Korean Reviews Reviews

Film Review: A Dirty Carnival (2006) by Yoo Ha

A great mix of drama and gangster film

In the golden age of crime thrillers coming out of S. Korea, “” holds a special place, for combining both elements that point directly towards entertainment, and a disillusion about the crime world that frequently crosses over to being ironic.

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Byung-doo is a low-level gangster who tries to take care of his few subordinates and his sick mother and smaller siblings. His financial situation is awful, with his family being on the threshold of eviction and his direct superior, named Sang-cheol, not caring for his problems. Having no other choice, he bypasses him and goes directly to the boss of the gang named Hwang, an act that leaves him with a mission to get rid of the district attorney Park, who is on the hunt for his boss. As his fate seems to change for the better, an old friend named Min-ho resurfaces, who has become a director, and in his wish to shoot a gangster film, he wants information from actual professionals. This meeting leads to a second one, with an old flirt of Byung-doo named Hyun-ju.

directs and pens a film seemingly in the usual motif of the rise and fall of a criminal anti-hero inside a gang. However, he enriches it with plenty of drama and he focuses, in essence, on the repercussions of violence and criminal life in the psychosynthesis of the main character, and the way these two aspects keep him from taking care of his family and living a “normal” life. Additionally, he avoids creating a character who only seeks out revenge and brings chaos in his path, but instead one who simply tries to improve his life, initially for financial reasons rather than for authority, and lastly for survival.

The film is set in a very “dark” atmosphere, with the main character offering very few moments of hope in a crime world that is presented in utterly realistic fashion: its members are selfish, schemers, thieves and always willing to kill anybody to ascend the in the ranks of the organization, having violence as their sole mean of solving their differences. At the same time, it satirizes the largely failed effort of the film industry to portray the essence of life in organized crime.

is magnificent as Byung-doo, particularly in the scenes where he attacks his opponents, where he appears truly terrifying. In the more sentimental scenes, his appearance helps him the most to portray his character's vulnerability. However, his best moment comes when he describes to Min-ho the sentiment of stabbing someone, in a cruelly realistic scene. This scene is also the best for who plays Min-ho, magnificently portraying his inner struggle, as he takes advantage of his friendship with Byung-doo. is also good in the role of Hwang, a crime boss with paternalistic behavior.

Choi Hyeon-gi's cinematography help the most in creating the dark world the protagonists inhabit, while Park Gok-ji and Jeong Jin-hee's editing induce the movie with a very fitting, relatively fast pace, that suits the rhythm of the film excellently, and particularly the action scenes, with some of them being audiovisually astonishing

“A Dirty Carnival” is a great mix of drama and gangster film and a true masterpiece of the genre.

About the author

Panos Kotzathanasis

My name is Panos Kotzathanasis and I am Greek. Being a fan of Asian cinema and especially of Chinese kung fu and Japanese samurai movies since I was a little kid, I cultivated that love during my adolescence, to extend to the whole of SE Asia.

Starting from my own blog in Greek, I then moved on to write for some of the major publications in Greece, and in a number of websites dealing with (Asian) cinema, such as Taste of Cinema, Hancinema, EasternKicks, Chinese Policy Institute, and of course, Asian Movie Pulse. in which I still continue to contribute.

In the beginning of 2017, I launched my own website, Asian Film Vault, which I merged in 2018 with Asian Movie Pulse, creating the most complete website about the Asian movie industry, as it deals with almost every country from East and South Asia, and definitely all genres.

You can follow me on Facebook and Twitter.

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