Oldboy-2013
Director Spike Lee
Starring Josh Brolin, Elizabeth Olsen
Scott’s Review #97
Reviewed July 8, 2014
Grade: B-
Oldboy (2013) is a United States remake of the original South Korean film from 2003 that tells the story of a successful advertising executive named Joe Doucett, played wonderfully by Josh Brolin.
He is mysteriously kidnapped and kept prisoner in a private one-room facility, where he is served the same three meals daily for twenty years, while framed for the murder of his wife.
Through the years he is kept abreast of his daughter’s life events through videos. He is just as mysteriously released after twenty years and sets out to exact revenge on his former captors.
Brolin is quite charismatic and appealing (kudos for his multiple nude scenes) in the lead role and it is nice to see Michael Imperiolo in an off-beat supporting role.
The premise is interesting but the type of film where everything that happens is plot-driven, the villains completely manipulate events, and the film becomes implausible and, via flashbacks, reminds me of the CBS series Cold Case.
Forgetting that Brolin’s character becomes superhero-like and chiseled after twenty years in captivity, the film is a good, solid, fun, thrill-ride, and bloody at times.
It has aspects of a nice whodunit to a point. It has so many plot holes that I lost count, but somehow it is enjoyable at the same time.
Oldboy is never boring and even unpredictable at times.
Many questions run through the viewer’s head. Who is the villain? What could the villain’s motivation be? Friend or foe?
Is the film unrealistic, and ludicrous at times, but also highly enjoyable?