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Showing posts with label Ji-young Yoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ji-young Yoo. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2025

MOVIE REVIEW: UNTIL DAWN

 






















One year after her sister disappeared, Clover and her friends head to the remote valley where she vanished to search for answers. Exploring an abandoned visitor center, they soon encounter a masked killer who murders them one by one. However, when they mysteriously wake up at the beginning of the same night, they're forced to relive the terror over and over again.

Director: David F. Sandberg

Cast: Ella Rubin, Michael Cimino, Odessa A'zion, Ji-young Yoo, Belmont Cameli, Peter Stormare

Release Date: April 25, 2025

Genre: Drama, Horror

Rated R for strong bloody horror violence, gore and language throughout.

Runtime: 1h 43m

Review:

Until Dawn is a fun horror mashup of countless 80's slasher tropes paired with a gorier version of Edge of Tomorrow's rinse and repeat conceit.  Since I'm not personally familiar with the game this film is based on, I can't speak to how this works as an adaptation but as a horror film it has a wickedly fun tone that embraces the bloody carnage on display.  Once the film sets up the general premise, director David F. Sandberg moves the action along at a steady pace by delivering a string of effective jump scares and inventive kills.  A handful of those moments are truly inspired and sure to make old school gore hounds grin with glee as the splatter hits the screen.  There are a few that don't work quite as well but the film moves by them so quickly that it doesn't negatively impact on the overall experience too badly.  The cast of fresh-faced actors is well aware of the kind of film they’re in and lean into their roles with a knowing wink and just have fun with it.  The script is a bit clunky in spots with cast doing their best to deliver convincing reads of slow rolled realizations and revelations.  Ella Rubin makes for a fine lead while the supporting cast is capable even if the script doesn't give them a ton of depth. There isn't much to them and if any of the characters annoy you too much there's the fallback of watching them die multiple times. Odessa A'zion with her raspy voice, green eyes and messy hair leaves the most noticeable impression of ensemble that feels vaguely reminiscent of late 90's slashers like I Know What You Did Last Summer and Urban Legend.  Long-time character actor, Peter Stormare feels terribly underutilized here, which feels like a misstep since he could have brought so much more to his role.  Missteps aside, Until Dawn is like cinematic fast food that makes for a bit of a mindless treat for horror fans. 

B-

Friday, April 4, 2025

MOVIE REVIEW: FREAKY TALES

 






















An NBA star, a corrupt cop, a female rap duo, teenage punks, neo-Nazis and a debt collector embark on a collision course in 1987 Oakland, Calif.

Director: Ryan Fleck, Anna Boden

Cast: Pedro Pascal, Ben Mendelsohn, Jay Ellis, Normanit, Dominique Thorne, Jack Champion, Ji-young Yoo, Angus Cloud

Release Date: April 4, 2025

Genre: Action, Adventure, Comedy, Crime, Drama

Rated R for strong bloody violence, language throughout including slurs, sexual content and drug use.

Runtime: 1h 47m

Review:

Freaky Tales is a quirky, Interconnected Tarantinoesque anthology that delivers a hefty dose of 80's Bay area nostalgia with increasingly off the wall chapters that benefit from a strong vibe and cast.  Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden borrow elements from a variety of sources for the four chapters that make up the story with noticeable nods to Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill being readily evident and even some sprinkles of Scott Pilgrim in the opening.  The pairs deep love and affection for this time and space seeps through the screen as they touch on everything from the punk and hip-hop scene to dirty cops, Nazis and basketball ninjas.  Some chapters are far more grounded than others with the filmmakers asking you to roll with the punches especially as events get nuttier in the final act.  Like most anthologies, some chapters work better than others with the first two really nailing down the vibe of each setting before stalling out in a more straightforward crime drama with the Pedro Pascal focused third chapter.  That's not to say the third chapter is bad, it just marks a notice shift in the film's tone to establish the connective tissue that brings everything together in its final act.  It’s a minor hiccup but it does have a fun cameo that makes the tonal change easier to deal.  The ensemble cast turns in solid work across the board with Jack Champion and Ji-young Yoo sharing some believable romantic chemistry in the opening act with Normanit and Dominique Thorne bringing a similar authenticity to their friendship in the rap battle portion.  Pedro Pascal is given the least showy role in the whole thing but delivers a solid turn as usual.  Ben Mendelsohn and Jay Ellis are given more fun roles as a sleazy detective and rather lethal point guard.   It all makes Freaky Tales a rather unexpected surprise of a film that's sure to become a cult classic in the years to come.

B+
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