Category: REVIEWS

Here is where you would find our film reviews on BRWC.  We look at on trailers, shorts, indies and mainstream.  We love movies!

  • Lost In Karastan (Hopkins, 2014) – DVD Review

    Lost In Karastan (Hopkins, 2014) – DVD Review

    By Last Caress.

    Lost in Karastan is a satirical black comedy written and directed by Ben Hopkins (The Nine Lives of Thomas Katz) and co-written by Academy Award winner Pawel Pawlikowski (My Summer of Love).

    Its international cast includes Matthew Macfadyen (Ripper St., The Three Musketeers, Anna Karenina), MyAnna Buring (Ripper St., Kill List, Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn pts 1 & 2) and Noah Taylor (Shine, Submarine, Peaky Blinders). Shot on location in Georgia, it attempts a darkly humorous look at the film industry in the tradition of The Stunt Man (Rush, 1980) and Bowfinger (Oz, 1999). Released to VoD in January, Lost in Karastan is being released on DVD by Bulldog Film Distribution next week. So, how is it?

    karastan

    Down on his luck film director Emil Forrester (Matthew Macfadyen) is unexpectedly invited to attend a retrospective of his work at the International Film Festival in The Autonomous Republic of Karastan. On his arrival, the country’s benign yet massively corrupt President Abashiliev (Richard van Weyden, Ninja Assassin) persuades him to direct an epic retelling of the story of Tanat, the historic medieval hero and founder of the country, the part of whom is to be played by “Australia’s Greatest Action Hero”, the unreliable renowned drunk Xan Butler (Noah Taylor).

    Faced with the challenge of a large-scale production, Forrester finds himself dangerously out of his depth, confused by the tumultuous politics of The Autonomous Republic of Karastan and also by the seductive charm of the beautiful Chulpan (MyAnna Buring), whose relationship with President Abashiliev adds considerably more complications than could have been anticipated. With local talent wrangler Ruslan (Lasha Ramishvili) taking Forrester and his production to ever more remote locations, Emil finds local villagers being “encouraged” by soldiers to take on various roles. Is he directing his way to the greatest picture of his career, or will it be a disaster for everyone concerned?

    karastan

    Hm. A queer one, this. Lost in Karastan wants to take a wry, gently dark stab at a story which, on the face of it, is initially painted with much broader strokes. I hate lazy comparisons but one is apt here: A mash-up of two Sasha Baron-Cohen vehicles – Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (Charles, 2006) and The Dictator (Charles, 2012), made as a feature-length episode of Last of the Summer Wine. The premise of the movie itself is sound (if a little too busy) and the performances are all good – particularly that of lead Matthew Macfadyen and of Richard van Weyden as the menacing Karastan leader – but they’re all played straight and the script is unfortunately light on laughs. As a result, the tone of Lost in Karastan feels uncertain, leaving one to wonder by the end exactly what it wanted to be: Was it an unfortunately unfunny comedy, or an unfortunately insubstantial drama? It’s a shame either way because as I said, the idea for a smart comedy is certainly in there somewhere. The DVD by Bulldog Film is clear and crisp in audio/visual terms, presented in 16×9 with Dolby Digital 5.1 sound (with a 2.0 channel option), but has no extra features whatsoever.

    [big_title2]Lost in Karastan is released on DVD by Bulldog Film on 29/02/2016.[/big_title2]

  • Zoolander 2: The BRWC Review

    Zoolander 2: The BRWC Review

    I’m going to make this review brief out of respect for the original Zoolander.

    Someone is killing celebrities. (The biggest laugh comes in the form of Justin Bieber’s violent death). We find Derek Zoolander, complete with crazy facial hair, living as a recluse. He is lured out of retirement and the film follows his attempts to reunite with his estranged son, learn to recapture the ‘fire’ in his face and defeat a sinister conspiracy.

    About ten minutes into this film, I realised something was missing. I hadn’t laughed. Not once. The jokes were coming thick and fast, the visual gags were there – they just weren’t funny. The person I was sitting next to fell asleep and began snoring loudly. This would usually drive me crazy but sadly I was not bothered whether I heard the dialogue or not.

    Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson are a great pairing but their chemistry quickly abates. And even Will Ferrell’s high dose of energy cannot save this lackluster sequel.

    Zoolander 2 is a never-ending parade of celebrity cameos and tired juvenile humour. Like Anchorman 2, I just wish they’d left the original alone…

  • Review: Factory Boss

    Review: Factory Boss

    A few years ago a colleague said to me, God punishes people by casting them into the manufacturing business. I didn’t understand it then, but I do now. So begins the introduction to the life of Mr Lin (Yao Anlian), in the once-thriving industrial town of Shenzhen in Southeast China. Placing the story against the background of 2010, when the Global Economic Crisis was sweeping throughout the world, Lin is faced with an economical and moral dilemma. His toy manufacturing business is in threat of imminent closure. He has made a lot of money in the past, which means he now employs close to 700 people, providing his workers with both work and housing. Under intense pressure to avoid bankruptcy Lin has to choose between accepting a contract with an American company for a large order, creating immense financial risk for himself, but saving jobs for his staff; or selling his factory and forcing his staff into unemployment. The film’s lead actor, Yao Anlian, deservedly won the Best Actor Award at the 2014 Montréal Film Festival.

    Factory Boss is Chinese director Zhang Wei’s second film.

    « It took me six years to prepare for this film. This film was initially called Made in China, but due to the pressures of censorship, among others, the name was changed to Factory Boss, from an English novel entitled Factory Girl concerned with a similar theme. This project was formed in my mind when I was studying directing at the Beijing Film Academy. Having lived in Shenzhen for over 20 years, I was compelled to speak up about these important issues which are directly linked to the accelerated development of the Chinese economy. The inspiration behind Factory Boss is the exposition of the harsh survival conditions of SMEs (small manufacturing enterprises) in the delta region of the Pearl River, around Shenzhen, following the reform and the opening of the country to international business over 30 years ago. »

    Similar to the story behind the film are the 2007 Foxconn incidents, when media described this leading Shenzhen-based private enterprise as a “sweatshop,” causing the company to lose orders from Apple in the US. Though the company later won its lawsuit against Chinese media, the constant suicides of Foxconn workers kept the company firmly in the public’s attention. http://www.bbc.com/news/business-30532463

    This is a well-written timely film that deals with a contemporary problem. In this era of fast-fashion, worker-suicide, no sweatshops and ethical trade, are the people who build the goods produced by the billionaire companies actually being looked after by the ones who cut the deals?

    To find out more, director Zhang Wei will join audiences to discuss the film in more detail at the Regent Street Cinema on 26 February for the European premiere of his film.  

    Factory Boss will be making its European Premiere as a part of Asia House Film Festival at Regent Street Cinema on Friday 26 February, 18.30. Asia House Film Festival takes place from 22 February to 5 March at London venues http://asiahouse.org/

  • Bond, James Bond: All The Movies, Ranked – Part 3

    Bond, James Bond: All The Movies, Ranked – Part 3

    By Last Caress.

    Concluding our rundown of all of the James Bond films, ranked in order from worst to first (Part 1 HERE, Part 2 HERE):

    8. Skyfall (Mendes, 2012)

    bond skyfall

    Poor 007. Shot off of a moving train, hitting the Vodka Martinis a little too hard during his extended convalescence, and when he finally gets back to work following an explosion at MI6, M has to fudge his aptitude results just to get him back in the saddle because he couldn’t hit a cow’s arse with a banjo, he’s developed a range of “issues” and, worst of all – as it always is – he’s gone and gotten old, dagnammit.

