Director: Kang Yoon-Sung
Cast: Ma Dong-Seok, Yoon Kye-Sang, Jo Jae-Yun, Choi Gwi-Hwa, rk Ji-Hwan, Hong Ki-Joon
Running Time: 121 min.
By Z Ravas
I walked away from 2016’s smash hit Train to Busan with a distinct impression that supporting actor Ma Dong-seok had stolen the movie – no small feat in a film about a train full of rabid zombies! Although I’d caught the actor in plenty of parts before, including Kundo: Age of the Rampant and The Unjust, it was his role as a proud papa-to-be defending his family against the zombie masses that forever endeared Ma Dong-seok to me. Only a year later, he’s back with a role that feels entirely tailored to Dong-seok and his onscreen persona, which is one that’s equal parts lovable teddy bear and hulking bruiser.
The Outlaws is based on the true story of a 2007-era police operation that saw a sweeping round-up of gangs in the Guro District of Seoul. One neighborhood there in particular, Garibong-dong, has long served as a home to many Chinese citizens who have emigrated to Korea seeking economic prosperity. Unfortunately, Seoul’s version of Chinatown is also plagued by criminals and lowlifes, some of whom smuggled themselves into the country to escape Chinese authorities. As the film opens, Ma Dong-seok’s seasoned detective is able to keep the peace on his beat by primarily serving as a mediator between gangs, most of whom are petty hoods just looking for a little extortion money – not drug dealers or murderers. Ma Dong-seok’s laconic style of police work, which occasionally sees him sitting down for tea or sharing a drink at a karaoke bar with organized crime for the sake of brokering a truce, is challenged by the emergence of a nihilistic criminal (played by Golden Slumber‘s Yoon Kye-sang) and his duo of vicious enforcers.
I’m imagining the film’s storyline is “loosely” based on real life incidents, as the conflict in The Outlaws quickly boils over to the kind of street-level anarchy one might expect in a Takashi Miike Yakuza flick. In fact, part of pleasure of The Outlaws‘ opening half hour is watching the Guro District’s carefully maintained ecosystem utterly up-ended by Yoon Kye-sang, an almost Joker-like instigator who has no qualms about chopping off someone’s hand if he feels they’ve disrespected him. Ma Dong-seok’s scrappy police team and the other local hoods are all caught entirely unprepared for Yoon Kye-sang’s savage gangland takeover, and the pressure to capture the dangerous criminal mounts as the body count rises.
46 year-old writer/director Kang Yoon-sung appears to have arrived out of nowhere, but he actually spent a few years as an actor before realizing he felt more at home behind the camera. The Outlaws makes for an auspicious debut, and the movie not only made a splash at the box office but landed Kang Yoon-sung a well-deserved nomination for Best New Director at the Blue Dragon Film Awards. Part of the reason the film is so successful is how vividly the filmmaker captures the texture and feel of the Guro District. The movie lands on the shortlist of Korean movies that really go out of their way to establish a sense of place beyond the neon glow of downtown Seoul, and the screenplay devotes time to depicting just how much local business owners and concerned citizens are suffering due to the turf warfare erupting around them. Kang Yoon-sung reportedly spent three years perfecting the script, and it shows; much like Asura: City of Madness, I would not be surprised if the director was in part inspired by HBO’s The Wire, as the film displays some of that show’s scope and ambition.
Despite plenty of humor, much of it derived from Ma Dong-seok’s pitch-perfect comic timing, The Outlaws doesn’t shy away from brutal violence or short bursts of choreographed action; Kang Yoon-sung even offers an impressive single camera take of Yoon Kye-sang slicing up the guests at a birthday party with a hatchet. One might say a flaw of the script is that it has to tie itself in knots to make sure Ma Dong-seok and Yoon Kye-sang never end up in the same room together, lest the film be over long before its two hour runtime; but when the hard-nosed detective and amoral crime boss finally do come face to face, the wait is more than worth it. From True Lies to The Man From Nowhere, there’s something of an unwritten rule that fight scenes in bathrooms are always good, and – without spoiling anything – The Outlaws gives a titanic tussle in the Incheon International Airport bathroom that certainly lives up to the memorable action sequences that have come before.
Ever since Oldboy gained the attention of the international scene way back in 2003, South Korean has been firing on all cylinders with stellar genre fare; even so, it feels like the industry has been on a particular hot streak during the past few years, and for me The Outlaws easily ranks alongside the best the country has been offering as of late. The film offers a role that feels tailor made for charismatic tough guy Ma Dong-seok, and serves as the rare blend of action and comedy that doesn’t hold back when it comes to hard-hitting violence. No matter what project writer/director Kang Yoon-sung tackles next, I guarantee I’ll be buying a ticket.
Z Ravas’ Rating: 8.5/10
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