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Soo (film)

Soo
Soo film poster.jpg
Hangul
Revised Romanization Su
McCune–Reischauer Su
Directed by Yoichi Sai
Produced by Shin Beom-su
Hwang In-tae
Written by Lee Seung-hwan
Lee Joon-il
Yoichi Sai
Starring Ji Jin-hee
Kang Sung-yeon
Oh Man-seok
Moon Sung-keun
Music by Lee Byung-woo
Cinematography Kim Seong-bok
Edited by Lee Eun-su
Distributed by Cinema Service
Release date
  • March 22, 2007 (2007-03-22)
Running time
122 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean
Box office US$1,275,162

Soo is a 2007 South Korean film directed by Yoichi Sai (also known as Choi Yang-il).

Tae-soo tries to steal from a gang. The gang catches Tae-soo's brother Tae-jin instead. The incident causes the brothers to separate. Tae-soo becomes a mob fixer and an assassin. Tae-jin becomes a police detective. When a call brings the brothers together, they get ready for brotherly bonding, but Tae-jin is killed. Tae-soo decides to get revenge on his brother's killer.

Soo was released in South Korea on March 22, 2007, and was ranked fifth at the domestic box office on its opening weekend, grossing US$795,086. As of April 15, 2007, the film had a gross revenue of US$1,275,162.

Kevin Ma of Love HK Film reviewed the film saying, "Soo's concept is somewhat successful on paper because it doesn't take the easy way to revenge. In execution, Soo is wildly uneven, moving between slow exposition scenes of plot development and raw, brutal fight scenes dominated by chaos. However, it remains a compelling and violent action film thanks to Sai's fluid camerawork during the action scenes and the performances of his actors. Special kudos go to star Ji Jin-Hee, who sheds his romantic leading man reputation to become a believable killer who can stab and punch his way out of a fight. Sai also sheds the expectations put on him after Blood and Bones by delivering an arthouse spin on a straightforward revenge film. Still, the film's ultimate effectiveness remains highly debatable."

Derek Elley of Variety reviewed the film saying, "A onetime killer hits the road to self-redemption by tracking down his brother's killer in "Soo," a coolly told, often brutal yarn that remains strangely involving despite its flaws. High-concept idea—a twin brother takes on his dead cop brother's identity to solve a crime he's also been hunted for by the cops—has strong remake potential. Pic itself, which bombed on South Korean release in March, is more ancillary or film week fare."

Lee Hyo-won of The Korea Times reviewed the film saying, "Soo is a memorable film. In Korean, "soo" means water, the very essence of life. Throughout the film Soo seeks to free his brother from "han" or spiteful grudge, as well as his own soul from staggering guilt. Even the Bad Guy wishes to spare his father the fires of hell. Choi's lasting imagery of water washing away blood suggests the pervasive human instinct to survive and the desire to purge oneself of one's impurities."


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