Review: 'No Other Choice' is Park Chan-Wook's brutal and morbidly funny take on downsizing, and what Lee Byung-hun's desperate character will do for a job
Park Chan-Wook’s new movie, the darkly comic “No Other Choice,” pairs well with “Decision to Leave” to represent the Korean director at his most down-to-earth — but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t carry many of the outlandish flourishes and psychological horrors Park has brought to such movies as “Oldboy,” “Thirst” and “The Handmaiden.:
Lee Byung-hun — who worked with Park early in their careers, notably the 2000 thriller “Joint Security Area,” before Lee became a global star via “Squid Game” — plays Man-su, who has worked at a Korean paper company for decades. He argues that experience should count for something, but the American corporate types who buy the company don’t care, and Man-su is laid off.
Man-su goes through the different stages of post-employment indignity, including group therapy sessions and classes in how to present oneself in a job interview. But with few other paper companies hiring, Man-su knows the competition is tough, in part because they’re the people he used to work with. So Man-su slowly comes to create a new plan: Eliminating the competition, literally.
Park puts Lee through his own indignities, staging scenes that are both brutally funny and just plain brutal in their depiction of Man-su slowly rationalizing murder and discovering his ineptitude at pulling it off.
The movie is bolstered by strong source material: Park and his three co-writers are adapting “The Ax,” a novel by American detective novelist Donald E. Westlake. Park doesn’t remove the menace Westlake’s hard-boiled plotting, but he adds a strain of morbid humor — particularly in Man-su’s stakeouts and his efforts to apply his paper-making managerial skills to the problem solving necessary to kill someone and not get caught.
Of course, what makes “No Other Choice” resonate is that it’s not something that only might happen to someone in South Korea. (It’s telling that an earlier adaptation of “The Ax” was made in France two decades ago.) Anyone fearing for their job in today’s corporate world can imagine being in the same position as Man-su, and making the same desperate choices.
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‘No Other Choice’
★★★1/2
Opens Friday, January 2, at the Broadway Centre Cinemas (Salt Lake City). Rated R for violence, language and some sexual content. Running time: 139 minutes; in Korean with subtitles.