    So, why’s he back to work at all? He’d been presumed dead, nobody was looking for him, he could enjoy his retirement by the beach, shacked up with some sort, half-cut and performing alcohol-based party tricks with scorpions for shits and giggles. Have that, you wanky arachnids! Well, he has to get home to trap a far larger creepy-crawly under glass: Raoul Silva (Javier Bardem), a former agent out for revenge against M for hanging him out to dry years earlier for “the greater good” and all that. He survived eating a cyanide capsule – although he now needs some pretty nifty cosmetic dentistry to hold his face up and stop him resembling a dish cloth hung on a hatstand – and he wants M to suffer for it. Not that she isn’t suffering already: Like Bond, she’s considered past it, a relic. The debacle of a stolen hard drive full of the identities of all of Britain’s spies in operation (culminating in the aforementioned shooting of Bond off a moving train, accidentally, by Miss Moneypen.. um, by “Eve”. Ahem) has given M’s critics the ammo they need to bundle her into a metaphorical trebuchet and fling her, screaming, into retirement. She needs Bond to get his funky sh*t together and waste that manic Hispanic before he can Bench the Dench. Sounds easy? Funnily enough, it is. Hmm. A little too easy…

    Third Daniel Craig Bond and third terrific movie, although despite the retention of the globetrotting locations and the in-camera stunts, and despite the return to the Bondiverse of Miss Moneypenny and the DB5, the dilution of the character of James Bond  continues unabated. The sense of humour often displayed by Bond specifically and throughout the films in general is almost entirely absent here, and James himself is… well, he’s a mortal. One of Bond’s many trademarks was always his uncanny ability to be better than everybody else at everything else. Whether he took the form of a 32 year-old Sean Connery or a 106 year-old Roger Moore, James Bond 007 could unload his PPK into your ballbags whilst unloading his ballbags into your missus – and still not spill his shaken-not-stirred – faster than you can say “Now pay attention, Bond!” Not so, here. Craig’s Bond is looking his age, looking worn down, worn out. In Skyfall, he’s the ageing gunfighter, gunshy and grizzled, having his hand forced by a vengeful antagonist in order to save his family (M, the closest thing to family Bond has). Incredibly, it’s no longer a given that James Bond is going to survive.

    Oh, and we welcomed a new (though far from improved) Q in Skyfall although, promisingly, he shares my general disregard for the sillier gadgets Bond had to negotiate down the years (“What were you expecting, Bond? An exploding pen? We don’t go in for all that anymore.”).

    7. Quantum of Solace (Forster, 2008)

    Bond QoS

    What is that tuneless gibbering debacle masquerading as a Bond theme by the usually reliable Jack White and Alicia Keys? Why must this movie be the first Bond film that doesn’t work as a standalone picture? Did I read somewhere that, because of the writer’s strike, parts of the script were cobbled together on the fly by director Marc Forster and Daniel bloody Craig (obviously I did read that, about ten minutes ago)? And what in sh*tting bumwrong is a “quantum of solace”, anyways?? James Bond’s 22nd movie outing happily racks up a list of issues before it’s even started. Well, amongst these faults we can also add “bad aim” because, despite its best efforts to shoot itself in the foot, Quantum of Solace is a fantastic picture. No, really.

    Kicking off without a traditional “Gun Barrel Sequence” and straight where we left off at the end of Casino Royale, Double-Oh-Seven has Mr. White (sadly neither the Harvey Keitel OR Bryan Cranston versions, alas) in the trunk of his car and is taking him for a good old torture-up but as soon as Jim and M get to the “‘Quantum’? What are you chatting about, you divnut?” question already rending the cinema audiences asunder – oh noes! Some previously extraneous extra in the corner of the room turns out to be a fellow scallywag and BLAM! Bond’s off on what is already his second chase of the movie, and it’s only been on five bloody minutes!

    And so it goes, with James following a trail that takes him around the world as usual, but this time commander Bond – is he still a commander, in this rebooted universe? – seems ready and willing to pop a cap into the ass of anybody who even looks at him sideways. “Can you try not to kill every lead we find, Bond?” implores M. “No. Up yours, Judi Dench!” implies Bond right back with that trademark Danny Craig smirk/scowl on his inscrutable granite-face, I’m going to assume. “Kill ’em all, and let God sort ’em out.” Probably. And kill’ em all is exactly what he does for the next ninety minutes or so as he edges towards QoS‘s big bad, Dominic Greene, all smarm, slime and psychosis, orchestrating a coup in Bolivia so’s he can seize control of almost all of the water in the country in order to extort the new regime and make a tidy packet for Greene and his associates in the shady and mysterious “Quantum” group. The actor who played Greene, the brilliant Mathieu Amalric, stated that he was aiming for a Nicolas Sarkozy/Tony Blair hybrid and you can certainly see it.

