Revenge is a dish best served cold, someone once said. In Kim Ji-woon's I Saw The Devil, revenged is served so fucking cold it's like a block of ice smashed across your face. Kim Ji-woon takes the tried and true serial killer formula and flips it on it disturbed head with fantastic results. Korean superstars Lee Byung-hun (Bittersweet Life, The Good, The Bad and the Weird) and Choi Min-sik (Old Boy) headline this sucker punch of a movie that one wasn't expecting from the man who delivered Tale of Two Sisters and most recently The Good, The Bad and the Weird. Lee plays a secret service agent who's wife has been brutally slain by a sick and twisted serial killer played by Choi. With the help of the girl's father, who's a retired police chief, Lee is able to track down the closest suspects and delivers a swift beat down before moving on to the next in line. Finally he's able to track down Choi at his slaughter house and figure out that he is indeed the killer he's been looking for. But instead of killing him right there and then he beats the living shit out of him and lets him go, but not before inserting a small GPS unit in to him. After that a demented game of catch and release takes place where Choi, who has no idea why this man is after him, gets his ass handed to him and then patched up to be ready for the next round. But while Choi is a demented and a disgusting person he's not stupid and later on he's on to what's going on and things turn around for the worse for Lee.
It's not often that you sit in a movie theater and every single person in there winches and groans because of what is on the screen. It's no wonder that South Korean authorities wanted extensive cuts to be made to the film, it's pretty damn violent and mean spirited. But it could be very easy to do those cuts and not lose the power of the film and Ji-woon manages to infuse pitch black humor in to the story as well that balance things out. The film also caters to the viewers who want to see harm come to Choi's character as it revels in the torture that Lee performs on him. They might just not be ready to the excesses of violence that the film portrays.
The performances in the film are top notch, Choi might be hamming it up a little bit but it sort of fits. Lee is cool as a cucumber, totally set on horrible and slow murder.
I Saw The Devil is a nut kicker of a film, powerful and brutal, funny and sad and not the torture porn that it might sound like it is.
More from I Saw The Devil
- Reviews: I SAW THE DEVIL Blu-ray Review
- News: [WINNER!] Now You Can Say I SAW THE DEVIL On DVD With A Giveaway From Magnet Releasing!
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- Reviews: I SAW THE DEVIL review
- Reviews: I SAW THE DEVIL Review
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- News: Weinberg Reviews I SAW THE DEVIL
- News: Red-Band Brutality In New I SAW THE DEVIL Clip
- News: Hey Canada! D Films Wants You To See I SAW THE DEVIL Early!
- News: Hey NYC! Kim Ji-woon Retrospective starts Feb. 25th at BAM!
- Reviews: Sundance 2011: I SAW THE DEVIL Review
- News: New US One Sheet For I SAW THE DEVIL
- Reviews: Sitges 2010: I SAW THE DEVIL Review
- News: Magnet Releasing Picks Up I SAW THE DEVIL For US Distribution!
- News: I SAW THE DEVIL Trimmed By Seven Cuts, Not By Seven Minutes.
- News: What Did It Cost For Kim Ji-Woon's I SAW THE DEVIL To Gain Release? Seven Minutes.
- News: Kim Ji-Woon's I SAW THE DEVIL Cleared For Release In Korea
- News: Kim Ji-Woon's I SAW THE DEVIL Banned From Public Theaters In Korea.
- News: Full trailer for 'I Saw the Devil' [악마를 보았다]
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- Galleries: I Saw The Devil


It's also a hot mess, with jarring tone shifts (really? The black humour balances out?!?!?) and no soul. And to get the plot where he wants it to go, Ji-Woon turns the protagonist from a smart, calculating man (who's also a POS, allowing an innocent nurse to be raped as part of his cat-and-mouse chase) into a complete moron who takes forever to get to the most obvious conclusion one could get to.
What started out as a dark, brooding, seven-esque thriller radically switches to an over the top, dumb cat-and-mouse game, to an even more over the top farce and finally into sequence after sequence of stupidity.
I can't wait to see Min-sik back with a hammer in his hand!
I heard that this was the edited version they played at Fantastic Fest, could be wrong though...
Hey Swarez is there another kid actor in this movie that is part of the story line, yet again??