Director: Min Kyu-dong
Notable Cast: Lee Hye-young, Kim Sung-cheol, Yeon
Woo-jin, Kim Moo-yul, Shin Sia, Kim Kang-woo, Choi Moo-seong, Ok Ja-yeon, Lee Hyun-gul
In a world where there is one to two “old man with a sordid
past kicks ass” movies released a month, it’s nice to know that there will
occasionally be an “old woman with a sordid past kicks ass” movie that gets
released. However, in the case of The Old Woman with the Knife, the latest
South Korean action thriller to hit the States from our friends at Well Go USA,
it’s less about an aging killer being pulled back in and more about an aging
killer reckoning with their role in their own life. With a strong sense of
visual pizzazz, some impressively brutal action set pieces, and a positively
riveting performance from Lee Hye-young, The Old Woman with the Knife is
a sizzling slice of assassin cinema, even if the plot can get in the way of the
story at times.
The Old Woman with the Knife establishes its plot and
characters in provocative ways. A cinematic world of assassins is always fun to
explore, and especially over the last decade or so, thanks to John Wick,
movies have been having fun creating fantastic scenarios around killers and
their deeds. In this universe, there is a group of assassins that act as “pest
control” and eliminate the ill-gotten pests that infect our society. It’s a
relatively small group, well-trained and well-equipped to get the job done,
that follows their stringent guidelines about their work.