Wasn‘t he killed in prison as ordered by the father of one of the guys he killed?
Was this right near the end? Oh well, even so, it would be easy to write in a reason why the counselor survives a prison stay. Maybe he comes out with a limp from a failed assault. Who knows? :D Would be a great sequel.
Wow. This thing is a riot! It left me amused, entertained, and seriously turned on.
It works magnificently as a parody of: Japanese politics Samurai/death cult/macho/hara kiri/bullshit Gay pornography Gay romance Group-think and much more...
This was made in Korea, not China, and at the time it was made, there had already been a number of feature films…
BUT IT HAS TEN BILLION VIEWS FROM CHINA, AND THOSE ARE ALL CLOSETED, GAY, CHINESE VIEWERS WHO CAUGHT ALL THE OBVIOUS, HOT GAY CODING AND ROMANCE AND THUS TUNED IN MULTIPLE TIMES!!!!!!!! :D
This was made in Korea, not China, and at the time it was made, there had already been a number of feature films…
1. So pathetic you consider three and a half short paragraphs to be more than you can bear to read. No wonder you're so dim-witted.
2. Adding "literally" to your statements doesn't make them stronger, it just makes you sound stupid. Is there a way to be "non-literally gay?"
3. Lots of gay people suffer from internalized homophobia. YOUR internalized homophobia explains why you find watching gay-censored programming fulfilling.
4. Your disinterest in reading more than a sentence or two likely explains your ignorance.
What am I saying? I'm sure you can't bear to read past the word "So..." above in this comment.
This was made in Korea, not China, and at the time it was made, there had already been a number of feature films…
Typical response of a homophobic fangirl like you, who thinks high viewership = quality. What's even sicker is that ALL of those ten billion views came from inside China, where stupid straight people who don't know what they're watching, and self-hating gays, desperate for ANYTHING that even hints at being gay, watched this nightgowns and sword fights joke of a show.
Why any healthy gay person would watch a live-action show in which the plot tells them over and over that gay love/affection/sex is SO incredibly nasty, gross, and immoral, that it can't be shown on the screen even when that love is the heart of the story. Imagine a relationship in the real world, gay, straight or otherwise, in which the partners never hug, kiss, or make love and then tell me you'd see that as healthy and fulfilling. If you say you would, you're lying.
And yet that is what The Untamed dishes up over, and over, and over. It would be interesting to know how many views this thing would have garnered if gay love wasn't censored out of everything in China. If Chinese people could watch depictions of steamy, real gay love, would they watch this trash? There's no way to know but I'm hoping not.
Where do YOU live, btw? Thankfully, I live in the U.S., where anything goes onscreen, and we like it that way.
Wow. That's some nihilistic shit, right there. Extremely well-done nihilistic shit. I had no stomach for Hollywood films this violent, but the Koreans do something entirely different with the genre and it has made me a fan of these Yakuza/murder/thugs/gangs/crooked cops type movies. Not entirely how to sum it up, but I think it's in the characterizations overall. I find something to like in even the most loathsome characters and that makes me give a shit about what's happening to them, even when they get what they deserve, a few bullets to the brain or a knife to the gut. Oh, and usually, the fight scenes, car chase scenes, and otherwise bloody violence is incredibly choreographed to look absolutely real. Not currently familiar with the work of Uhm Tae Goo, but I am going to make myself so. He was outstanding here. That raspy voice alone is incredibly sexy and interesting. Funny...he looks like a boy scout in his bio pic above. Cha Sueng Won and Park Ho San are sensational, as always. Both excel at bringing nuances and specifics of character to their roles. I have yet to feel like either is repeating a character, and I've seen both in a lot of films.
For its genre, this is a 9/10 for me. Highly recommended.
This was made in Korea, not China, and at the time it was made, there had already been a number of feature films…
Well, your silly, little fangirl opinion is also garbage, and far stinkier than mine.
"The show's romance was very realistic to its intended era." The only romance in "The Untamed" exist in your imagination, fueled by your pathetic willingness to interpret raised eyebrows and longing glances as indicative of a relationship the Chinese cannot and do not, portray in their programming. Are you saying ancient, gay love affairs were conducted as in TU, without verbal or physical expressions of affection?
