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IMDbPro

A Vilã

Título original: Aknyeo
  • 2017
  • 16
  • 2 h 4 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
18 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
A Vilã (2017)
Sook-hee (KIM Ok-vin) was brought up to become a deadly assassin. She gets a second chance in life when South Korea's Intelligence Agency recruits her to become a sleeper cell. Her new identity is a theater actress and comes with a promise of complete freedom after serving the country for 10 years. But living a normal life is no easy task, and when two men suddenly appear in her life, she uncovers secrets of her past.
Reproduzir trailer1:59
1 vídeo
46 fotos
AçãoAção do Exército de Uma PessoaSuspense

Um assassino deixa um rastro de corpos atrás dela enquanto busca vingança.Um assassino deixa um rastro de corpos atrás dela enquanto busca vingança.Um assassino deixa um rastro de corpos atrás dela enquanto busca vingança.

  • Direção
    • Jung Byung-gil
  • Roteiristas
    • Jung Byung-gil
    • Byeong-sik Jung
  • Artistas
    • Kim Ok-bin
    • Shin Ha-kyun
    • Sung Jun
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    18 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Jung Byung-gil
    • Roteiristas
      • Jung Byung-gil
      • Byeong-sik Jung
    • Artistas
      • Kim Ok-bin
      • Shin Ha-kyun
      • Sung Jun
    • 121Avaliações de usuários
    • 146Avaliações da crítica
    • 64Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 7 vitórias e 14 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    Trailer

    Fotos46

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    Elenco principal18

    Editar
    Kim Ok-bin
    Kim Ok-bin
    • Sook-hee
    Shin Ha-kyun
    Shin Ha-kyun
    • Joong-sang
    Sung Jun
    Sung Jun
    • Hyun-soo
    Kim Seo-hyeong
    Kim Seo-hyeong
    • Chief Kwon
    Jo Eun-ji
    Jo Eun-ji
    • Kim Seon
    Min Ye-ji
    • Sook-hee (young)
    Seo Beom-sik
    • Shadow #2
    Lee Chae-yun
    Lee Chae-yun
    Park Chul-min
    Park Chul-min
    • Sook-hee's father
    Baek Dong-hyeon
    Jung Hae-kyun
    Jung Hae-kyun
    • Jang-chun
    Kwon Hyuk-bum
    • Joong Sang's subordinate #2
    Jung In-tae
    Jung In-tae
    Son Min-ji
    • Min-Joo
    Lee Seung-chul
    • Bus driver
    Lee Seung-joo
    • Choon-Mo
    Jung Sung-Yoon
    • Briefing man
    Kim Yun-woo
    • Eun-Hye
    • Direção
      • Jung Byung-gil
    • Roteiristas
      • Jung Byung-gil
      • Byeong-sik Jung
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários121

    6,617.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5Groverdox

    Made for highlight clips

    "The Villainess" is a movie with a bravura opening and ending sequence, and a middle which reveals its filmmaker has no idea how to do anything other than bravura sequences. The whole movie couldn't have been like that, apparently - especially not at the idiotic two-hour plus length that it goes on for.

    The movie has flashbacks that really add nothing, plastic surgery makeovers that also add nothing except confusion, and a bad guy who changes for no reason I could discern.

    It also doesn't evince any sympathy for its protagonist. You want to see her kick butt, sure - but she only does that at the beginning and end of the movie, really. Other than that, you don't care, and I was never really sure who the main bad guy was.

    This is a movie that was basically made to be cut up into clips and watched on Youtube, saving everyone's time. Don't bother trying to sit through the whole thing.
    6spookyrat1

    Some Great Action Sequences: Pity About the Story!

    There's no denying The Villainess has some amazingly inventive and filmed action scenes liberally sprinkling its lengthy running time. Whether they are enough to justify the film's reputed 4 minute standing ovation when presented at the Cannes Film Festival, I'm not sure. The Point Break remake had some exciting action scenes and stunts too and yet they're aren't too many disputing the contention, that it was very much a dud of a film.

    Speaking of remakes I'm kind of amazed there doesn't seem to be any formal acknowledgement or credit that The Villainess, like John Badham's 1993 The Assassin (also known as Point of No Return), is a remake of Luc Besson's 1990 film La Femme Nikita. There's simply no repudiating it. Badham's movie gave credit to Besson's and said it was a remake. But strangely writer/director of The Villainess, Jung Byung-gil said he was inspired by La Femme Nikita, whilst giving no onscreen credit (that I could see). In my little corner of the world that's what we generally call "ripping people off".

