The Villainess
The Villainess (Korean: 악녀, romanized: Ak Nyeo) is a 2017 South Korean action thriller film directed by Jung Byung-gil, starring Kim Ok-vin.[2] The film had its world premiere at the 70th Cannes Film Festival in May 2017.[3][4][5]
The Villainess | |
---|---|
Hangul | 악녀 |
Hanja | 惡女 |
Revised Romanization | Aknyeo |
Directed by | Jung Byung-gil |
Written by | Jung Byung-gil Jung Byeong-sik |
Produced by | Moon Young-hwa |
Starring | Kim Ok-vin Shin Ha-kyun |
Cinematography | Park Jung-hoon |
Edited by | Heo Sun-mi |
Music by | Koo Ja-wan |
Production company | Independent Filmmakers Group BFG |
Distributed by | Next Entertainment World |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 129 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Box office | US$8.8 million[1] |
According to Jung, the movie was inspired by La Femme Nikita by Luc Besson, which he had seen at the age of 10.[6][7]
Plot
Sook-hee, a highly skilled assassin, enters a hallway and kills numerous people before being surrounded by cops and smiling. Later, Sook-Hee is drugged and taken to South Korea's intelligence agency, who provide her plastic surgery. To give her a new start, they also fake her death and assign her a new name: Chae Yeon-soo.
Yeon-soo learns that she is pregnant, and the agency's leader, Kwon-sook, offers her freedom if she trains with them and works as their agent for ten years. She accepts and while in training, gives birth to a daughter, Eun-hye. Having completed her first assignment, Yeon-soo is given an apartment to share with her daughter. Unknown to Yeon-soo, Kwon-sook places an agent named Jung Hyun-soo in the apartment next door, who is to befriend Yeon-soo and keep tabs on her. After a few meetings, Yeon-soo and Hyun-soo fall for each other. Later, Yeon-soo is sent on her first "assignment". The target she kills turns out to be the father of a young girl. This triggers the memories of her past
Past: A 7 year old Sook-Hee witnesses her father's death but does not get a look at the killer's face; she only hears him whistling. Years later, Sook-Hae tries to kill Jang-Chun, a man with yellow teeth, believing him to be the killer, but gets captured and beaten. While beating her, Jang-Chun tells her he did not kill her father. He eventually sells Sook-hee to a prostitution ring. She is about to be assaulted by a client when someone named Lee Joong-sang arrives and rescues her, while also killing Jang-Chun.
Joong-sang decides to train Sook-hee to be a killing machine, and she becomes devoted to him. The two eventually get married. Sook-hee is willing to let go of her thirst for revenge if she can live a normal life with him. Seeing his trained assassin would no longer be of much use, Joong-sang sets up an act. While on their honeymoon, he fakes saving a gang member called Choi Chun-Mo and stages his own death. When Sook-hee learns about Joong-sang's "death", she goes on a killing rampage and takes out a whole gang that was known to hate Joong-sang. Joong-sang expects her to die killing his rivals, but they end up being no match to her.
Present: While on a mission with another agent named Min-ju, Yeon-soo is caught stealing a phone. Min-ju is killed in the ensuing fight. The stolen phone contains documents about Choi Chun-Mo and the agency is worried that since Yeon-soo knew him, she may be a double-agent. Hyun-soo comforts her and this brings them closer together. The agency wants Yeon-soo to kill her next target from a wedding catering company, so they arrange a wedding between her and Hyun-soo. Aiming her rifle out a window, Yeon-soo finds out her target is Joong-sang.
Shocked that he is still alive, she fails to kill him. Joong-sang backtracks the location from which he was attacked and identifies Yeon-soo as Sook-hee. He meets with her and reveals that Hyun-soo is actually an undercover agent. Joong-sang's gang meets Hyun-soo and Eun-hye. Hyun-soo reveals that Eun-hye is, in fact, Joong-sang's daughter, hoping for all the killings to stop. However, Joong-sang does not care about this revelation and plants a bomb near them. While reaching her apartment, Yeon-soo watches the bomb go off. Hyun-soo and her daughter die.
Consumed with revenge, Yeon-soo tracks down Joong-sang to a parking garage and kills many of his men. She confronts Joong-sang, who escapes to the street and meets with his remaining henchmen. They all speed off in a shuttle bus. Yeon-soo chases after them, boards the bus and holds an axe over Joong-sang's head. He puts his head down and starts whistling the same tune she heard when her father died, revealing that Joong-sang is his killer. Yeon-soo kills him with the axe. Before walking out of the wreckage with the police surrounding her, Yeon-soo smiles.
Cast
- Kim Ok-vin as Sook-hee / Chae Yeon-soo
- Min Ye-ji as young Sook-hee
- Shin Ha-kyun as Lee Joong-sang
- Sung Joon as Jung Hyun-soo
- Kim Seo-hyung as Kwon-sook
- Jo Eun-ji as Kim Sun
- Lee Seung-joo as Choon-mo
- Son Min-ji as Min-joo
- Kim Yeon-woo as Eun-hye
Cameo
- Jung Hae-kyun as Jang Chun
- Park Chul-min as Sook-hee's father
- Kim Hye-na as training female rookie
Release
The Villainess was released in South Korean cinemas on June 8, 2017.
