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Korea (DVD) |
Henney plays James Parker, a young Korean man who was adopted by
American parents 20 years ago. Now grown up, James enlists in the army
to search for his biological parents in Korea, despite some opposition
from his family. "You might regret it after you find them," his adopted
Korean sister warns, suggesting that these kinds of searches tend to
end unhappily. After going on TV and being reported in the newspaper, a
priest eventually contacts James and helps him meet his father for the
first time. However, his father is a convicted murderer on death row,
limiting their reunion to only a meeting through prison glass.
Even though the film is based on the true story of Aaron Bates,
director Hwang and his co-writer Yoon Jin-Ho amp up the drama, posing a
true acting challenge for what is only Henney's second film starring
role. Here, the novice actor has to cry, scream, smile, and even sing,
stretching every possible emotion out of James Parker. Henney does step
up and delivers a believable performance, thanks to the numerous "give
me an award" moments provided throughout. While that's good news for
Henney, the various soul-baring moments begin to appear manufactured
for cinematic purposes. By the time James delivers a public monologue
about his feelings in front of passerbys and military police, one
almost expects Henney to simply break the fourth wall and begin
speaking to the audience. Scenes like this don't belong in reality, and
they threaten to wear out their "based on a true story" credibility.
While Henney gets the spotlight for his breakthrough performance,
mentions should also go to Kim Young-Cheol, who plays James' biological
father Nam-Cheol. It's hard to believe that this is the actor who
played the elegantly evil crime boss in A Bittersweet Life.
Kim's performance as the down-and-out Nam-Cheol is heartbreaking,
eliciting sympathy from the first moment his aged face and deformed
body enters the screen. Kim's performance most likely helped Henney
elevate his own performance as well, especially during the several
emotionally intense exchanges in the prison visiting room during the
latter half of the story. Their performances help in making the
emotional scenes work by not crossing the thin line into overacting.
Despite its cookie-cutter melodramatic screenplay, My Father stands up slightly above the rest not only because of two strong lead performances (Yes, Daniel Henney can
act), but also because of surprisingly assured direction by a
first-time director. While everyone has room to improve at any given
point in their careers, I personally cannot wait to see where a bit of
improvement will take Hwang's next film.
(review written by Kevin Ma)
Favorite line from the movie:
"See that? See that? This is my blood, and i beg for this blood to be his. I beg for it, I beg! I don't go to church, and I don't believe in God. But I got down on my knees and I fucking prayed, that this blood is his blood.."
What did I got from this movie:
It seems useless if i watch a movie, if I dont get any message from it. Well, this movie gave me a real deep message. That: Everyone needs a father. Who your father is, that is your identity. Jika kamu tau siapa Bapamu, maka kamu akan tau identitasmu. You can really see from this movie, how he was so desperate to find his father, so he would know his roots...