Yesterday
Movie Review:
Synopsis:
In 2020, in a newly-unified Korea, a SWAT team struggles
to track down a super-human serial killer nicknamed Goliath,
who’s coolly dispatching his victims along the former
border between North and South. But Goliath has a secret
– one that will rock the government to its foundations
If you
fully understand the complexities of the plot of “Yesterday,”
a new Korean sci-fi action movie, you deserve some sort
of medal.
I’ll
try my best, though. There is a serial killer on the loose
killing scientists. This leads to an investigation led by
Seok (Seung-woo Kim), who
accidentally shoots his kidnapped son, who was trying to
escape the clutches of the killer. Later, the chief of police
is kidnapped, and her daughter
joins in the investigation. She is well trained and ambitious,
like Clarice Starling without the emotion.
That
is only the film’s set up. Later (or earlier…
or somewhere along the line) we are introduced to the concept
of cloning, and the rights of the
clones. This concept, as well as the visual appearance of
the futuristic city that the film takes place in, is inspired,
to say the least, by “Blade Runner,” which had
androids instead of clones.
The
film is directed by Yun-Su Jeon, a man with a good eye for
visuals; the film looks fine. The problem with the film,
it seems, is it tries to do to
much; there is a lot of action, shooting and explosions,
sometimes during battles where I was not even entirely sure
who was fighting whom, and why they were bothering, and
there is also a look at cloning in the future, as
well as a sort of study into the personalities of the main
characters.
While I admire films that mix intelligence and ideas with
action (“Minority Report,” the best film of
last year, is a fine example), I think I need to
have some time to breathe, and I also need to be able to
know exactly what is going on. Keeping up with the plot
is even more exhausting than keeping up with the action.
“Yesterday”
is set mainly in 2020, in a unified Korea. It begins though,
in 1990, where the scientists who are later to be killed
off are picked for a special project, and some children
disappear. The film starts off with a
fight scene that made me think of the madness of “Black
Hawk Down.” The confusion was part of the point of
“Black Hawk Down,” here it is a
distraction that takes much of the thrill (and all of the
suspense) from the action scenes.
“Yesterday”
requires a lot of attention and thought to follow the story,
but it isn’t really worth it. Yun Su-Jeon, I’m
sure, has good films in him;
what he needs to do now is find a story that he can explore
more fully, without losing the audience. The film has split
audiences in Korea. I do not hate it, but I did not particularly
enjoy the experience of watching it; I ended up admiring
aspects of it rather than enjoying it. I was looking at
it rather than watching it.
While
I think there could be a perfectly good character study
about clones set in the future, or a perfectly good action
films set in a world with
clones and complex characters, the film tries to be both,
never quite choosing what its main ambition is. Is it just
trying to tell a story in
its own way? Maybe, and maybe you’ll enjoy its story,
if you can keep up. I tried my best to, but didn’t
find the experience particularly rewarding.
**
(out of 5)
Adam
Whyte
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