    6. Licence to Kill (Glen, 1989)

    Bond LtK

    The Secret Diary Of Benicio del Toro, Clearly Aged 13¾

    Friday – My ballbags have just dropped. Aye Caramba! I’d better quit my boy band – The Funky Contras – and become a henchman to a suitably pock-marked Bond Villain.

    Saturday – My new boss has just been nabbed by the Rozzers, including one who was getting married at the same time. Alicante! I’d better get stuck in by ensuring that the bride gets a “nice honeymoooooooon.” Muy es Bueno!

    Sunday – Fed the sharks at Krest’s place. Shat myself when it jumped up at me. Fortunately: One Sheet does plenty! Stayed in that evening though, to finish my Geography coursework. ¡Ole!

    Monday – Chiquitita! Just got a sweet gold tooth cap, free in this week’s issue of Whizzer & Chipotle. I’m going to wear it tomorrow night, see if I can get in a grown-up bar, dazzle some senoritas, eh? Lucha Libre!

    Tuesday – Went to a sweet marine bar. Wore my tooth cap. The barman totally bought that I was 18! Muchos gracias, Whizzer & Chipotle! Started to pull this sweet Yank sort but in comes this widemouth Taff bastardos with the cock-block! Torremolinos! I heard her tell him I was in the Contras. I hope for the sake of my still-burgeoning machismo that he assumes she meant the Nicaraguan rebels, and not the boy band I walked out on earlier this week. Enrique Iglesias!

    Wednesday – I’ve come with the boss to his meditation retreat. It’s a bueno looking place amigos, and I thought we were getting sweet massages, but – Una Paloma Blanca! – the whole place is a bastardos-strength cocaine lab! And… hey, I recognize that new guy my boss took on the other day… it’s that no good somonabitch Taffy cock-block! Old El Paso! I’m going to throw him in the coke-brick smasher, I assume I’ll be completely safe in a situation like that…

    Yes, I liked this one a lot. Nearly fell off my chair to see a Leiter I’d seen before already. Immediately took to Bond in this location, though. Despite being 500 miles away and the wrong side of Cuba, I think the Florida Keys feels close enough to placing our James back Underneath the Mango Tree from whence he sprang, and I think he suits the West Indies. Or they suit him. The plot was a strange one: It felt at first as though it was going to be a very un-Bond-like story of straight-up revenge, and I suppose ultimately that’s what it was, but it seems as though Bond fortuitously stumbled upon some very typically Bond style shenanigans along the way. Who knew that the guy Leiter was after all these years would also have a big underground drug factory fronted up by Wayne bloody Newton of all people? Of course, Breaking Bad taught me that all big-time drug barons like a bit of underground factory action so, maybe it’s not so far fetched after all. Quite bloody here and there for a Bond film though; Poor old Krest getting the Scanners treatment in that pressurised diving chamber was a bit strong, wasn’t it?

    I loved Robert Davi as Big-Bad-of-the-Week Franz Sanchez. He’s got such a great face. A bad guy face, you know? And despite taking the p*ss there, I thought young Benicio was really good too. He looked very young, yes, but the charisma and the personality was all there, even then. Tim: “Take your hands off her!” Benicio (grinning): “Nobody asked you, gringo…” Fantastic. Bond girls Talisa Soto (Lupe) and Carey Lowell (Pam) were of the Maryam d’Abo very-pretty-but-not-especially-sexy variety, but: What sort of a Bond Girl name is “Pam”? What happened to the good old days of “Jalapeno Clitsmack” or similar?

    Still, Licence to Kill was a good ‘un and it was a shame to be saying hwyl fawr and iechyd da to Mr. Dalton so soon.

    What is a licence to kill, anyways? Can Bond just arbitrarily shoot anyone, perfectly legally? Like, if Amazon say they’ll be at his gaff by lunchtime and then they don’t show up with his King of the Hill DVD until f*cking nine o’clock that evening, can he pop a cap straight in the surly courier’s nostril on his own front doorstep? If so, how can I go about getting me one of those licences?

