Director: Lee Yong-Joo
Cast: Gong Yoo, Park Bo-Gum, Jo Woo-Jin, Yeon Je-Wook, Lee Un-Jung, Lee Sang-Kyung, Park Byung-Eun, Jang Young-Nam, Kim Jae-Gun
Running Time: 114 min.
By Paul Bramhall
Around the turn of the millennium the Korean film industry saw itself increasingly dabbling in the science fiction genre, with movies like 2001’s 2009 Lost Memories, 2002’s Yesterday, and 2003’s Natural City, and while they all had their moments of inspiration, for the most part they proved to be middling efforts. Now 20 years later, the beginning of the 2020’s seems to indicate a resurgence for Korea’s interest in sci-fi, after being absent for the most part in the preceding 2 decades. In 2021 we got the space adventure Space Sweepers, and the year closed out with the Netflix series The Silent Sea, which followed a mission to retrieve a mysterious sample from the moon that could save the planet. Making it a hat-trick, in the same year we also got Seobok, although notably completed before both Space Sweepers and The Silent Sea, being another production that’s release was much delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Eschewing any adventures into space, Seobok takes the more grounded approach of being set in Seoul, and centers around the title character – a human clone. Played by Park Bo-gum (Coin Locker Girl, The Admiral: Roaring Currents), returning to the big screen having stuck to acting in K-dramas since 2015, Seobok is the result of years of top-secret research – he’s immortal, doesn’t need to sleep, and has brain waves so strong he can perform telekinesis. He’s also been confined to a lab for the entirety of his life, required to have daily injections to supress his ever-evolving cells that would kill him if not kept in check, and seemingly accepting of his place in the world. His cells are also believed to hold the cure for a whole variety of diseases, making him a hot commodity, so when one of the leading Continue reading
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