Ha Jung-woo, Lee Jung-jae, Jun Ji-hyun, Oh Dal-su, Jo Jin-woong — I finally watched Assassination, which I had been waiting for for months.
Ha Jung-woo, Lee Jung-jae, Jun Ji-hyun, and director Choi Dong-hoon. I trust Choi Dong-hoon, who made The Thieves, so I was even more excited.
I went to CGV, and I bought a ticket because I didn’t need a VIP ticket.
This is a feature-length film.
As much as I had high expectations, it was a movie I could really look forward to.
There are so many ads that even my neck hurts from the front row.
No, I watched the ad and clicked again.

The CGV theater itself is small, but each seat is wide, so there is a leg rest that lets you put your legs on the chair. The Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea appointed these three people to the assassination mission, and the faces of An Yulun, Jun Zhixian, Sokpao, Zhao Zhenxiong, Wang Deoksan, and Choi Deokwan were not exposed to the Japanese front lines.
The assassination targets are Mori Kawaguchi, commander of the Japanese garrison in the north, and pro-Japanese collaborator Jang In-guk, and the blue-collar killer with a pistol from Hawaii, Oda-soo, begins to chase him after receiving a big favor from someone.
Assassination. Some people say it could succeed, some say it’s boring, and some give up on the idea of wanting to watch it, but the 2-hour-and-20-minute runtime never feels boring, and if you like action, it is a good movie to watch. Jun Ji-hyun—no, no, everyone says Ha Jung-woo is a nerd, and Ha Jung-woo is cool too, but I’m really into Lee Jung-jae. What should I do? I fell into Lee Jung-jae’s swamp.
I couldn’t get out of the swamp, but anyway, this devilish man’s smile was really frequent.