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In
a world where Mickey Mouse has more legal rights than an Iraqi child,
director Jang Sun-Woo has driven this car bomb loaded with semiotic
explosives and philosophical dynamite deep into the heart of the multiplex As rich and tricky as James Joyce's Ulysses, RESURRECTION OF THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL won't please anyone who just wants a movie, same as Joyce's book won't please anyone just looking to kill a few hours with a story. But those looking for a real experience will get more than they bargained for. If all you're looking to do is make it a Blockbuster night, try THE CORE. Ju (Kim Hyung-Sung,
MY BEAUTIFUL DAYS) is a frustrated delivery boy
eternally wearing a look of affable surprise. His life is all about
running food from one customer to another and hanging out with Yi, his
obnoxious What happens next is that Ju either dreams about rescuing Im Eun-Gyung, and his dream is saturated with the video game conventions he's absorbed all his life, or else he wakes up and gains entry to RESURRECTION OF THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL, a fully-immersive, world-sized game whose arrival is heralded by Chuang Tzu's famous butterfly. Delivered to the audience like a summer blockbuster, this perverted game ends when you make the titular Match Girl fall in love with you right before she freezes to death. It's an ugly thing to watch: a human actress turned into a bit-mapped puppet for a gang of thugs, hoods, mobsters and lone wolf gun babes to fight over. But fight over her they do, in bullet ballets, wire-fu fist fests, motorcycle chases, helicopter battles inside narrow, concrete hallways. Fighting with weapons doled out by a fishcake seller who runs an armory out of his food stand: guided missiles, atom bombs, submachine guns, and the ultimate Taoist weapon, the Mackerel. Are the characters
in ROTLMG video game characters who think they're people, or people
who think they're video game characters? Phillip K. Dick would be proud
of the layers of reality on display in this flick. For all of its The players are a swirl of meta-casting. Jin Xing (who plays the lesbian warrior Lara, as in "Croft") is China's first out transsexual, a self-created animal whose previous life as an army officer has become irrelevant to her current incarnation as a modern dance choreographer. Im Eun-Gyung, the titular Little Match Girl, is the face of a popular cell phone service provider and as she dies in the opening scene we can see her face on one of her own billboards in the background: a model, playing a cell phone user, looking down on herself, playing a character, who plays a character in a movie. Unpack that, if you can. Yi is played by Kim Jin-Pyo Korea's bad boy rapper, who plays a bad boy gamer in the service of corporate interests, just like he is in real life. Layers and layers and layers are packed around this movie that is to action blockbusters what Alejandro Jodorowsky's seminal EL TOPO is to Westerns: a transcendant headtrip that's also a helluva lot of fun. And when you reach the center, when you've unraveled the last layer, that's when you discover that there is no center because it's all center. There is no answer, because it's all answer. So sit back, relax, open your minds, and prepare to put your mouth over the nozzle of a motion picture firehose. |
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