According to the distributor Next Entertainment World the film was sold prior to the local release to 115 countries including North America, South America, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Australia, Taiwan and the Philippines.[8] Later it was sold to additional territories which includes Japan, China, Singapore, India increasing to a total of 136 countries worldwide.[9]
Reception
The Villainess received a four-minute standing ovation at Cannes Film Festival.[10]
The film was also screened at the 16th New York Asian Film Festival which was held from June 30 to July 16, 2017. At the festival, the film received the Daniel E. Craft Award for Excellence in Action Cinema.[11]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 84% based on 85 reviews with an average rating of 6.84/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Villainess offers enough pure kinetic thrills to satisfy genre enthusiasts -- and carve out a bloody niche for itself in modern Korean action cinema."[12] Review aggregator website Metacritic gave the film a rating of 64 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[13]
Awards and nominations
Award | Category | Recipient | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
16th New York Asian Film Festival | Daniel E. Craft Award for Excellence in Action Cinema | The Villainess | Won | [14] |
21st Fantasia International Film Festival | GURU Prize for Best Action Feature Film | Silver | [15] | |
26th Buil Film Awards | Best Actress | Kim Ok-bin | Nominated | [16] |
Best Cinematography | Park Jung-hoon | Won | ||
1st The Seoul Awards | Best Actress | Kim Ok-bin | Nominated | [17] |
Best Supporting Actress | Kim Seo-hyung | Nominated | ||
54th Grand Bell Awards | Best Actress | Kim Ok-bin | Nominated | [18] |
Best Lighting | Lee Hae-won | Nominated | ||
Best Cinematography | Park Jung-hoon | Won | ||
Best Editing | Heo Sun-mi | Nominated | ||
Technical Award | The Villainess | Won | ||
38th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Cinematography and Lighting | Park Jung-hoon & Lee Hae-won | Nominated | [19] |
Best Technical Achievement - Stunts | Kwon Ki-deok | Won | ||
Best Actress | Kim Ok-bin | Nominated | ||
18th Busan Film Critics Awards | Technical Award | Park Jung-hoon | Won | [20] |
Kwon Kwi-deok | Won | |||
54th Baeksang Arts Awards | Best Actress | Kim Ok-bin | Nominated | [21] |
23rd Chunsa Film Art Awards | Won | [22] |
TV series
In July 2021, it was announced a TV series based on the film is in development with Amazon with writer Francisca Hu writing and executive producing the pilot.[23]
References
- "Aknyeo (2017)". The Numbers. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
- ""The Villainess" Kim Ok-bin Swinging Her Swords". HanCinema. April 27, 2017.
- "Two Korean Films Invited to Compete at Cannes Film Festival". HanCinema. April 14, 2017.
- "THE VILLAINESS Singled Out for Terrific Action at Cannes". koreanfilm.or.kr. May 25, 2017.
- "Korean Film to be Remade into U.S. TV Series".
- Dunlevy, T'Cha (2017-07-12). "Fantasia film fest: The Villainess is more Nikita than Kill Bill". Montreal Gazette. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
- "Q&A: Writer/Director Byung-gil Jung Talks 'The Villainess'". Modern Horrors. 2017-08-22. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
- "'The Villainess' presold to 115 countries". Yonhap News Agency. May 24, 2017.
- "Korean action film presold to 136 countries". Yonhap News Agency. May 30, 2017.
- Jeong Yu-jin (May 22, 2017). "[N1★칸] '악녀' 김옥빈 처절 액션, 칸 홀렸다…4분 기립 박수 :: 네이버 TV연예". News1 (in Korean).
- Jeremy Kay (June 5, 2017). "'The Villainess' to close New York Asian Film Festival". Screen Daily.
- "The Villainess (Ak-Nyeo) (2017)". Retrieved 28 May 2020 – via www.rottentomatoes.com.
- "The Villainess Reviews - Metacritic". Metacritic. August 25, 2017. Retrieved June 25, 2018.
- "Excellence in Action Cinema Award for JUNG Byung-gil in New York".
- "Fantasia 2017 Awards: Agnieszka Holland's SPOOR Takes Top Prize". screenanarchy.com. 3 August 2017. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
- "A TAXI DRIVER Tops Buil Film Awards". Korean Film Biz Zone. October 17, 2017.
- "'제1회 더 서울어워즈' 노미네이트 공개, 이보영 지성 김희선 조승우 등 화려한 라인업 공개". SE Daily. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
- "Stars shine at Daejong awards: A successful year for film industry celebrated at annual ceremony". Korea JoongAng Daily. October 27, 2017.
- "[공식입장] '제38회 청룡영화상' 후보 공개, '불한당'vs'택시' 대격돌" (in Korean). Sports Chosun. 2017-11-06.
- "부산영화평론가협회상". Naver.
- "제54회 백상예술대상, TV·영화 각 부문별 수상 후보자 공개". JTBC (in Korean). April 6, 2018.
- "[23rd 춘사영화제 종합]'남한산성' 최우수감독상 수상…최희서 11관왕 달성". Herald Corporation (in Korean). May 18, 2018.
- "'The Villainess' TV Adaptation In The Works At Amazon From Francisca Hu, Skybound Entertainment & Contents Panda". Deadline. Retrieved July 8, 2021.