Why anyone who cares about gay people would watch such twisted, censored, shame-filled representations of LGBTQ, emotional, romantic relationships, is beyond me. We do a lot more than stare at each other endlessly, while occasionally falling into a "sort-of" embrace, what I call a "slip-catch-fall," also typical of Thai BLs. We don't fly around in the air in silk dresses, saving each other from evil swordsmen either. Or did you not know that?
Marvelous, quiet, calm, and deeply moving. The only thing more beautiful than the ambiance of this film is the acting and chemistry of the two leads. Both are sensational in their roles, but it's Taniguchi Masashi as Togawa who impresses me most.
This was my third watch, and every time it gets better. There aren't many movies, of any budget level, I'd say that about.
Damn, I was rooting for SJS's character all the way. SJS has evolved into an extremely effective and charismatic actor. I totally believed every version of the MC as he revealed them to us, from goodhearted, slow-witted victim to brilliant survivor.
I enjoyed it a great deal. What about it did you find hard to believe? How were the last 30 minutes repetitive?
I don't have your faith that some asshole psychopath with the power to do what was done here, wouldn't do exactly that just because he can, or maybe was a little bored that night, who knows? These boys were just toys to him. On another night, perhaps he wouldn't have taken it this far. I find it totally believable that on this night, he did.
However, as you point out, it's not necessary to feel as I do to acknowledge this as a really good film, especially with Kai Ko in his freshman effort from the director's chair.
Most powerful political/revolution/dictatorship/military film I have ever seen. I just finished watching and am too overwhelmed to write much coherently, but this is an absolute 10/10 across the board in every way, shape, and form.
As an American, I am distressed at my complete ignorance of what the military dictatorship in Korea was in 1987, and how it went about maintaining its grasp on power, no doubt with the tacit approval of the U.S. It humbles me once again, as do all stories like this, to behold the courage displayed by so many in the face of such brutality.
My heart breaks for all those, like the two murdered young men at the heart of this story, who lost their lives so young because they could not stand by and watch silently, without action.
Horrible story, stunningly told. Bravo to all involved.
About halfway through I was thinking I'd be giving this a high score. But then the relationship felt more and more, entirely about sex and nothing else. Seriously, do they know each other at all from time spent together when not shagging? Barely at all. This isn't passionate "love," it's sexual addiction and compulsion.
Also, I felt she knew exactly what she was up to from the very beginning. I didn't buy her "only for one night" schtick for a minute. Please.
The contrived ending, with its absurd metaphor, was the final nail that took this from a 9/10 to maybe a 7/10 max.
I'm impressed with the film's frank approach to depicting sex, but toward the end, watching them have sex was getting...old. Just as these two characters, should they try to stick together, gradually will tire of f**king all the time, and then it'll be "ok...what do we do now?"
I like that the ML didn't spend six months in the gym before this was filmed, to get shredded for all the nude scenes.
Terrible.
3/10
Dropped. 1/10
5/10
So, actually...terrible.
6/10
Oh well, even so, it would be easy to write in a reason why the counselor survives a prison stay. Maybe he comes out with a limp from a failed assault. Who knows? :D Would be a great sequel.
It works magnificently as a parody of:
Japanese politics
Samurai/death cult/macho/hara kiri/bullshit
Gay pornography
Gay romance
Group-think
and much more...
Love it! Highly recommended.
For what it is: 10/10
2. Adding "literally" to your statements doesn't make them stronger, it just makes you sound stupid. Is there a way to be "non-literally gay?"
3. Lots of gay people suffer from internalized homophobia. YOUR internalized homophobia explains why you find watching gay-censored programming fulfilling.
4. Your disinterest in reading more than a sentence or two likely explains your ignorance.
What am I saying? I'm sure you can't bear to read past the word "So..." above in this comment.
