Watching Oldboy feels like you’re watching a history lesson on the projector in your seventh grade class, according to Paloma Sharma.
Hollywood is clearly outsourcing. The remake bug seems to have bitten Spike Lee quite hard.
Lee’s Oldboy is a remake of South Korean director Park Chan-wook’s legendary film of the same name, which was further based on Garon Tsuchiya and Nobuaki Minegishi’s Manga graphic which, again, has the same title.
Oldboy stars Josh Brolin as Joe Doucett, a divorced father and advertising executive who moonlights as a drunkard and womanizer.
After failing to close a deal because he hit on his client’s girlfriend, Joe finds himself out of a job and wanders the streets inebriated until he finally blacks out.
When he wakes up, Joe finds himself in captivity, where he finds out that he is the prime suspect in the rape and murder of his ex-wife and that his daughter has been adopted by another couple. Joe remains captive for 20 years until one day he is released as abruptly as he was captured. But the questions haunt him. Who would want to kidnap and torture him, and why? Most importantly -- why did they let him go?
Brolin will probably be able to save his career after this debacle thanks to some decent acting -- if you can get over the first attempt at pretending to be drunk -- the same cannot be said for Sharlton Copley who plays Joe’s arch nemesis.
Copley might have blown you away in Elysium but he will make you snort your popcorn out through your nose as you try to breathe between fits of laughter once you hear his British accent.
Elizabeth Olsen stars as Marie, Joe’s love interest, and is constantly found simpering on the sidelines. Olsen’s vulnerable female character with a pained past has been done so many times in revenge thrillers that I could yawn.
I honestly do not understand what Spike Lee was thinking. Although Oldboy is not a shot-to-shot remake, it has nothing much to add to the previous