    5. Casino Royale (Campbell, 2006)

    Bond CR

    Despite having the budget and frippery of a typical 21st century blockbuster, Casino Royale keeps pretty much all of the stakes fairly small, by Bond standards, doubtless due to this being a reboot and subsequently a reintroduction to the character of Jimmy B and his universe. Well, all of the stakes are kept fairly small apart from, um, the stakes. I’ve seen scores of otherwise action-packed spag westerns screech to a halt for a poker scene so my heart sank when I saw that the centrepiece of this pic was going to be a mega session of Texas Hold ‘Em. But director Martin Campbell – who also helmed Pierce Brosnan’s 007 debut GoldenEye eleven years previously – keeps the poker action interesting, clear and tense, albeit largely via the simple trick of having Pazzi from Hannibal (Scott, 2001) provide Eva Green with card-by-card commentary. Plus of course the poker itself was interspersed with some terrific action set-pieces, in-keeping with the rest of the movie. I mean, there would be plenty of terrific action set-pieces, wouldn’t there? It’s Bond. But Casino Royale really hits the target in that regard, whether it’s a fight in a stairwell or a Venetian building collapsing into the Grand Canal. And how good was that free-running chase? I was so inspired I tried to free-run up the stairs for a poo earlier today but I just stubbed my toe and almost shat myself, alas.

    So, how was Daniel Craig in his 007 debut? Well, I liked him but I don’t know if I found him to be especially “Bond”, although I appreciate that that was largely the intention; to present us with a quite different Bond to any we’d seen. He’s got that immovable granite face, and he always appears to be either smirking slightly or scowling slightly. Either way, if I was on set with Mr. Craig I’d have to resist the urge to push a knitting needle into his head, see how far I could push it before it hit skull. Mads Mikkelsen was a memorable villain but he’s just got a “villain” face, hasn’t he? Giancarlo Giannini was also a great addition in a supporting role. Judi Dench was excellent once again – as one would expect – as the only returning cast member, but this casting choice was a queer one, what with Casino Royale being a reboot rather than a continuation of the previous Bond timeline. I guess Dame Judi has simply now played two “M”s, rather than one continuous one. The reboot nature of the pic meant that, for once, there was a justification for bringing us yet another Leiter and Jeffrey Wright does well with the role in a short space of time. Still can’t top Jack Lord, though. Shame there was no Q of any kind this time, although I prefer Bond with less gadgets anyway. Chris Cornell’s theme is a grower, too.

    4. Goldfinger (Hamilton, 1964)

    Bond Goldfinger

    The third movie in the franchise, and we’re really into some James Bond territory now. A tricked out Aston Martin DB5 (and you needn’t be a Bond fan to adore that car), revolving pool tables/control panels, lazer beams into the jaffas – yes, it’s all gone rather mental. The plots were starting to get a bit overengineered now, but Goldfinger was still a lot of fun. I would imagine that Auric Goldfinger’s weird obsession with gold could easily be viewed as bloody daft really, but as someone who has watched over 150 spaghetti westerns, an antagonist’s almost carnal lust for gold feels positively commonplace (and of course, Goldfinger pre-dates many of those spags). Anyway, I really enjoyed Goldfinger whilst not particularly taking to Auric himself (or Oddjob for that matter. That hat thing is silly. Not “good” silly, just silly). Also, Pussy Galore is a magnificent name, but Honor Blackman just simply isn’t all that. The Masterson sisters were better-looking but all too brief. A very sumptuous, attractive movie though. The sets were all almost as sexy as that car.

    3. Thunderball (Young, 1965)

    Bond Thunderball

    Bond: Oh, hello!
    Patricia: Haven’t you had enough exercise for one evening??
    Bond: Ah, it’s funny you should say that…

