“Officer Black Belt” Netflix Poster
Director: Kim Joo-hwan
Cast: Kim Woo-bin, Kim Sung-kyun, Lee Hyun-geol, Lee Joong-Ok, Kang Seung-Ho, Yoon Dae-Yul, Park Ji-Yeol, Jin Mi-Sa, Lee Jung-Gwi, Bang Byung-Hyun
Running Time: 105 min.
By Paul Bramhall
The latest in Korea’s steady stream of post-Squid Game Netflix produced movies, Officer Black Belt hit the platform in 2024, offering a look into a rarely seen part of the law enforcement system – the parole officers who monitor ex-offenders once they’re released from prison. The production marks a welcome return to the director’s chair for Kim Joo-hwan, who spent the latter half of the 2010’s establishing himself as the helmer of entertainingly action-centric productions like Midnight Runners and The Divine Fury. After the turmoil of directing the 2023 series Bloodhounds (also made for Netflix), which saw the entire script rewritten when co-star Kim Sae-ron got involved in a drunk driving incident mid post-production, it felt debatable if we’d be seeing Joo-hwan return to filmmaking anytime soon. It’s a relief to see him bounce back so quickly, and as the title indicates, action is again the order of the day.
For his latest Kim Woo-bin (Master, The Con Artists) stars as a directionless slacker whose 2 passions consist of “sports and e-sports”, with his one rule for anything he gets involved in being that it has to be fun. When he’s not flexing his skills in judo, taekwondo, and kendo, he’s usually playing online games with his 3 closest friends, with any time left over spent making deliveries for the fried chicken restaurant his father runs (who he also lives with). I’m not exactly Continue reading →
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