    Any way if you know the plots to the previous films, you'll know the basic storyline of The Villainess. Namely, that a young woman is taken and trained by a shadowy facility associated with South Korea's intelligence agency, into being a sanctioned assassin. The differentiating feature with The Villainess, is the almost infuriatingly complicated back story we are given about Sook-hee, the woman concerned. It is made unnecessarily complex in the long first act, by excessive flash-backing, where we are even given flashbacks, within flashbacks. At times things become nearly incoherent. I actually breathed a sigh of relief during the second act, when Sook-hee goes outside the training school on her first mission and the narrative becomes for a time, more traditionally linear in style, with far less flash backs. Complicating matters further is that the 20 year old Sook-hee we see onscreen almost appears more dangerous than the older trained up Sook-hee we see later. In the somewhat absurd, but dazzlingly choreographed opening , she eliminates a whole rival gang on different storeys of a building, a la The Raid. Yet later, both her and an associate female assassin have trouble with a couple of dudes they're supposed to terminate. There are head-scratching inconsistencies like this right through The Villainess.

    Kim Ok-vin in the lead role as Sook-hee is very good, as is her onscreen daughter, Eun-hye, played by Kim Yeon-woo, who is very appealing, as a cute 3-year old. Kim Seo-hyung as Kwon-sook, the head of the training school, also succeeds in a finely tuned ambiguous role, whereby we are never sure of where her loyalties ultimately lie.

    The conclusion which follows another hideously kinetic, wholesale gang slaughter and freeway bike and bus chase, very reminiscent of that seen in The Matrix Reloaded, is both thrilling, yet still somewhat confusing, whilst leaving the door ajar for a possible sequel no doubt. To be honest I don't think I'd be interested in it, unless I could be guaranteed that Jung Byung-gil had improved upon his story-telling abilities.
    6Pjtaylor-96-138044

    Frenzied and ferocious action-sequences but a convoluted and slightly generic story.

    'The Villainess (2017)' contains some of the craziest action-sequences in recent cinema, primarily because of the frenzied and ferocious nature of the camera itself. It is used as a tool to put you right in the centre of the violence, often literally putting you in the P.O.V. of our protagonist, and never strays further than a few feet away from any of the killing. As such, there is a claustrophobic and relentless feel to each and every such scene, which don't cut away until away until our lead has finished her dirty-work. Because of this, we don't get to rest until our hero does, instead being breathlessly whisked along from brutal but balletic beat to beat. All of the neck-slicing, blood-spilling, body-piling action feels guttural, given a visceral and grimy sense that only one person can survive. This runs counter to most high-concept pictures of the kind, where glossy, clean framing and shiny, pain-free choreography paint a picture of violence that doesn't really hurt and death that doesn't really matter. While death is depicted as similarly cold and callous here, each life that is taken feels painful and we're always on edge for the few people we care about. It's in both the tight and precise but scrappy and explicit fight-choreography, and subsequent blood-letting, and the down-and-dirty camera-work that the picture finds its footing as an 'in-the-trenches' and 'honest' depiction of despicable work, revenge in high-numbers shown from right up-close and watched with gritted teeth. The strongest of sequences are the opening first-person fight and a phenomenal sword-crossing motorbike chase. Both of these use impressive long-takes and hidden camera-cuts to appear as fluid as possible, with the former being an apparent 'one-shot' until its final moments. The use of small digital cameras allows the frame to go places it wouldn't normally be able, with the audience being transported into a one-on-god-knows-how-many battle or even through the wheels of a moving bike seamlessly, and it allows for a very intimate relationship with the lead and her struggle to survive. The only time a combat scene falls slightly short is in the feature's final movement, with some ever-so-slightly dodgy green-screen sky-replacement honestly looking pretty hokey and reducing the effect of the entire segment. Still, what was achieved on its relatively low budget is undeniably impressive and equally exciting. What isn't as exciting are its slower segments and convoluted, though completely understandable, plot. The contrast of its balls-to-the-wall action with its rather domestic, though still out-there and thematically appropriate, story is quite heavy and isn't always balanced too well. There are times where it feels as though the piece has switched gears entirely, with its initial intentions then coming crashing back down onto its new pace just as you're settling into it. This is conceptually appropriate but it does take you out of the film. As does the contrived plot-device used to inject tension and a proper antagonist in the latter half of the second act. This 'twist' feels as though it comes from nowhere, without the explanation afforded to other sequences of less importance, and is handled with confusion even within the narrative. Still, it doesn't ruin the plot and begins to inject some decent pacing back into the piece. It just feels like most of the picture is, or was trying to be, set-up for this moment but it happens too late for that to be the case, or for it to work successfully. On the whole, there isn't anything that isn't enjoyable about the picture. The eclectic, energetic and exciting action-sequences are a sight to behold and the flick plays with some intriguing themes, as well as having an appropriately 'strange', if slightly generic, story. It is always entertaining, even if it loses its drive and isn't quite as pacy as you'd expect. 6/10
    7shobanchittuprolu

