zankokunashukkin DVD Region 2
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Technical Information
| Product Title: | zankokunashukkin zankokunashukkin zankokunashukkin 残酷な出勤 zankokunashukkin |
| Artist Name(s): | Kim Young Min | Ko Eun Ah | Kim Su Ro | Lee Seon Gyun Kim Young Min | Ko Eun Ah | 金秀路 | 李善均 Kim Young Min | Ko Eun Ah | 金秀路 | 李善均 キム・ヨンミン | コ・ウナ | キム・スロ | パク・キホン(音楽) | イ・ジュンギュ(撮影) | キム・テユン(脚本) | ソン・ジェワン(照明) | イ・ソンギュン | コ・ウナ 김 영민 | 고은아 | 김 수로 | 이선균 |
| Director: | キム・テユン(監督) | キム・テユン |
| Release Date: | 2008-10-24 |
| Publisher Product Code: | OPSD-S807 |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
| Publisher: | SPO |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1011876503 |
Product Information
平凡なサラリーマンのトンチョル(キム・スロ)は、株に失敗し、多額の借金を抱えていたが家族には隠していた。ある日、利子の返済の際に偶然出会ったマノ(イ・ソンギュン)が、どさくさ紛れに子供を誘拐し、トンチョルの車に乗り込んできた。2人は、子供の両親に108回もの脅迫電話を掛けるがつながらず、誘拐は失敗に終わった。今度は緻密な計画を立て、金持ちの娘テヒ(コ・ウナ)を誘拐する。しかし、この誘拐に成功した瞬間、トンチョルのもとに「お前の娘を誘拐した」という1本の電話がかかってくるのだった……。 映像特典
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Korea Version
- A Cruel Attendance VCD
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- A Cruel Attendance (AKA: Educating Kidnappers) DVD Region 3
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Professional Review of "zankokunashukkin"
This professional review refers to A Cruel Attendance (AKA: Educating Kidnappers)
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A Cruel Attendance is the latest outing for actor Kim Su Ro, who last split viewers' sides in the hilarious Vampire Cop Ricky, here turning his hand to the slightly more serious subject of kidnapping. Thankfully, debut director Kim Tae Yun (who previously worked on the 2003 romantic comedy Spring Breeze still makes the most of the star's wacky talents, with face-pulling and gags a-plenty before the film takes its inevitable final reel dive into emotional angst and life-lessons. The plot offers a twist on the usual kidnap caper, following Dong Cheol (Kim Su Ro), a bankrupt man desperately trying to keep up with loan repayments, who accidentally becomes involved with the equally down on his luck Min Ho (Lee Seon Gyun, recently in The Customer is Always Right) when the latter impulsively grabs a young girl off the street and attempts to hold her to ransom. After no less than 108 calls to her parents fail to yield any results and she starts to run a fever, they give up and dump her at the hospital. However, driven by increasing financial pressure, they are forced to try again, this time snatching a seemingly suitable hostage in the shape of Tae Hee (Ko Eun Ah, Ssunday Seoul), the daughter of a rich businessman. Unfortunately, she turns out to be a less than ideal captive, and matters take a turn for the worse when Dong Cheol receives a phone call informing him that his own young daughter has been kidnapped by someone who seems to know far more about the crime game than he and his hapless partner. Although primarily a farce, A Cruel Attendance also works in drama, mystery and thriller elements and with the pressure on wretched protagonist Dong Cheol constantly mounting throughout, it actually makes for fairly tense viewing. Of course, with Kim Su Ro in the lead role, the emphasis is still on humour, though the jokes are less of the slapstick variety than might have been expected, and indeed the tone of the film is quite bleak, being a comedy of errors with an underlying theme of social injustice. This does give things a certain edge, and although the proceedings are frequently very funny, director Kim manages to prevent the buffoonery from undermining the driving narrative too much, and keeps the film focused rather than letting it degenerate into nonsense. As such, although no one could ever mistake A Cruel Attendance for serious social commentary, it is a little more ambitious than first meets the eye, and does at least make an effort to provide more than simple laughs. The film to a large extent relies upon the chemistry between Kim and Lee, and the two combine quite well as a likeable pair of incompetents. For a film of this sort, their characters are well enough fleshed out, with just enough depth to add a touch of sympathy for their plight and to make the viewer hope that somehow their schemes will turn out well, or at least not too badly as seems increasingly likely. The film does take a somewhat moralistic turn towards during the latter stages, which never really rings true due to the fact that whilst it is one thing to feel sorry for Dong Cheol and to laugh at his antics, it is quite another to actually think that turning to kidnapping was the right thing to do in his situation. Unfortunately, director Kim seems to have a sudden attack of guilt at having spent most of the running time making light of the subject and uses the last couple of scenes to hammer home the painfully obvious message that kidnapping is not a victimless act, and that, surprise, surprise, crime does not pay. Thankfully, he recovers his senses in time to finish things in a satisfying manner rather than going for a cop out happy ending, and as such this sudden flash of sentiment is only a minor slip in what proves to be a very entertaining film, and one which again confirms Kim Su Ro as one of the funniest men working in Korean cinema today. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |










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