Project Wolf Hunting review – Korean horror brings Bruckheimer-esque bombast

Korea’s most wanted escape their handcuffs on a cargo ship back to the motherland but find they are not alone in bloody thriller

If you had a pound for every slashed jugular and staved-in cranium in this Korean horror-thriller, you would probably have more than the film’s entire budget. This seems to have been mostly spent on supplies of fake blood almost copious enough to run the sprinkler system on Frontier Titan, the 58,000-tonne cargo ship travelling between the Philippines and South Korea in Kim Hong-sun’s film.

Forget Con Air; this is Con Sea, with bruiser cop Seok-woo (Park Ho-san) in charge of escorting a dirty dozen or so fugitives back to the motherland. First among evils is Jong-doo (Seo In-guk), a rapist with boyband looks and tattoos up to his jawline, who earns an early beating from Seok-woo after threatening his daughter. It doesn’t take a doctorate in whup-ass studies to guess that the criminals don’t stay in handcuffs for long. But – unbeknown to all but the doctor who keeps sneaking down to the basement – they are not Frontier Titan’s only cargo. Suffice it to say that transporting this thing on the same ship as Korea’s most wanted is the action-movie equivalent of that meme about the nuclear power plant and the spider farm being next to each other.

Kim sets up the early square-offs and hijacking with the kind of Bruckheimerian bombast that is becoming a lost art in Hollywood. He makes decent use of the ship’s layout – though spreading the mayhem around a disaster-movie-style ensemble, rather than a single protagonist, means the tension is somewhat diffused. The real main character is gratuitous carnage, already amply supplied by the desperadoes before the third party gets involved. If you’ve ever wanted to see a man beaten to death with his own arm, you’ve come to the right place.

The slaughter does start to get monotonous, but the film rallies in its final third as adversaries arrive capable of standing up to the basement boy, including seemingly innocuous-looking felon Do-il (Jang Dong-yoon), and Kim produces a set of pulpy late revelations. By then Die Hard-style precision staging has long since given way to pure Splatterhouse – but what B-movie relish it has.

• Project Wolf Hunting is available on the Icon Film Channel on 30 January and in UK cinemas on 3 March.

Contributor

Phil Hoad

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Midnight review – deaf heroine brings a new element to super-tense Korean thriller
Kwon Oh-Seung’s impressive debut cleverly uses social sexism to ramp up disbelief in his female characters

Leslie Felperin

08, Mar, 2022 @4:00 PM

Article image
The Witch: Part 2 review – Korean horror combines hi-tech and old-style ass-kicking
Gory and absorbing sci-fi sequel is part Stranger Things, part Orphan Black and all action, with a ridiculously good-looking and super-cool cast

Leslie Felperin

23, Nov, 2022 @11:00 AM

Article image
Night in Paradise review – operatic Korean display of gunfire and death
This blood-splattered Korean gangster flick with a romantic subplot follows Tae-Gu as he hides out from his enemies

Leslie Felperin

08, Apr, 2021 @11:00 AM

Article image
Kill Boksoon review – intense Korean assassin thriller with satisfying complexity
This fast-moving yarn about a woman balancing contract killing with raising a teenage daughter has flair and depth to spare

Leslie Felperin

30, Mar, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
The Killer review – super-violent South Korean thriller with well-coiffed assassin
A retired mercenary must free a kidnapped teen in this lurid and drum-tight thriller

Leslie Felperin

21, Mar, 2023 @7:00 AM

Article image
Beasts Clawing at Straws review – jet-black comedy in arch Korean thriller
A long-suffering sauna worker finds a bag stuffed full of cash in a crime caper with perfectly pitched performances

Leslie Felperin

10, Aug, 2021 @11:00 AM

Article image
Deliver Us From Evil review – frenzied hit-man thriller is full of cinematic life
Rooftop chases, vengeful yakuzas and brutal fistfights. What’s not to like in this Korean actioner from Hong Won-chan?

Peter Bradshaw

04, Jan, 2021 @2:00 PM

Article image
Lucky review – home-invasion horror that's a stand against violence, on repeat
Brea Grant is menaced by a masked intruder, night after night, in a time-loop thriller that makes a vehement statement about society’s attitude to women

Phil Hoad

01, Mar, 2021 @1:00 PM

Article image
Wickedly Evil review – glimmers of zest in Irish heist-gone-wrong comedy-horror
Student-level production values mar this promising-sounding comedic caper about a bumbling crime gang

Catherine Bray

06, Nov, 2023 @1:00 PM

Article image
Saloum review – slick gangster horror in wild west Africa
Director Jean Luc Herbulot dynamically weaves supernatural mystery into this gritty crime caper to produce a distinct and charismatic thrill ride

Phuong Le

06, Sep, 2022 @1:00 PM