5.8 /10 1 Votes
Directed by Ha Won-jun Director Won-jun Ha Editor Jin-Hee Jeong | 5.7/10 IMDb Running time 99 minutes Initial release 23 January 2014 Cinematography Yun Jong-ho | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Written by Ha Won-junKim Su-yeonAhn Jong-jun Starring Kim Jeong-hoonCha Ji-heonMyung Kae-nam Release date March 23, 2014 (2014-03-23) (South Korea) Cast Kim Jeong Hoon, Gye‑nam Myeong, Hwang Young‑Hee, Deok‑jae Jo, Taekwang Hwang Similar Tinker Ticker, Spy Girl, Stray Dog, My Boss - My Hero, Cafe Seoul |
Stray dogs trailer new release
Stray Dogs (Hangul: 들개들; RR: deul-gae-deul) is a 2014 South Korean thriller film starring Kim Jeong-hoon, Cha Ji-heon and Myung Kae-nam. It is co-written and directed by first-time director Ha Won-jun.
Contents
- Stray dogs trailer new release
- Stray dogs official teaser 1 2014 taiwanese drama hd
- Plot
- Cast
- Reception
- References
Stray dogs official teaser 1 2014 taiwanese drama hd
Plot
So Yoo-joon (Kim Jeong-hoon) who aspires to be a distinguished reporter is now a third-class reporter. Besides being hounded by vicious loan sharks to pay off his gambling debts, he is also having an affair with Jung-in, the wife of his friend-cum-colleague, who wants to call it quits. Determined to keep her even if he has to kill her husband, he sets out to find him who is on an assignment in an isolated village. While searching for him, his car breaks down and he is stuck at the village.
Although the village seems peaceful, it is hiding a hideous secret – a young woman Kim Eun-hee (Cha Ji-heon), a long time resident, has inadvertently become the sexual plaything for the perverted and pathetic elder village men. When Yoo-joon tries to help Eun-hee, he finds himself on a violent collision course with the locals and the village chief Jang Gi-no (Myung Kae-nam).
Cast
Reception
James Mudge: No film that deals with this kind of subject matter should really be guilt-free enjoyment, and with Wild Dogs, Ha Won-jun is clearly aiming for hard-edged and challenging. To his credit he largely succeeds, and though not really in the same league as Moss or Bedevilled, the film is an effective piece of suspenseful rural nastiness in its own right.
C.J. Wheeler: Stray Dogs is, as best, cynical and stale; and at worst a misogynistic mess ladened with endless exposition and creaky hinges.