a more manipulative film, Tae Guk Gi has a formidable intensity, as if to burn the adjective off the last century's "forgotten" war.

 
My Voice Nation Help
0 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest
 

Now Showing

Find capsule reviews, showtimes & tickets for all films in town.

Powered By VOICE Places

Join My Voice Nation for free stuff, film info & more!


Box Office

  1. Star Trek Into Darkness, 70.2 mil, 83.7 mil
  2. Iron Man 3, 35.8 mil, 337.7 mil
  3. The Great Gatsby, 23.9 mil, 90.7 mil
  4. Pain & Gain, 3.2 mil, 46.7 mil
  5. The Croods, 3.0 mil, 177.0 mil
  6. 42, 2.8 mil, 88.8 mil
  7. Oblivion, 2.3 mil, 85.6 mil
  8. Mud, 2.2 mil, 11.7 mil
  9. Peeples, 2.2 mil, 7.9 mil
  10. The Big Wedding, 1.2 mil, 20.3 mil
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings

Movie Trailers

©2013 Village Voice, LLC, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places New York

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city