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The Age of Shadows

Original title: Mil-jeong
  • 2016
  • 12
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Lee Byung-hun, Song Kang-ho, Gong Yoo, and Han Ji-min in The Age of Shadows (2016)
Trailer for The Age of Shadows
Play trailer1:39
2 Videos
56 Photos
ActionHistoryThriller

Korean resistance fighters smuggle explosives to destroy facilities controlled by Japanese forces in this period action thriller.Korean resistance fighters smuggle explosives to destroy facilities controlled by Japanese forces in this period action thriller.Korean resistance fighters smuggle explosives to destroy facilities controlled by Japanese forces in this period action thriller.

  • Director
    • Kim Jee-woon
  • Writers
    • Kim Jee-woon
    • Lee Ji-min
    • Jong-dae Park
  • Stars
    • Lee Byung-hun
    • Gong Yoo
    • Song Kang-ho
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • Writers
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Lee Ji-min
      • Jong-dae Park
    • Stars
      • Lee Byung-hun
      • Gong Yoo
      • Song Kang-ho
    • 32User reviews
    • 78Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 16 wins & 41 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Age of Shadows
    Trailer 1:39
    The Age of Shadows
    The Age of Shadows
    Trailer 1:46
    The Age of Shadows
    The Age of Shadows
    Trailer 1:46
    The Age of Shadows

    Photos55

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    Top cast45

    Edit
    Lee Byung-hun
    Lee Byung-hun
    • Jeong Chae-san
    Gong Yoo
    Gong Yoo
    • Kim Woo-Jin
    Song Kang-ho
    Song Kang-ho
    • Lee Jung-Chool
    Park Hee-soon
    Park Hee-soon
    • Kim Sang-ho
    Heo Sung-tae
    Heo Sung-tae
    • Ha Il-Soo
    Jeon Yeo-been
    Jeon Yeo-been
    • Gisaeng
    Han Ji-min
    Han Ji-min
    • Yoon Gye-soon
    Go Joon
    Go Joon
    • Shim Sang-do
    Won Jin-ah
    Won Jin-ah
    • Nun on Bike
    Lee Sang-hee
    Lee Sang-hee
    • Baby's mom
    Kwak Ja-hyoung
    Kwak Ja-hyoung
    • Seo Jin-Dol
    Sin Seong-rok
    Sin Seong-rok
    • Jo Hwe-ryung
    Um Tae-goo
    • Hashimoto
    Kwon Soo-Hyeon
    Kwon Soo-Hyeon
    • Sun-Gil
    Joo Suk-tae
    Joo Suk-tae
    • Prosecutor
    Kim Dong-young
    Kim Dong-young
    • Heo Chul-joo
    Han Soo-yeon
    Han Soo-yeon
    • Mae-Hyang
    Seo Yeong-ju
    • Joo Dong-Sung
    • Director
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • Writers
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Lee Ji-min
      • Jong-dae Park
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    7.111.6K
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    Featured reviews

    billygoat1071

    Enjoyably Thrilling

    Well, that was a lot of fun. The Age of Shadows is a spy thriller that is basically a ticking bomb and once things go wrong, it just gets brutal and chaotic. The set up for these characters and their plot is well put together enough to be engrossing. And the set pieces are just excitingly executed. The film is unafraid of showing something terrible from their consequences. Though there is one point at the third act where I wished the film had ended. It gets to feel a little too long as it goes on, but man, the train sequence alone is one hell of an exercise for suspense. The production is also too impressive and the acting is quite engaging. Overall, it's a dark and brutal, yet quite an edge of your seat cinematic thrill ride.
    10alexdeleonfilm

    So much in this film it feels like watching a Beethoven Symphony!

    Mil Jeong (밀정 ~ The Age of Shadows).

    Viewed at 2016 Venice FilmFestival. Tremendous Korean epochal drama about life and resistance under the oppressive Japanese occupation in the early decades of the century. Director Kim Jaewoon really knows how to set up drama and suspense mixed with blazing action. There was so much in this film that I felt like I was watching a Beethoven symphony. Dark Sepia toned photography used to good effect enhances period feel. Musical soundtrack employs jazz and adrenaline tensor stretches and the final shootout in the train station is orchestrated deftly to Ravel's Bolero.

