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Typhoon (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:32
Fresh:7
Rotten:25
Average Rating:4.2/10
Consensus: A pseudo-political thriller on the fritz, Typhoon drowns in its own heavy handedness and silly acting.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong violence and brief language.
Runtime: 2 hrs 4 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Jun 2, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $114,607
Synopsis: Hailing from South Korea, director Kyung-Taek Kwak (FRIEND) brings some explosive subject matter to the silver screen with TYPHOON. Kwak follows in the tradition of directors such as John Woo (HARD... Hailing from South Korea, director Kyung-Taek Kwak (FRIEND) brings some explosive subject matter to the silver screen with TYPHOON. Kwak follows in the tradition of directors such as John Woo (HARD BOILED) and Takashi Miike (DEAD OR ALIVE), molding a fast-paced action thriller that manages to divide its time between visceral set pieces and intriguing plot developments. Sin (Jang Dong-Gun) is from North Korea and still feels the effects of his parents' slaying at the hands of brutal South Korean tormentors, who refused to allow Sin's family to move into the country when he was a kid. Sin plans to destroy both North and South Korea in the ultimate act of vengeance, and his acquisition of some potentially deadly nuclear waste helps further his maniacal dreams. Jang Se-jong (Jung-Jae Lee) is a South Korean native whose naval training is called upon when he is given the task of tackling Sin, and director Kwak draws on a strong supporting cast to act out some explosive and bloody battles as the two men go head-to-head. Kwak takes the eyebrow-raising decision to have his cast speak in English for most of the film, and some of the lines could possibly have benefited from a little more work in the preproduction stage. But TYPHOON isn't meant to be Shakespeare, and audiences will surely revel in the on-screen pyrotechnics and death-defying stunt work that barely lets up from start to finish. [More]
Starring: Junh-Jae Lee, Dong-Kun Jang, Mi-Yeon Lee, David No
Starring: Junh-Jae Lee, Dong-Kun Jang, Mi-Yeon Lee, David No, David McInnis, Chatthapong Pantanaunkul
Studio: Paramount Classics
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Reviews for Typhoon
[Jang Dong-gun]...is the main attraction, which almost compensates for the film's problems.
what on paper just sounds like adrenaline-pumped nonsense turns out on screen to be a sensitive and surprisingly sombre study of the personal tragedies afflicting the divided Koreas.
Kwak Kyung-taek's overwrought melodrama isn't nearly as artful -- nor as disturbing -- as many of South Korea's other entries in the apparently inexhaustible revenge genre.
A muscular Korean thriller that hearkens back to the monolithic Hollywood blockbusters of a decade or so ago-but not in a good way.
Every gesture feels synthetic, from the back story about North-South separation to massage the emotions of the home audience, to the 24-style globe-hopping nuclear-terrorism premise.
Typhoon is a goofy mess, plenty exhilarating in all the right spots, except for the character ones.
Caught up in a triple vortex of poor scripting, unexciting action and leads you couldn't care less about, the pic boasts good production values but little else.
Anyone anxiously awaiting Under Siege 3 should be thrilled by this Korean bastard child of Michael Bay and Wolfgang Peterson ... at their worst.
An exhausting combination of generic thriller, political tract and sentimental weepie.
In Typhoon, there are plenty of guns being fired in front of the camera, but behind it [director] Kwak apparently had his safety catch in place.
A reasonably entertaining, very Korean take on the kind of stuff Jerry Bruckheimer produces by reflex -- and that's in no way an insult to either Bruckheimer or Typhoon.
Pure action-thriller adventure is ruined with an overly melodramatic second half.
It loses its sense of political urgency by relying on melodramatic clichés (the bad guy has a dying sister) and rhythms that are all too familiar from the big-budget American films it sets out to emulate.
The action comes fast and thick, and the sentimentality reaches near-operatic proportions.
Ambitious and impressive, both in its provocative themes and superb production design using striking sets and locations in Korea, Russia and Thailand, this handsome epic amply rewards audiences willing to go the distance.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 77% 77% | The Hangover |
| 88% 88% | Inglourious Basterds |
| 66% 66% | Public Enemies |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 90% 90% | District 9 |
| 86% 86% | 500 Days of Summer |
| 63% 63% | Extract |
| 06% 06% | All About Steve |
| 78% 78% | It Might Get Loud |
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