- A BOY AND HIS DOG Hits Blu-ray in August
- Trailer and Poster for 80s Horror Throwback UNDER THE BED!
- Stephen King's CELL Headed To The Big Screen
- Stephen King's CELL Headed To The Big Screen
- Stephen King's CELL Headed To The Big Screen
- IRON SKY Sequel Turns to Crowdfunding
- Imagine Announces DARK TOWER Going Ahead; New Anne Rice Adaptation in the Works
- Face Off: John Frankenheimer's SECONDS Coming to Criterion Blu-ray!
- Don't Let Go! First Look At Space Thriller GRAVITY [Trailer]
- Face Off: John Frankenheimer's SECONDS Coming to Criterion Blu-ray!
- Re: Why Don't You Play in Hell? (2013)
- Re: Japanese zombie movies (2011-12 round-up)
- Re: Lesson of the Evil (2012)
- Project Kronos (short film)
- Why Don't You Play in Hell? (2013)
- Endless Dark (2013)
- Re: Darkness by Day (2013)
- Re: Sadako 3D
- Re: Morituris (2011)
- Re: Japanese zombie movies (2011-12 round-up)
- Z FOR ZACHARIAH movie is happening... for real this time!
- A BOY AND HIS DOG Hits Blu-ray in August
- Trailer for THE DEAD 2: INDIA Rises from the Grave
- THE COLONY: There's Hope At The End Of The World [Review]
- Michael Bay's Post-Apocalyptic THE LAST SHIP Gets a Trailer
- First footage from SNOWPIERCER!
- Amazon's ZOMBIELAND Series is DOA [Review]
- Stream M83's OBLIVION Soundtrack in Full
- THIS IS THE END: The Ultimate Celebrity Filled Apocalypse Comedy [Trailer]
- New WORLD WAR Z Trailer Focuses on the Family
- The Zombie Apocalypse Sounds Sweet In THE BATTERY [Trailer]
- CANNES 2013: THE BLING RING Review
- Story & Action Well Balanced In COLD PREY Director's ESCAPE [Review]
- KISS OF THE DAMNED Is A Sexy Story Of Awakening [Review]
- THE COLONY: There's Hope At The End Of The World [Review]
- TAI CHI HERO Is A Load Of Fun [Review]
- HEMLOCK GROVE Premieres. Lacks Wow Factor
- MOLLY MAXWELL Is Young, Smart & Inappropriate [Review]
- IN THE HOUSE Is A Darkly Comedic Tale Of Voyeurism And Morality [Review]
- Mini Review for Must-See Masterpiece UPSTREAM COLOR
- Personal Demons Are Exorcised In Thriller TOMORROW YOU’RE GONE [Review]
- CANNES 2013: Eerie First Clip From STAKE LAND Director's WE ARE WHAT WE ARE
- THE COLONY: There's Hope At The End Of The World [Review]
- CANNES 2013: Hints of Miike Violence In SHIELD OF STRAW Trailer
- Sacrilege! Pub Crawl Thwarted By Alien Invasion In THE WORLD'S END [Trailer]
- Things Get Ugly UNDER THE DOME [Trailer]
- Michael Bay's Post-Apocalyptic THE LAST SHIP Gets a Trailer
- Trailer and Poster for 80s Horror Throwback UNDER THE BED!
- ENDER'S GAME Trailer Arrives And It's A Thing Of Beauty
- The Great Ray Harryhausen has Died
- Great First Look At Scifi Thriller EUROPA REPORT [Trailer]
- Nanotech superpowers wow in stunning short THE FIELDS
- Fantasia Announces Frontieres Projects; Fans Cry With Joy
- Trailer for Glass Eye Pix & Chiller TV's BENEATH!
- REC 4: APOCALYPSE Unleashes First Teaser (Sort Of)
- JUDGE MINTY: A Must See DREDD Short
- Sneak Peek At ENDER'S GAME Trailer!
- Is ABE the First Robot Serial Killer?
- Folk Music Saves The World In THE HISTORY OF FUTURE FOLK [Trailer]
- THE END Offers a Christmas Apocalypse of Lovecraftian Proportions
- Horror In The AFTERSHOCK! [Trailer]
Jack In
Latest Comments
Latest Forum Posts
PA News
Latest Reviews
Older News
Film Festivals
Seattle International Film Festival
May 17 - Jun 10
Seattle, Washington
Festival de Cannes
May 16 - May 27
Cannes, France
Cinequest Film Festival
Feb 28 - Mar 11
San Jose, California
Dead by Dawn
Mar 29 - Apr 01
Edinburgh, Scotland
Crew
Don Neumann aka quietearth
Editor in Chief
Fort Collins/Denver, Colorado
agentorange
Managing Editor
Edmonton, Alberta
Marina Antunes
Assistant Managing Editor
Vancouver, British Columbia
projectcyclops
UK Correspondent
Edinburgh, Scotland
Rick McGrath
Toronto Correspondent
Toronto, Ontario
The Crystal Ferret
France Correspondent
Paris, France
rochefort
Austin Correspondent
Austin, Texas
Joao Fleck
South American Correspondent
Porto Alegre, Brazil
Griffith Maloney
New York Correspondent
New York, NY
Stephanie Ogrodnik
Floating Correspondent
Quiet Earth Bunker
Latest news

thriller drama Munho is a likable veterinary doctor with a thriving practice. He's well liked, happy and getting ready to marry Seonyeong. With the wedding just a few months away, Munho takes his soon-to-be wife on a drive to finally meet his mother and father. The couple stop along the way for coffee with Seonyeong staying in the car to answer a call but when Mucho returns, the car is running and his fiance is gone. Finding her apartment ransacked and assuming that she's been kidnapped, Munho goes to the police but when that's of no help, he hires a former police officer who also happens to be his cousin, to help him track down Seonyeong.
Helpless unravels as Munho and his cousin Jonggeun investigate Seonyeong's past and discover that she is not be the woman Munho thought she was. As they follow the trail of her past they uncover an intricate web of lies and perhaps even a murder. It's a past filled with so much trouble that it would drive away any sane person but Munho is so in love that he's willing to overlook all of Seonyeong's shortcomings, including the gruesome, if it means spending the rest of their lives together.
Helpless is a carefully crafter tale, part police procedural as the pair of men follow the clues to uncover Seonyeong's history but also an intense drama, one that sees Munho's struggle with the realization that he doesn't know the first thing about the woman he was going to marry. Munho is helpless at every turn; not only can he not find his fiance but the further he digs into the past the more it becomes apparent that he'll never get her back but the movie's title also plays into Seonyeong's story. She goes from helpless woman to a cold individual willing to do anything and risk anyone in order to survive. For this reason, the movie's final scene comes as a surprise and even a let down; it seems a cop out that a woman who worked so hard to survive would make the choice she makes but it's not enough of a misstep to render the rest of the movie a write-off.
The missing person angle has been done so often that it's nearly impossible to find a new approach but director Young-Joo Byun's takes a crack at it by adapting Miyuki Miyabe's novel. The results aren't exactly new but it's interesting to see a story that takes the approach of leaving the man to suffer the emotional breakdown while the woman is portrayed as the one capable of anything. The performances are excellent, especially from Seon-gyun Lee as Munho, and the resulting movie is an often intense thriller that explores not only the power of love but the lengths some are willing to take in order to survive.
You might also like
Comments temporarily closed.