    139' running time is long and winds up with several anticlimactic codas but never lets you out if its grip. For Koreans this is clearly a film with heavy patriotic messages. The final theme is "Don't let your failures stop you -- build on them and rise to the next level" -- until victory is achieved. I would love to see this film with a Korean audience and would expect to see people on their feet cheering at the end... A young Italian I met afterwards said he loved it even though he knows nothing of the history involved. I could easily see why -- in a way this is something like a Kimchee spaghetti western and charismatic actor Kang-ho Song, 49, has got to be the Korean equivalent of John Wayne, or at least, Robert Mitchum.
    9Quinoa1984

    taut and intense, bloody and heartfelt but also unsentimental

    I have to wonder if director Kim Jee-Woon titled this film in some part after the Melville WW2 film Army of Shadows. This isn't to get all movie trivia on you all, rather it's to make a small point about how Jee-Woon is doing two things in The Age of Shadows and doing them well: making a sort of homage to films about resistance movements and espionage during wartime (in a way this makes this a war film, but the front-lines are often with a few people behind closed doors, or trying to find people on a train who are incognito, or sides being reversed, with torture on the table for the side with power to those captured), and at the same time it's Jee-Woon making a film about his own country's history, when Korea was occupied by Japan, which adds a personal dimension to it.

    While I'm sure if I was Korean I would have more of a connection to it - I actually didn't know as much about this history as I thought - knowing about other resistance and underground movements against occupying powers (and another film that comes to mind outside of Melville's film, which is much darker than this, is Inglourious Basterds) makes the drama palpable. Oh, and the actual conflicts and character dynamics pop every possible moments. It's a story about loyalty and honor, but also how difficult that really is: the point of view is mostly from Song Kang-Ho (remember him from Snowpiercer and The Host and other films by Bong Joon-Ho?), a Korean born officer for the Japanese police who was one years before part of the resistance against Japan, but has now gone to the side of conformity. But people underground, including Kim Woo-Jin who is wanted by the top Japanese police brass, see some potential in Hang-Ho's character, the conflict in him deep down, and look to "open his heart" to turn for them. Partially.

    This is a complex film, and I'm sure on a first screening a few plot points here and there or little scenes made it so that I'm also sure a second screening might clear up a few things (it's a long film too at 140 minutes, not unlike Army of Shadows, so it's kind of dense viewing - not a bad thing, just what it is). In this complexity the filmmaker, who also is the writer, finds a lot of strong thematic connections, how we as the audience can fill in the gaps that might be questioning on how or why characters decide to do things, the journey for Lee Jung-Chool as alright cop to gray-area level traitor, and it doesn't shy away from gruesome details and moments. It doesn't dwell on things like the torture scenes, when resistance fighters who are captured and given burning skewers or ripped-off finger-nails, but it's important to show enough of that so it impacts certain characters. At the same time the violence is brutal but cut quick (not too quick, of course), which also brings back to mind Basterds.

    What I mean to say going back to 'complex' is that you have to pay attention to it (you look at your phone while watching this for a second and you'll miss something, put it away, it's not that kind of movie - aside from that you'll miss the often exquisite filmmaking and those moments where the screws tighten like that entire sequence on the train that makes up a 20 minute chunk midway through). It treats its audience like adults who can take some very hard decisions from characters, and also how subtle cues can alert people to things, and yet at the same time there's even some humor here and there. When the main resistance guy gets introduced to Lee Jung-Chool, the way to make things a little less, uh, 'tense' is to go through an entire barrel of liquor. How this one minute of film is cut together, showing drink after drink tumbled down until the barrel is empty, is one of the funniest things this year - but, again, subtle-funny. It's more about character than anything else.

