Director: Kim Hak-soon
Notable Cast: Kim
Mu-yeol, Jin Goo, Lee Hyun-woo, Lee Wan, Kim Ji-hoon, Jang Joon-hak,
JooHee-joong, Lee Min-ho
Many of the early reviews for Northern Limit Line spouted off rhetoric about the film being too
propaganda-ish with its patriotic South Korean themes. Truthfully though, the
film is not even nearly as bad as 80% of the war films that get made in the
United States. In fact, Northern Limit
Line is quite the serviceable military drama…to a fault. Often enough, it
actually plays things relatively safe as it caters to its mainstream audience
instead of really digging into its material. Still, this Korean piece of
dramatic action has enough heart and enough action to keep the audience hooked throughout
its two hour run time even if the film quickly dissolves from memory after the
credits roll.
Team spirit. |
As one of those films that is “based on a true story,” Northern Limit Line takes its time
building up some cinematic relationships for its crew. Set to the backdrop of a
time when South Korea was high on patriotic pride with the success of their
football team, the film utilizes this to its benefit to craft some symbolic and
dramatic set pieces. Unfortunately, the moments of a child’s party or a drunken
encounter with a disenfranchised wife doesn’t necessarily stand out as all that
memorable in the sea of cliché beats that many of the characters go through.
The fact that the film spends quite a bit of time with various characters and their
own personal arcs deters away from the one relationship that seemed to work
much better than the rest – as a matured sailor finds a brotherly bond with a
new recruit. That and a shockingly effective ending. The acting is all around solid, although nothing nearly as dynamic
as one would hope in this kind of film, but we do care enough about the crew
that we feel the pain when shit hits the fan in the third act and the naval
battle commences.
Which does bring up the point about the actual “battle” that
this film uses as its core conflict. The final act is decently shot (although
South Korea is still a bit behind in the use of super realistic CGI) with
plenty of horrors and tension to be held as we see our beloved crew come under
fire, but even then the film uses a faceless enemy to create this conflict and it
doesn’t work nearly as well as it might have. Unlike what some of those other
reviews would indicate, it would seem that the film actually pulls away from
being too propaganda propelled by not showing the enemy ship as this monstrous
evil – although the black color scheme of the ship certainly hints at such as
does the gruff looking leader that shows up for one or two scenes – and it
actually pulls away from the cinematic aspect of the flick. It tries to make up
for it with some solid gore and realistic special effects to show the evil that
rains down on the crew, but it lacks the building tension that’s needed in the
previous acts to pull it off. I’m not a history expect about this incident, but
the final act was well executed for what essentially comes off as a siege on a
patrol boat.
Fire at will! |
All in all, Northern
Limit Line is a fine dramatic piece of film with plenty of likeable
characters, some interesting relationships, and a well-executed third act of
destruction and mayhem. However, it tends to fall into too many cliché war film
moments and lacks a building tension for the final act to truly succeed at
being in the upper echelon of dramatic war flicks. For those looking for something
solid in that genre though, Northern
Limit Line works even if it doesn’t quite excel at its dramatic elements.
Written By Matt Reifschneider
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