Two Cops | |
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Two Cops poster
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Hangul | |
Revised Romanization | Tu Kapseu |
McCune–Reischauer | T'u K'apsŭ |
Directed by | Kang Woo-suk |
Produced by | Kang Woo-suk Kwon Yeong-rak Jeon Yang-jun |
Written by | Kim Sung-hong |
Starring |
Ahn Sung-ki Park Joong-hoon Ji Soo-won |
Music by | Choi Kyung-sik |
Cinematography | Jeong Kwang-seok |
Edited by | Kim Hyeon |
Distributed by | Kang Woo-suk Production |
Release date
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Running time
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110 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Two Cops (Hangul: 투캅스; RR: Tu Kapseu) is a 1993 South Korean action/comedy film directed by Kang Woo-suk. It stars Ahn Sung-ki and Park Joong-hoon as a pair of police detectives with different outlooks who end up working on a case together.
The experienced detective Jo has a new partner, Kang who recently graduated from the Police Academy at the top of the class. The idealistic Kang always sticks to his principles and often conflicts with Jo, an amoral cop who always tries to take advantage of his position. Kang tries to win Jo over to his side, but fails. One day, a beautiful woman who works in a bar comes to the police station for help, and Kang falls in love with her. He starts going to the bar often to see her, and begins to become more like Jo. Jo is initially pleased at this, but later begins to experience a dilemma with Kang's change in attitude.
Despite some criticism that its plot was copied from 1984 French film My New Partner, Two Cops became a box office hit upon its release on December 18, 1993. A highly commercial crowd pleaser which at the same time dealt with the serious theme of police corruption, it was the second most-watched Korean film of 1993, after Sopyonje.
The financial success of Two Cops enabled Kang Woo-suk to establish his own film production and distribution company, Cinema Service.
Two sequels came out in succeeding years: Two Cops 2 (1996), and Two Cops 3 (1998).