I watched 1999's "Life and Death" today. It is said that this is the beginning of the Korean film that year, and it has a milestone significance. Standard commercial movies, with a lot of elements such as suspense, love, gunfights, and thrillers. Director Kang Di-kyu is worthy of being the son of Hollywood, and the "Korea's Spielberg" deserves its name.
The unified interpretation of the country has become the main axis of the whole plot. The ideological evaluations of the North and South of the ROK, North and South are level and sympathetic to each other. This profound historical reflection is subtly integrated into the old-fashioned plot. At the same time, the warmth and fragility of human nature are tightly wrapped in the political theme.
Several chase scenes and gun battle scenes were shot smoothly and sharply, but the camera shake was a little too much. The agents are invulnerable one by one, stylish and suave. When he was young, Song Kanghao was heroic, and as a supporting role, he was just right. In my opinion, this is the only movie where he died halfway through.
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