Oldboy: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
Line 37: Line 37:
* [[Face Death with Dignity]]: {{spoiler|Woo-jin}} takes a hot shower and puts on his best suit before shooting himself.
* [[Face Death with Dignity]]: {{spoiler|Woo-jin}} takes a hot shower and puts on his best suit before shooting himself.
* [[Fan Disservice]]: {{spoiler|The first time audiences see the sex scene between Dae-Su and Mido, it's probably tantalizing. Once they're hit with the revelation of Mido being his daughter, the scene is much less appealing in retrospect or upon repeated viewings.}}
* [[Fan Disservice]]: {{spoiler|The first time audiences see the sex scene between Dae-Su and Mido, it's probably tantalizing. Once they're hit with the revelation of Mido being his daughter, the scene is much less appealing in retrospect or upon repeated viewings.}}
* [[555]]: Averted, as the address - both the street number and PO box - to Dae-su's daughter's foster parents in reality belongs to [http://www.firsthotels.com/en/Our-hotels/Sweden/Stockholm/First-Hotel-Amaranten/ a hotel in Stockholm].
* [[555]]: Averted, as the address - both the street number and PO box - to Dae-su's daughter's foster parents in reality belongs to [https://web.archive.org/web/20110811023601/http://www.firsthotels.com/en/Our-hotels/Sweden/Stockholm/First-Hotel-Amaranten/ a hotel in Stockholm].
* [[Gambit Roulette]]: Woo-jin. So much.
* [[Gambit Roulette]]: Woo-jin. So much.
* [[Go Mad from the Revelation]]: Dae-su, after learning he has been framed for the murder of his wife.
* [[Go Mad from the Revelation]]: Dae-su, after learning he has been framed for the murder of his wife.

Revision as of 03:34, 19 September 2018

Laugh and the world laughs with you. Weep and you weep alone.

A South Korean movie very loosely based on a Japanese manga of the same name, and is the second and most well-known installment of Park Chan-wook's Vengeance Trilogy, which begins with Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and ends with Sympathy for Lady Vengeance. The film also has several parallels to The Count of Monte Cristo, as well as Shout Outs to Titus Andronicus.

Oh Dae-su is an alcoholic businessman with a wife and daughter who is released by the police after a night of drunken misconduct, and then is abruptly kidnapped without a trace. Locked inside a hotel room, completely cut off from the outside world except for a TV, and drugged with knock-out gas every so often, he eventually learns that during his disappearance his wife has been killed, and he has been framed as the murderer. Enraged by his predicament, he finds ways to pass the time, writing his memoirs, training his fists and slowly inching towards his eventual escape.

But just days before his long-awaited breakout fifteen years later, he is just as mysteriously released, with nice clothes, money, a cell phone, a severely weakened psyche, a fugitive status and a million unanswered questions. With the help of a female Japanese chef named Mido and one of his old computer-geek friends, he tries to piece together the scattered clues of who took his life away from him, cutting down anyone who gets in his path.

An English-language remake has been in development for some time, and Spike Lee has been chosen to direct with Josh Brolin in the lead role.

Since this is a movie that has some major twists and surprises, watch out for spoilers.


Tropes used in Oldboy include:

Lee Woo-Jin: "You weren't drugged. You just forgot. It wasn't important to you."