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Deliver Us from Evil korean drama review
Completed
Deliver Us from Evil
0 people found this review helpful
by strawberryeuphoria
8 days ago
Completed
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 8.0

Loved the cinematography

It had been a while since I’d seen Hwang Jung-min in a lead action role, so watching Deliver Us From Evil felt like reconnecting with an old favourite, and he did not disappoint.

The Plot**
The story follows Kim In Nam, a professional hitman who has spent years eliminating targets for an organisation but now works on his own. As one last job before he disappears for good, he is given an assignment in Japan involving the yakuza boss. Nam plans to retire quietly in Panama. But just as he thinks he’s finally stepping away from bloodshed, his past comes chasing him back. He learns that he has a daughter from a former girlfriend, a child he never knew existed, and now she has been kidnapped in Thailand.As In Nam races to save his daughter, he is hunted by the ruthless half-brother of the yakuza boss he killed for revenge.


The story is intense and tightly paced. There’s no unnecessary dragging. It moves with purpose. The cinematography shift between Korea and Thailand was one of my favourite aspects. When the film moves to Thailand, the colour palette transforms to intense yellows, humid streets, and neon-lit chaos. It gave me strong late 90s / early 2000s action-thriller vibes. That gritty, sweaty, street-level energy that feels raw and dangerous.
The action sequences were genuinely impressive. Not just generic fight scenes but a combination of: brutal hand-to-hand combat, high-speed chases, gunfights and knife combat.

Hwang Jung-min plays In Nam with a quiet exhaustion. He’s not flashy. He’s not overly emotional. But you can see the weight of his life in his eyes. This isn’t a man looking for redemption; it’s a man trying to do one right thing before disappearing,and then there’s the antagonist, played by Lee Jung-jae, he was terrifying. Unhinged. Stylish. Violent. Cold and he enjoyed the hunt.

The side character Yui, a transgender Korean woman trying to earn money for surgery, added unexpected emotional depth. The actor played her with such charm tough on the outside, but clearly soft-hearted underneath. She brought moments of humour and warmth into an otherwise dark narrative. That balance worked beautifully.

If I had to change one thing, I might have extended the final
confrontation slightly just to build the emotional and physical climax a bit further. But even without that, the ending still hits hard.
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