The audience wasn’t very large, but I had high expectations because it was a film that seemed to want to say a lot.
And I was really looking forward to it because it had been invited to Cannes or another fairly large international film festival, and my expectations for Ryoo Seung-ryong’s film were high. It’s a little less immersive than I hoped.
If you look only at the texture or the plot, there’s nothing especially wrong with it, but it feels strange like a movie that is too much like a movie, which makes it uncomfortable. It’s Ryoo Seong-ryong’s film, but there seems to be a part that doesn’t focus on him. He was targeted, chased, and fought over simply because he showed a big move.
But at first, it felt awkward.
I don’t know why they dared to cast a character like that next to Ryoo Seong-ryong.
I don’t even know the keyword that needs to be unraveled, and I don’t know what kind of special character it is. The action is so big that it makes it succeed.
It’s impossible, so I can’t get too absorbed in it. The performances of all the actors in Target are no joke.
Each of them showed a masterpiece of acting.
Among them, Zhao En-di stood out.
It’s not a standout lead, but it is very stable and highly immersive.
In the confusing film Target, Ah Jin-gu initially only twitched, and later he became so weak that I couldn’t even tell he had intellectual disability.

Since it’s a film directed by Ryoo Seong-ryong, I had high expectations, but there are many disappointing parts.