    For me, Thunderball almost tops Dr. No as the best of the Connery era, even though it is by far the most over the top and convoluted, traits in the franchise I grew to increasingly dislike when handled by inferior craftsmen than star Sean Connery and director Terence Young, back for his third of the first four Bond movies (and his last). Almost as lavish as the previous three movies put together with ever-increasing gadgetry and a star who, incredibly, still seems to be getting better in the role, although James does appear to be moving slowly from “cheeky sex-addicted chappie” to “Actual sex-pest: Keep well clear”. Largo is a better villain than Goldfinger even though I couldn’t shift the thought of Robert Wagner’s turn as Number Two in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, which is desperately unfair since Wagner’s character is nought but a direct parody of Adolfo Celi’s Largo. Also, The Bond Girl concept hits a big spike (Best Rik Mayall impression: Yes, in my TROUSERS!) with virtually every girl in Thunderball being a looker, particularly Luciana Paluzzi as Fiona, Molly Peters as Patricia (both almost as good as Honey Ryder) and Claudine Auger as Domino (as good, if not even better than Honey Ryder, if that’s possible). And the early scene in the health spa with Bond strapped to some Godawful stretching device was a genuine laugh-out-loud moment.

    2. Dr. No (Young, 1962)

    Bond DrNo

    “Bond, stop tonguing Moneypenny’s earhole and find out what’s happened to our man in Kingston… oh, he was close to rumbling a no-handed megalomaniac in a relatively poorly-defended island fortress, trying to topple over space rockets for shits & giggles (and some outfit he mentions in passing called SPECTRE or somesuch. Doubt we’ll ever be hearing from those again). Aaand… you’ve blown him up. Bravo Bond, take a short break to f*ck Ursula Andress in her boat (that’s the literal AND Cockney rhyming slang versions). Twice.”

    THE END!

    Ground Zero for the James Bond movie legacy, and it’s a belter. I love that sumptuous sixties Technicolor quality, Sean Connery is affable and even vulnerable as well as being suitably quick witted, eager to kill and riddled with sex addiction issues, and the plot isn’t littered with unnecessary over-complication. Are they all this fundamentally simple at their core, beneath their shaken-not-stirred-now-pay-attention-Bond frippery? Of course not, and maybe a few of them should’ve paid attention to what brought Bond such acclaim in the first place.

    1. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (Hunt, 1969)

    Bond OHMSS

    For this reviewer, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service unquestionably represents the high water mark for the James Bond Franchise. The best of the bunch. The gadgets and silliness are pared right back, revealing a terrific story underneath. Somewhat controversially I suppose, I thought George Lazenby was really rather good. He’s not as good as Sean Connery but I think it’s possible to miss Connery’s performance whilst still extolling the virtues of Mr. Lazenby. I loved the “This never happened to the other fellow” acknowledgement; I think it was smart that they got that out of the way up front. The story held me from start to finish, there were a bevvy of beauties (Angela Scoular, the actress who played Ruby – the curly-haired chicken-fearing one of Blofeld’s “Angels of Death” – was at one time married to Leslie Phillips. She sadly took her own life aged 65 by drinking bleach), Lazenby’s Bond was a tough f*cker who looked good in the fight scenes but was also vulnerable and even scared at times, Telly Savalas was a better Blofeld than Donald Pleasance* (though that may be because Pleasance’s version has been so parodied over the years) and WAY better than Charles Gray or Christoph Waltz, Diana Rigg was gorgeous, hitting #1 in the Bond Girl charts with a bullet (literally), and the entire thing came packaged with the best Bond title track of all from John Barry, as well as Louis Armstrong’s fantastic We Have All the Time in the World. In fact, the whole picture is so good that just writing about it makes me want to go watch it again. And maybe I will!

    *Savalas was preferable to Pleasance for me but, despite Blofeld’s considerable evil means in OHMSS, I felt kind-of sorry for him; his Alpine hypno-spa still seemed like a hell of a climbdown from his volcano rocket base. Poor Blofeld.

    Spectre is out on DVD/Blu-ray today, 22/2/2016.

  • Review: The Good, The Bad, The Weird (2008)

    Review: The Good, The Bad, The Weird (2008)

    Produced, Written, and Directed by the highly rated Jee-woon Kim, who also gave us the twisted and thrilling ‘I saw the Devil’ and the creepy atmospheric K-horror ‘Tale of Two Sisters’, this is a rip-roaring, high-octane Eastern Western adventure from start to finish. It’s also a film that – at the time of release – was the most expensive movie in South Korean cinema history, although that’s now been exceeded by Joon-ho Bong’s more recent film – Snowpiercer.

