“The Divine Move 2: The Wrathful” Theatrical Poster
Director: Khan Lee
Cast: Kwon Sang-Woo, Kim Hee-Won, Kim Sung-Kyun, Heo Sung-Tae, Woo Do-Hwan, Won Hyun-Joon, Park Sang-Hoon, Jung In-Gyeom, Stephanie Lee
Running Time: 106 min.
By Paul Bramhall
Since Korean cinema started to gain international recognition in the late 90’s and early 00’s, sequels have never really been a part of the industries repertoire, and when they have, they’ve mostly felt unneeded. It’s safe to say nobody was really clamouring for follow-ups to the likes of Attack the Gas Station, Friend, and Tazza, and their arrival was greeted by a muted response combined with low box office returns. 2014’s The Divine Move also feels like it fits into this category, and while it came long after Korean cinema had asserted itself as a force to be reckoned with, like the Korean Wave classics mentioned, nobody was expecting a sequel to it.
5 years later though, and that’s what we have with The Divine Move 2: The Wrathful, although technically it’s billed as a prequel. The prequel billing only relates to the late 90’s era its set in, offering up a new set of characters, with only the fact that the story revolves around the game of Go connecting it to the original. The opening introduces us to a villainous master Go player played by Jung In-gyeom (The Negotiation, Assassination), who has an unhealthy fondness for the underage girl he’s been giving pocket money too for cleaning his house. After In-gyeom forces himself on her which leads to tragedy, her younger brother challenges him to a game of Go, but he crumbles under the pressure Continue reading →
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