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2009: Lost Memories (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:6
Fresh:2
Rotten:4
Average Rating:4.5/10
Runtime: 2 hrs 55 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
US Box Office: $0
Synopsis: One of South Korea's top-grossing films, director Si-myung Lee's 2009: LOST MEMORIES blends sci-fi, action, politics, and history into a time-bending thriller which explores issues of national and... One of South Korea's top-grossing films, director Si-myung Lee's 2009: LOST MEMORIES blends sci-fi, action, politics, and history into a time-bending thriller which explores issues of national and cultural identity. Set in the year 2009, the film operates in an alternate reality where Japan retained control of its Korean colonies after World War II and the independent nation of Korea never existed. Masayuki Sakamoto (Dong-Kun Jang) is a Korean police detective comfortably assimilated into this Japanese-occupied state until a routine investigation reawakens his nationalist pride. Assigned to probe a terrorist attack on a museum exhibit displaying historical artifacts, Sakamoto is soon drawn into an underground network of Korean freedom fighters who seek their nation's independence. As Sakamoto's sympathy for the rebel group urges him into action, the Korean grows increasingly at odds with his Japanese best friend and partner Shojiro Saigo (Toru Nakamura)--setting the stage for a tense and bloody showdown. [More]
Starring: Dong-Kun Jang, Toru Nakamura, Kil-Kang Ahn, Jin-ho Seo
Starring: Dong-Kun Jang, Toru Nakamura, Kil-Kang Ahn, Jin-ho Seo, Masaaki Daimon, Shohei Imamura, Ken Mitsuishi, Nobuyuki Katsube
Director: Si-myung Lee
Director: Si-myung Lee
Screenwriter: Si-myung Lee, Sang-hak Lee
Producer: Stanley Kim
Composer: Dong-jun Lee
Studio: ADV Films
Reviews for 2009: Lost Memories
Though it ultimately devolves into megabudget Hollywood action-movie cliches by way of John Woo, Lee's handsome blockbuster is an entertaining variation on the American formulas that have colonized world cinema.
There's a shallowness to the central relationship -- compounded by Chang and Nakamura's lack of chemistry -- which undermines the whole film.
The amped-up Dickian scenario features too many frame-filling fireballs.
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