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Take Point
90分钟末日倒数

Opening Date
27 Dec 2018
Rating
NC16 Some violence and coarse language
Runtime
125 mins
Language
Korean / English with English & Chinese subtitles
Genre
Action, Thriller
Director
Kim Byung-woo
Cast
Ha Jung-woo, Lee Sun-kyun, Jennifer Ehle, Kevin Durand, Malik Yoba, Spencer Daniels
Synopsis
On the day of the 2024 U.S. presidential election, Ahab and his team of elite mercenaries embark on a secret CIA mission to abduct North Korea's Armed Forces Minister in an underground bunker below the Korean DMZ. But they get caught in a crossfire that threatens to take the mission to the brink of World War III.
Reviews
By Say Peng  26 Dec 2018
Despite decent performances and heart-racing action set pieces, Take Point does not come together to say something profound or significant about sacrifice or politics or anything. It is just another action film.
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The DMZ or demilitarised zone that borders North and South Korea is a rich minefield for Korean filmmakers. Dozens of Korean films have been set in the DMZ, with director Kim Byung-Woo’s latest film, Take Point, joining the list.

Set in an underground bunker 30 metres below the DMZ, the film follows a group of private military contractors who are also illegal immigrants, led by English-speaking South Korean Ahab, played by Along with the Gods’ star Ha Jung-woo, who had worked with Kim on his debut film, The Terror Live. Their mission is to capture the Supreme Leader of North Korea.

Unfortunately, their higher-ups at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have other plans, and Ahab and his team are betrayed. In order to survive, Ahab has to work with North Korean doctor, Yoon Ji-Ui, played by Lee Sun-Kyun.

The premise of setting a military action film in a contained and underground space below the DMZ is certainly new. The claustrophobic spaces ratchet up the tension, keeping the audience perpetually at the edge of their seats. The action sequences are intense and unrelenting. At some points, we feel like we are right in the thick of the shooting and the action.

Ha gave a great performance as Ahab, depicting his struggles to balance his mission objectives with his teammates’ lives and safety. He has also got the difficult task of conversing almost entirely in English throughout the entire film, which he manages rather convincingly despite having to say some hammily written lines.

But despite decent performances and heart-racing action set pieces, the film does not come together to say something profound or significant about sacrifice or politics or anything. It is just another action film.
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