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"...with its
gentle mocking of gangster codes, police authority and | |
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"Everyone
get together and fight. This is a war!" A love war, baby. From
the cast and crew that brought you last year's hit, ATTACK
THE GAS STATION, KICK exponentially increases the wildness of that
anarchic blowout into a staggering fun sausage of epic proportions.
Starting in the godawful 80's, we watch the class bully (Cha Seung-Won)
grow up to become a gym teacher, and the class nerd (GAS STATION'S Lee
Sung-Jae) grow up to become a bigshot gangster. The two collide as adults,
engaging in hand-to-hand combat over the heart of a noodle shop owner
in a opera buffo world of bubbling problems and seething resentments,
where asking for a date can spark a riot. The Iliad of life after graduation,
KICK sees high school as a microcosm for the world, or the world as
a microcosm for high school. With more supporting characters than a
Victorian novel, and sprawling crazily across the candy-coated city
of Gyeongju, it's shot in Super 35mm so that (as the press kit says),
"viewers can wholesomely share the experience".
A heady hit of nitrous oxide, KICK THE MOON's carnival ride has something going on beneath the surface. As the gangster and the gym teacher butt heads for the love of Ju-Ran, the feisty noodle-shop owner, they make her younger brother a pawn in their powergame. Gi-Dong, the gym teacher, cranks up his bullying of the kid, promising to "make a man" out of him. Young-Joon, the gangster, becomes a father figure encouraging him to get better grades and excel in school so he can grow up to be a master criminal. Neither idea is particularly enlightened, but they both attack their gameplans with evangelistic enthusiasm. In KICK, society is a fluid hierarchy of who can get away with doing what to whom, be it the old cop who flings his badge around like a Frisbee, the teacher who spends his hours devising baroque punishments for his students, the city gang boss vs. the country gang boss, the local draft board, or the constable on the beat. Intimidation and bluster are the order of the day, and life becomes an eternal, running battle of WWF proportions. The only one who keeps her head is Ju Ran, and she's the one you'll remember afterwards, capable of deploying judo throws and hysterical crying to turn the strength of her opponents against themselves, and walk on by all the cavemen who want to bring her down. Korea's second all-time,
top-grossing comedy (MY
SASSY GIRL is still #1), KICK THE MOON is the amiable drunk in the
family, sprawled out over five seats and blocking the aisle with his
feet. But behind all that bluster >
Read about it on
Darcy's impressive and comprehensive Korean film page: >
Straight from the
company's mouth! Read what Cinema Service in Korea has to say about
KICK THE MOON: http://www.wix.co.kr/cinema/movie/kick/default.asp |
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2002 Subway Cinema, LLC. All Rights Reserved.