Why any healthy gay person would watch a live-action show in which the plot tells them over and over that gay love/affection/sex is SO incredibly nasty, gross, and immoral, that it can't be shown on the screen even when that love is the heart of the story. Imagine a relationship in the real world, gay, straight or otherwise, in which the partners never hug, kiss, or make love and then tell me you'd see that as healthy and fulfilling. If you say you would, you're lying.
And yet that is what The Untamed dishes up over, and over, and over. It would be interesting to know how many views this thing would have garnered if gay love wasn't censored out of everything in China. If Chinese people could watch depictions of steamy, real gay love, would they watch this trash? There's no way to know but I'm hoping not.
Where do YOU live, btw? Thankfully, I live in the U.S., where anything goes onscreen, and we like it that way.
That's some nihilistic shit, right there.
Extremely well-done nihilistic shit.
I had no stomach for Hollywood films this violent, but the Koreans do something entirely different with the genre and it has made me a fan of these Yakuza/murder/thugs/gangs/crooked cops type movies. Not entirely how to sum it up, but I think it's in the characterizations overall. I find something to like in even the most loathsome characters and that makes me give a shit about what's happening to them, even when they get what they deserve, a few bullets to the brain or a knife to the gut. Oh, and usually, the fight scenes, car chase scenes, and otherwise bloody violence is incredibly choreographed to look absolutely real.
Not currently familiar with the work of Uhm Tae Goo, but I am going to make myself so. He was outstanding here. That raspy voice alone is incredibly sexy and interesting. Funny...he looks like a boy scout in his bio pic above.
Cha Sueng Won and Park Ho San are sensational, as always. Both excel at bringing nuances and specifics of character to their roles. I have yet to feel like either is repeating a character, and I've seen both in a lot of films.
For its genre, this is a 9/10 for me.
Highly recommended.
"The show's romance was very realistic to its intended era." The only romance in "The Untamed" exist in your imagination, fueled by your pathetic willingness to interpret raised eyebrows and longing glances as indicative of a relationship the Chinese cannot and do not, portray in their programming. Are you saying ancient, gay love affairs were conducted as in TU, without verbal or physical expressions of affection?
Why anyone who cares about gay people would watch such twisted, censored, shame-filled representations of LGBTQ, emotional, romantic relationships, is beyond me. We do a lot more than stare at each other endlessly, while occasionally falling into a "sort-of" embrace, what I call a "slip-catch-fall," also typical of Thai BLs. We don't fly around in the air in silk dresses, saving each other from evil swordsmen either. Or did you not know that?
Taniguchi Masashi as Togawa who impresses me most.
This was my third watch, and every time it gets better. There aren't many movies, of any budget level, I'd say that about.
9/10
Excellent, slow-burn thriller.
9/10
However, as you point out, it's not necessary to feel as I do to acknowledge this as a really good film, especially with Kai Ko in his freshman effort from the director's chair.
Most powerful political/revolution/dictatorship/military film I have ever seen. I just finished watching and am too overwhelmed to write much coherently, but this is an absolute 10/10 across the board in every way, shape, and form.
As an American, I am distressed at my complete ignorance of what the military dictatorship in Korea was in 1987, and how it went about maintaining its grasp on power, no doubt with the tacit approval of the U.S. It humbles me once again, as do all stories like this, to behold the courage displayed by so many in the face of such brutality.
My heart breaks for all those, like the two murdered young men at the heart of this story, who lost their lives so young because they could not stand by and watch silently, without action.
Horrible story, stunningly told. Bravo to all involved.
10/10
Also, I felt she knew exactly what she was up to from the very beginning. I didn't buy her "only for one night" schtick for a minute. Please.
The contrived ending, with its absurd metaphor, was the final nail that took this from a 9/10 to maybe a 7/10 max.
I'm impressed with the film's frank approach to depicting sex, but toward the end, watching them have sex was getting...old. Just as these two characters, should they try to stick together, gradually will tire of f**king all the time, and then it'll be "ok...what do we do now?"
I like that the ML didn't spend six months in the gym before this was filmed, to get shredded for all the nude scenes.
Worth a watch cause it's unique, but yeah...7/10.