Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
A Taxi Driver (2017)(South Korean) by Jang Hoon
#1
This stars Mr. Big Cheeks, my affectionate nickname for Kang-ho Song, who has starred or had prominent roles in Memories of Murder (2003), The Host (2006), The Good, the Bad and the Weird (2008), Snowpiercer (2013), and many others.  My goodness, he's a good actor.  I keep forgetting how good.

To truly enjoy this movie, you must first suspend your disbelief that a government could lie to its people.  I know that's a stretch (that a government could lie to its people), but do give it a try.

In 1980, a Seoul taxi driver agrees to take a German to Gwangju.  Little does he realize that the German is a journalist, and that college students are rioting in Gwangju against a very oppressive military government, which has cut the city off from all outside contact and is playing hardball.  In the beginning, the taxi driver and journalist are both in it for the money, and contemptuous of each other, but the realities of what they encounter change them deeply.

An abundance of little dramas along the way.  Very well done, despite getting overly dramatized towards the end.  And Mr. Big Cheeks is brilliant.

I do wish the German journalist had been made American.  Then it would have been one of those feel-good movies where we're rescuing other people from their inferior selves.

P.S. I looked up the Gwungju Uprising after watching this.  As it turns out, our government (under Reagan) fully supported the military takeover of South Korea and its leader, and there's strong evidence that our military bigwigs authorized the deployment of South Korean special forces to Gwangju to help put down the rioting students who were fighting for democracy.  This was the beginning of strong anti-American sentiment that lasted for decades in South Korea -- until Dennis Rodman came along.

No, wait.  Wrong Korea.
I'm nobody's pony.
Reply
#2
This got great reviews but I've been avoiding it because I'm so behind on my Asian films and the plot didn't sound that engaging to me.  I'll put it back in the queue for someday now.
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
Reply
#3
It only took me a half decade to get this off my queue. It was a bit of alright. I concur with cf’s appraisal for the most part. I’ll add that this also stars my fav comedic K-actor Yoo Hae-jin in a standout serious role. 

Song’s character bugged me at first. He was a typical whiny shallow money-grubber - the typecast role I disdain. I was only half tuned in. But there’s a major shift in tone when they make it to Gwangju and witness the violence firsthand. Then it got heavy and the backstory of Song’s character justifies his behavior. It was a little incredulous how self sacrificing everyone became but it lent more dramatic impact. The pre-credit scene with the actual reporter hit home hard. As for the real life taxi driver, one wonders if he ever saw this film, although if that brutality was anywhere near what actually happened, he was probably hunted down and killed. 

An interesting watch. Not D00M recommended to anyone who hasn't already seen it.
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)