7/10
bloody horror
19 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Those who will dare to watch 'Project Wolf Hunting' (the original title is 'Neugdaesnyang'), the 2022 film written and directed by Korean director Kim Hong Sun will have a good chance to see the bloodiest movie or one of the bloodiest movie that they have ever seen them. And yet it is not just a film aimed at fans of violent action and/or horror. 'Project Wolf Hunting' is also a film that confirms the boldness and creativity of South Korean filmmakers, their ability to combine and transcend genres and make interesting films that are not shy of being extreme or bizarre.

Several dozen male and female prisoners, handcuffed and guarded by a detachment of guards and policemen armed to the teeth, are extradited from the Philippines to South Korea aboard a cargo ship. The inmates plan and execute a spectacular escape and take control of the ship. They are among the cruelest criminals and murderers, so that the revolt is violent from the beginning and the fights between the guards and the prisoners cause many victims. Before long, however, they will all realize that they face a common danger, even more deadly than their rivalries. The ship carries a secret passenger of a very special kind, a killing machine with seemingly supernatural powers. It will break free and go on a rampage, killing everything in its path. Meanwhile, a remote command center watches over the ship until all communications are cut.

'Project Wolf Hunting' navigates (to use an appropriate expression) between cinematic genres. In the first half hour, which is about a quarter of the film's duration, we get to know the characters - the policemen, the prisoners, the crew, the people in the command center. Then we start losing them one by one in the violence that ensues. What started out as a psychological thriller turns into an action film about a prison uprising, only to end in pure horror. There is also an explanation of what is happening, a combination of facts from the violent history of Asia during the Second World War with experiences of prisoners that are taken over in our era by big pharma concerns and by armies. Everything makes sense and is well filmed. Those who do not reject violence as cinematic entertainment have a good chance of enjoying this film. The finale opens the premises of some sequels, so we may hear more about 'Project Wolf Hunting'.
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