    The plot is remarkably simple. An assassin, Chang-yi (the Bad), is hired to steal a treasure map from a Japanese official who is travelling by train. A thief, Tae-gu (the Weird), also happens to be operating on the train as Chang-yi derails it and begins his merciless slaughter of guards – living up to his ‘bad’ persona with style – in his search for his prize. A bounty hunter, Do-won (the Good), also turns up at the scene to claim the bounty on the head of Chang-yi, whilst Manchurian bandits also observe from a distance as they also have an interest in obtaining the map so that they can sell it on the Black Market. In the midst of all the violence and carnage, the map inadvertently ends up in the hands of Tae-gu. If I’m starting to make it sound complicated then I will sum it up like this: Tae-gu (the Weird) has a treasure map, and everybody else wants it. That’s pretty much it, but the lack of any complexity in the plot doesn’t really matter. It’s there to serve a purpose, and that is to fuel two hours of solid action, shootouts, chases, general mayhem, and carnage, with a large dollop of humour thrown in for good measure.

    As I just stated, the film is not driven by a convoluted plot, nor by meticulous character development, but rather its action set-pieces, photography, stunning visual presentation, and stunt work. Some of these set-pieces were so long, imaginative, and intricate that it must have taken a hell of a long time to film them with such choreographic perfection. When I say this, I particularly have in mind the chase sequence near the film’s climax where the Good, the Bad and his gang, the Manchurian bandits, and the Imperial Japanese army are all chasing the Weird on a variety of transport such as horses, motorbikes, and military vehicles, whilst at the same time trying to blow each other to pieces. The scene just seemed to go on and on and on, relentlessly, with barely a second to come up for air, and with a real danger of the viewer becoming high from an overdose of thrills. It was an astounding bit of film-making, made all the more impressive by the apparent lack of CGI and the great use of some rather daring stunt work. As a side-note, the actors involved in the movie apparently did their own stunts – one of which resulted in a broken arm for Woo-sung Jung.

    The photography is fantastic with some great scenes of the Mongolian Steppes on display throughout, and the whole film has a very bright and colourful look, emphasising the colorful action being played out onscreen. Some scenes are quite violent and gruesome, but this was balanced well by the overall playful mood, as well as the instances of effective wit and physical comedy scattered liberally throughout. Probably the aspect of the movie that I liked the most was its refusal to take itself too seriously and instead just throwing masses of energy into ensuring that the audience was having as much fun as possible. The overall direction from Jee-woon Kim is top notch with some great imaginative camera work, solid editing, and a handful of very impressive continuous shots. Admittedly, he is one of my favourite film directors and just has an amazing ability to make all of his work look so damn stylish!

    Byung-hun Lee is at his usual charismatic best as the pretty but totally evil bad guy, but it’s the excellent Kang-ho Song (the Weird) who really steals the show as a crazy thief, possibly in the way that Eli Wallach was really the star of the show in The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. And just like Eli, he brings to the film most of the wit, banter, and physical comedy that keeps the film from ever steering too far away from the fun at its core. Just so there’s never any doubt whilst watching that Kang-ho is supposed to be the funny one, he also wears an amusing hat. Woo-sung Jung as ‘The Good’ is probably the least charismatic of the movies leads and, on reflection, he’s probably also the most boring. Let’s be honest, Clint himself didn’t exactly have the most dynamic range of facial expressions or voice, but he still somehow had a great screen presence – one that I admit is hard to explain. Woo-sung Jung just didn’t have that presence about him and looked like a guy that wanted to be in the background and not be noticed. Still… it’s a minor quibble really.

    As is expected from the title, this is a Western-style adventure that borrows from and pays homage to several films – the most obvious one being, of course, ‘The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly‘. Fans of the genre will have fun picking out these moments and trying to match them to their original source. I certainly did. But even if you’re not a fan of the genre, I still can’t recommend this film highly enough. It doesn’t really matter if you hate Westerns, or didn’t particularly get on with The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. There’s enough fun, action, thrills, and style here to make it enjoyable for most and will certainly keep you entertained for a couple of hours.