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Crying Fist DVD (Asian Movie Live)
$10.99

Crying Fist DVD (Asian Movie Live)
[ED121]

Specifications Domestic

Media Type DVD
Number of Discs 1
Episodes Movie
Running Time Approx. 154 mins.
Release Date
Language Korean
Subtitles English
Regions Coding 0, ALL, NTSC
Genre
Release By

Crying Fist DVD (Live Action Movie)

The traditional underdog boxing story gets a Korean facelift in Ryoo Seung Wan's Crying Fist, a genre-busting box office smash about two men from different walks of life searching for a little redemption. Rather than focus on one boxer alone, the film explores two different fighters, both of whom are undergoing troubling upheavals in their personal lives.

Ryoo Seung Bum (from Arahan and No Manners) plays Yu Sang Hwan, an angry teenage punk with a penchant for crime. His out-of-control antics result in constant brushes with the law, a pattern of behavior that eventually lands him in prison. His hot-temper sparks a number of jailhouse fights, a fact which paves the way for his acceptance into the prison's boxing program. While Sang Hwan reluctantly steps into the ring to vent his frustrations, he soon finds that it may be his ticket out of his delinquent lifestyle.

Choi Min Sik (Old Boy), plays Kang Tae Shik the other half of the film's boxing duo. Unlike the wayward youth Sang Hwan, Tae Shik is an older man going through a midlife crisis of the most serious kind. Having once won the silver medal for boxing, Tae Shik is now up to his ears in debt with creditors and various shady criminal types. With his family disintegrating and his money situation dire, Tae Shik is forced to earn cash on the streets, utilizing his boxing skills in a most unconventional way. Rather than dish out punishment, Tae Shik is forced to take it, offering himself up as a punching bag for any passerby who's willing to pay the required fee.

Crying Fist cuts back and forth between the two characters, as they both struggle to take back a measure of control in their lives. The film does a fantastic job of integrating the performances of Ryoo Seung Bum and Choi Min Sik into one powerful whole. Each storyline is worthy of its own movie, but director Ryoo Seung Wan rightfully combines the two in order to avert formulaic notions associated with these kind of films.

Most boxing movies focus on a singular individual, an underdog who trains hard for the big fight. Even the most pedestrian boxing film will still be able to earn a hefty measure of sympathy and loyalty from its audience in favor of the film's protagonist. Crying Fist, however, succeeds in aligning the viewers with both of its protagonists, a circumstance which causes a peculiar kind of problem once the finale kicks in. If we, as the audience, recognize that each man desperately needs this win, who do we cheer for in the final bout? With our divided loyalties, we can only watch as the film's gripping resolution plays out, with no clue as to what will happen or what we hope will happen to our two characters. At the end of the day, it may only be a movie, but Crying Fist is a gritty, powerful film that captures your attention from the very first frame and throws you headlong into its double plot. Although who wins in the climactic bout is revealed by story's end, the real winner of Crying Fist is most definitely the audience.

By Calvin McMillin

Movie Trailer from YouTube

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