PDA

View Full Version : Ballerina | Netflix



GeneChing
09-20-2023, 12:27 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTt9Dn_W1aE










Just kidding. I'll split this into its own indie thread as soon as someone comments.

GeneChing
10-05-2023, 09:49 AM
Review Netflix movie review: Ballerina – Korean actress Jeon Jong-seo reunites with The Call director to play an assassin in slick and gory thriller (https://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/k-pop/k-movies/article/3236621/netflix-movie-review-ballerina-korean-actress-jeon-jong-seo-reunites-call-director-play-assassin#:~:text=Reuniting%20with%20leading%20lady %20Jeon,of%20Lee%27s%20attention%2Dgrabbing%20debu t.)
A slickly executed Korean thriller from The Call director Lee Chung-hyun, Ballerina stars Jeon Jong-seo as an assassin avenging the death of her old friend
While the script offers precious little invention beneath its polished surface, Jeon’s cold-as-ice angel of vengeance is the film’s saving grace
James Marsh

Published: 1:30pm, 5 Oct, 2023
https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1200x800/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/10/03/bd7b3e44-6fb6-4245-ac33-fb03d5ad8f64_f55753ae.jpg?itok=-uix5eHs&v=1696316965

A female assassin sets out to avenge her best friend’s death the only way she knows how in The Call director Lee Chung-hyun’s slickly executed thriller.
Reuniting with leading lady Jeon Jong-seo ( Burning), Ballerina is a lean and unflinching exercise in neon and blood-drenched action that should sate fans of such movies, despite lacking the genre-bending originality of Lee’s attention-grabbing debut.
In years to come, Ballerina may find itself vying for attention alongside Len Wiseman’s coming John Wick spin-off of the same name, slated to star Ana de Armas in a similar role and hit cinemas screens in the summer of 2024.
For the time being, Lee’s film already owes a huge debt to forerunners in this super-stylised space, most notably Luc Besson’s Nikita, Park Chan-wook’s Oldboy, and Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive.
Jeon stars as Ok-ju, a laconic loner who has parted ways with the shadowy international organisation that trained her to be a remorseless killing machine. Her quiet, solitary existence is disrupted when, out of the blue, she receives a call from Min-hee (Park Yu-rim), a ballerina with whom she was once very close.

https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/10/03/83121121-5f22-4d0f-9de8-8d0d35ddb1c6_595de0ff.jpg
Park Yu-rim (front) in a still from “Ballerina”. Photo: Yoo Eun Mi/Netflix
On arrival at her flat, Ok-ju discovers Min-hee has taken her own life, leaving behind only a cryptic message asking her friend to avenge her. Ok-ju is directed to a drug dealer known as Chef Choi (Kim Ji-hoon), and from there descends into a maelstrom of organised crime, perverse exploitation and bloody violence.

There is no denying that Ballerina feels like Lee is pirouetting in the wrong direction after his endlessly inventive time-travel horror mash-up The Call.

Too many of the film’s tropes, from the handsome, wealthy, emotionally detached villain onwards, have long since become tired, overused clichés; it can be frustrating to see them employed so enthusiastically in a script that offers precious little invention beneath its shimmering surface.

https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/10/03/5b57e488-1a4d-4f08-ad2c-4851b77bd7ec_1126e908.jpg
Kim Ji-hoon in a still from “Ballerina”. Photo: Yoo Eun Mi/Netflix
Jeon’s cold-as-ice angel of vengeance is the film’s saving grace. Ok-ju’s nonplussed half-pout of unfazed disinterest sits brilliantly at odds with the extreme violence she doles out to an endless parade of knife-wielding goons. Her ability to garner so much empathy while emoting so little is a testament to Jeon’s bewitching screen presence.

Had Lee dared to explore the depths of her relationship with Min-hee further, rather than merely imply that, for Ok-ju at least, it was more than just platonic, the film might have been a genuine game-changer. As is, Ballerina is a polished yet disposable slice of ho-hum hokum.

Ballerina will start streaming on Netflix on October 6.

I was kinda hoping someone would call me out for posting Ballerina-Netflix (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?72614-Ballerina-Netflix) on the John Wick Ballerina (https://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?71539-Ballerina) thread, then I was going to split them, but as this premieres tomorrow, I'll just split these now.