Park Chan-Wook’s new film
PROJEKT iVIEW | Movies, Preview | September 27, 2006 at 4:36 pm
It looks great as always, the man knows his cinematography. This is his latest film called, “I’m a cyborg, but that’s ok.”
DL the trailer from here
Rumor is that his next film will be a vampire film. Perhaps a supernatural trilogy then?
Let’s see Sanjay Gupta copy his way into this one
Actually, he probably won’t.
Source: Twitchfilm.
Tags: Gallery, Korean, Video













Anurag Kashyap
Abhay Deol
Dibakar Banerjee
Hansal Mehta
Khalid Mohamed
Kundan Shah
Anish Kuruvilla
Jaideep Verma
Manish Gupta
Navdeep Singh
Bhavani Iyer
D. Santosh
Onir
Ashvin Kumar
Ramu Ramanathan
Sudhir Mishra
Pankaj Advani
Revathy
Saurabh Shukla
Shilpa Shukla
Sujoy Ghosh
Suparn Verma
Santosh Sivan
Shashank Ghosh
Shivajee
Pavan Kaul
Partho Sen-Gupta
Prroshant Naryannan
Sam Langoria
Satish Kasetty











- Call it co-incidence or what. Just ended up watching the last of his first trilogy – Lady Vengeance last night. Review coming soon.
Cool. Well, if you’re giving a detailed review let me just give my two bits as well.
Sympathy for Lady Vengeance: Toned-down, but in a good way.
Oldboy was fucking excellent. It grabs your balls and never lets you until the film is over. After I watched it, I felt Chan wook park is one twisted motherfucker! Anyway I didn’t like SFLV that much and yet to see SFMV. BTW I am waiting this film and hopefully see it on big screen.
You’re right, Lady vengeance did lack the dynamism of Oldboy, or the sick humor of Mr. Vengeance, which is a must see to understand where exactly oldboy comes from. Mr. Vengeance is a very Takeshi Kitano-esque, quiet film, no doubt because the protagonist himself is deaf and dumb.
I tried to make myself like Lady Vengeance, there were certain scenes that were really cool, but most of the people who came expecting oldboy 2 probably got turned off by the non-violence, that is all the violence was off-screen.
It WAS a very cold film, Sam Mendez couldn’t have done it any better. Maybe we didn’t get it because the film was for a Korean audience, and some of the in-jokes and plot points may have passed over our heads.