    This is at times a rough film, its twists and turns confronting your expectations and making you question what's going to come next, and other times bleak and depressing. But it all leads up to a place that is phenomenal in terms of its dramatic arc and how the director builds up the kind of palpable suspense that shows he's watched his share of The Godfather a thousand times (but he makes it his own, it's not aped to annoyance). He's so assured that he goes past being one of the most skillful directors in Korea right now; The Age of Shadows confirms after massively entertaining and incredibly dark efforts like The Good, the Bad, the Weird and I Saw the Devil as basically someone in the entire WORLD that should be cherished. This is a remarkable film, and one of the better, more harrowing efforts of 2016.
    8kanyeezy-28832

    The movie you have to experience

    Based on the real story that happened during the time that Japan ruled the Korea, The Age of Shadow is very successful history-based movie. It is a fine mixture of Korean characteristics and Western characteristics. Until these days, many Korean movies have sought for ways to put Korean-exclusive stories into the frame of Western film-making. The result has been somewhat successful but also somewhat disappointing. It fulfilled Korean people's wishes to watch Hollywood-ish Korean movies. However, it couldn't convince foreign people of the reason to watch Korean movies instead of Hollywood movies. I mean, no matter how hard Korean movies try, the budget is lower than Hollywood, and spectacles are also lesser.

    However, this movie, The Age of Shadow, is different. This one is unique. I'm not going to praise action scenes, or comedy scenes because they were not that outstanding. What I want to praise is atmosphere in this movie that keeps suspense alive throughout the whole running time. Well, for better understanding I could use Quentin Tarantino as an example. Even though he is famous for violence in his movie, many people who watch his movies for the first time find them very non-blockbuster like but still quite amusing. The Age of Shadow is quite similar. This movie's acting, dialogue and visuals give this movie a special atmosphere that keep audiences' focus. I'm not saying that this movie is Tarantino-like though. Kim Jee-Woon and Tarantino are similar in a way that they use special atmosphere throughout the movie but their atmospheres are different. Kim Jee-Woon has the ability to form a Korean-exclusive atmosphere that is based on Korean culture. I'm not sure how to name it but it is something that can move Korean people's heart without stating it in a specific way. And I believe this movie will be quite amusing and also exotic experience for you if you are not Korean. This movie is not like other Korean movies, but also the most Korean-like movie. I recommend it.
    9ewleeds

    This Korean Film Just Pushed Gone With the Wind Away! Toppled it.

    If you said to me that a Korean Film can beat 95% of the top films produced in the last 20 years, I would have serious doubts. To explain, I am an Hollywood Worshipper, a Hollywood lover and a picture goer with strong views, likes and dislikes. What we have here is a film that is in the same 'sleeper league; as the ShawShank Redemption, a film with a wonderful story, script, a great cast and one of the best films I have seen for ages. It shown on British TV 23 October 2019, my wife put it on, when she saw it was Korean she lost interest and went to bed, big mistake, I stayed, and was totally hypnotised and absorbed with it, great technical strides have been made in the last 40 years in every department of film production - but in Korea, with a foreign cast, with no familiar names, a film made for adults not 11-year old children, without one car chase, or male film star whose next film is to save the world, or rescue it from Mr Evil Doom, this Korean film Age of Shadows, is one to be fond of, to watch again and again, and in some respects to relive your great film memories sitting in the Empire Cinema, Stockton on Tees, England, when sitting in the Nine-Penny seats watching the African Queen, All About Eve, or the Wizard of Oz, Yes, it is that good. Watch it.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film is Warner Bros. first Korean production.
    • Goofs
      In the train one of the resistance members open the pocket watch with QUARTZ inscription on dial. Second hand of the watch moves in distinct steps reaffirming they have a quartz movement inside. Quartz watch was not invented in 20s and was not available till late 60s.
    • Quotes

      Jung Chae-San: Even when we fail, we move forward. The failures accrue, and we tread on them to advance to higher ground.

    • Crazy credits
      The Warner Bros logo is set on a quiet street.
    • Connections
      Featured in Boléro, le refrain du monde (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      When you're smiling
      Written by Larry Shay (uncredited), Mark Fisher (uncredited) and Joe Goodwin (uncredited)

      Performed by Louis Armstrong

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 7, 2016 (South Korea)
    • Countries of origin
      • South Korea
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Vidio (Indonesia)
    • Languages
      • Korean
      • Japanese
      • Mandarin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Secret Agent
    • Filming locations
      • Seoul, South Korea
    • Production companies
      • Grimm Pictures
      • Harbin
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,620,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $541,719
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $165,685
      • Sep 25, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $54,491,162
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 20m(140 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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