    The Villainess is a decent action film with an engaging screenplay and amazing action scenes.A Must Watch for Action film lovers.

    Ak-Nyeo/The Villainess (2017):

    Action Lovers definitely never misses the chance of watching any action film from South Korea.Korean Action films have huge fan following for its ultra-stylish violent sequences like The Man from Nowhere,The Chaser,Old Boy and lot others.The Villainess is one such film of 2017 where action lovers will have a treat.

    Plot:

    Sook-hee (Ok-bin Kim) is a trained assassin who was born to kill. She was just a little girl when the training started in Yanbian, China. After the death of her mentor, when the chance of starting a new life was given to her, she came to South Korea as a government agent. They promised her that she will be free after ten years of service. So she begins her new life as a theatre actress. But soon two men Joong-sang (Ha-kyun Shin) and Hyun-soo (Jun Sung) appear in her new life. And she started to find deep dark secrets about her past. Eventually she take matters into her own hands.

    My Review:

    The Villainess makes no delay and right from scene 1,it shows abundant violence which shot in POV format.the sequence tracks a lone fighter through a building full of thugs, all of whom get dispatched with bloody efficiency. Finally, the unseen figure enters a martial-arts studio with a dozen or so adversaries and a mirrored wall. Only when the camera catches the intruder's reflection does the point-of-view switch from hers to ours. For starters,this scene may make them confused with its camera angles but it really deserves applause.

    After that hell of a scene,The Villainess goes in a non-linear way to reveal the past and present of Sook-hee's life and it may confuse to an extent but later it gets Ok.The major reason for the confusion is that Sook-hee's look is changed from past and present.But once the screenplay gets to the point,we can clearly see that The Villainess is same ages-old cliched revenge plot with predictable twist.

    The Villainess have inventively staged action sequences, including a sword fight between speeding motorcyclists, a knife battle inside a geisha house, and another protracted single take that tracks Sook-hee as she climbs onto the hood of a moving car, leaps onto a speeding bus and crashes through one of its windows, and slaughters some henchmen with an ax before the vehicle careens into oncoming traffic.

    Cinematography is so tricky but amazing at its best.Background score is an asset.Performances are amazing and especially Ok-Bin is show-stealer with her terrific performance.

    SO,The Villainess is a decent action film with an engaging screenplay and amazing action scenes.A Must Watch for Action film lovers.

    My rating 7/10
    8Fella_shibby

    La Femme Nikita on modafinil, creatine n beta alanine. This is how female assassin movies shud be.

    Was in my radar for a long time. Saw this recently. The plot may look n sound like La Femme Nikita n various films on female assassin turned rogue but check out the brutal action sequences. The film moves at a good pace, the screenplay is captivating with lots of twists n turns. Forget bah all those things. Such films r seen for the action sequences. The motorcycle ninja fight scene in this movie is again replicated in John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum which is also a terrific action entertainer.

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Director Byung-Gil Jung uses some never-before used cameras, some extremely small to achieve the look of the movie and give the viewer the impression that they are experiencing everything first hand.
    • Erros de gravação
      The bottle of Châteaux Margaux in the restaurant scene rotates on the table whilst no-one is drinking or touches it.
    • Citações

      Sook-hee: Let me show you what you've made me into.

    • Conexões
      Featured in MsMojo: Top 10 Best Female Revenge Movies of All Time (2022)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      When You and I Were Young, Maggie
      Lyrics by George W. Johnson

      Music by J.A. Butterfield

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    Perguntas frequentes17

    • How long is The Villainess?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de novembro de 2017 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Coreia do Sul
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Arrow Films (United Kingdom)
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Idioma
      • Coreano
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Villainess
    • Locações de filme
      • Seul, Coreia do Sul
    • Empresas de produção
      • Apeitda
      • Next Entertainment World (NEW)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 27.741
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 4.238
      • 27 de ago. de 2017
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 8.737.458
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 4 min(124 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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