Oldboy: I'd heard so much negative stuff about this movie that I almost didn't go see it. People didn't like the changes from the Korean original; the studio made people who saw the movie early sign nondisclosure agreements; Spike Lee didn't like the final cut of the movie. And like the new Carrie, I left the theater wondering why this movie was made beause this new movie doesn't go far enough to distinguish itself from the superior original. But that doesn't mean it was a bad movie. What we have here is a decidedly adult entertainment (in an age of PG-13 rated R movies and R rated PG-13 movies) that is deliciously dark, terrifically photographed and outstandingly directed by a master filmmaker who has abandoned his politics for the sake of entertainment. There are problems galore to found in the movie: where Oh Dae-Su in the original was a sympathetic character, Joe Doucette (Josh Brolin) is a son-of-a-bitch from the start, thus making it more difficult to sympathize with him; the character of Adrian Pryce (Sharlto Copley) is underwritten and shallow and not the tower of power and menance that he should have been; the relationships revealed don't add up completely to the resolution sought by Pryce; and the ending (while no less disturbing) doesn't have the resonance of the original. Still, the powerful presences and performances by Brolin and Samuel L. Jackson anchor this movie and make it watchable. It's not as bad as it has been made out to be. I do eargerly await a director's cut of this movie, though.
3.5/5
3.5/5
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