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Frères de sang

Original title: Taegukgi hwinallimyeo
  • 2004
  • 12
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
42K
YOUR RATING
Frères de sang (2004)
Period DramaTragedyActionDramaWar

When two brothers are forced to fight in the Korean War, the elder decides to take the riskiest missions if it will help shield the younger from battle.When two brothers are forced to fight in the Korean War, the elder decides to take the riskiest missions if it will help shield the younger from battle.When two brothers are forced to fight in the Korean War, the elder decides to take the riskiest missions if it will help shield the younger from battle.

  • Director
    • Kang Je-kyu
  • Writers
    • Kang Je-kyu
    • Sang-don Kim
    • Han Ji-hoon
  • Stars
    • Jang Dong-gun
    • Won Bin
    • Lee Eun-ju
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    42K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kang Je-kyu
    • Writers
      • Kang Je-kyu
      • Sang-don Kim
      • Han Ji-hoon
    • Stars
      • Jang Dong-gun
      • Won Bin
      • Lee Eun-ju
    • 255User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 14 wins & 19 nominations total

    Videos1

    Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War
    Trailer 2:04
    Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War

    Photos16

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Jang Dong-gun
    Jang Dong-gun
    • Lee Jin-tae
    Won Bin
    Won Bin
    • Lee Jin-seok
    Lee Eun-ju
    Lee Eun-ju
    • Kim Young-shin
    Gong Hyung-jin
    Gong Hyung-jin
    • Yong-man
    • (as Gong Hyeong-jin)
    Lee Yeong-ran
    • Mother Lee
    Ahn Kil-kang
    Ahn Kil-kang
    • Sergeant Huh
    Jin Jung
    • Sergeant Lim
    Jeon Jae-hyeong
    • Yong-seok
    Jang Min-ho
    • Old Lee Jin-seok
    Jo Yun-hie
    Jo Yun-hie
    • Lee Jin-seok's grandaughter
    Kim Bo-kyung
    • North Korean war prisoner
    Jeong Dae-hoon
    Go Do-hee
    • Kim Young-gook
    Jung Doo-hong
    Jung Doo-hong
    Jung Gi-sub
    Jung Gi-sub
    • Medic
    Bae Jang-soo
    • Noodles guest
    Kim Kyung-hwan
    • Kim Young-min
    Choi Min-sik
    Choi Min-sik
    • North Korean Captain
    • Director
      • Kang Je-kyu
    • Writers
      • Kang Je-kyu
      • Sang-don Kim
      • Han Ji-hoon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews255

    8.041.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10ncc1205

    A 'Brotherhood' For The Ages

    Nations do not fight wars. Citizens fight them, and these citizens are honorable men and women who serve their country willingly or, as history shows, by decree of a desperate government.

    As a result, patriotism has become the unlikeliest casualty. Once welcomed in the trenches of battle, patriotism has lost its limbs, fought back from life support, and suffered shell shock. Once easily recognized, patriotism has become a bit of a chimera, an ideal more easily attached to definable characteristics than it is any single soldier. However, in the bitter end, patriotism is defined by the actions of these individuals who serve; it is rewarded by the nations who sponsor this service; and, more often than not, it is measured in hardships endured.

    Such is the complex, ever-changing battleground of writer/director Kang Je-Gyu's 'Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War.'

    In 1950's Seoul, Jin-Seok (Won Bin) and his older brother Jin-Tae (Jang Dong-gun) are enjoying a strong family life of perfect happiness. Suddenly, they find their lives turned upside down as soldiers of the South Korean government seize them – all men aged 18 to 30 are taken – and they are forced to take up arms – despite their lack of training – against the approaching North Koreans. On one brutal battlefield after another, the bonds of family are put to increasingly demanding tests as Jin-Tae – originally driven by his responsibility to protect his younger brother – continues to further exhaust his physical and emotional prowess despite the protests of Jin-Seok. He learns that he is a good soldier, one with a talent for inspiring others as well as an unanticipated thirst for killing the enemy. Eventually, these two brothers – once bound by a love for family – find themselves at odds within this new brotherhood of war, and the pressures to prove one another continue to exact heavier and heavier tolls as the war escalates. As circumstances evolve, the brothers inevitably find themselves on opposite sides of a losing conflict … but can either find a path to redemption or reconciliation that can save both of them?

    There are many elements of 'Taegukgi' that elevate the film from the status of standard war film to a message of hope set against the backdrop of war. The film's scope is grand, dealing with the far more intimate themes of family, brotherhood, and personal responsibility when Director Kang Je-Gyu could have easily opted for banging the drum of nationalism. At its core, 'Taegukgi' is the story of two brothers, a strikingly poignant analogy for the entire North Korea / South Korea dilemma. While the battlefield choreography is as frenetic as it is harrowing, it never takes the film's center: this picture is founded on relationships – the human perspective to the world outside – and it never falters. Instead of focusing on history, Kang Je-Gyu crafts every scene to highlight the thoughts, actions, and emotions of the participants of history, and, for that, 'Taegukgi' deserves countless accolades.

    Much like exploring the heart of darkness as depicted in American classics as Francis Ford Coppola's 'Apocalypse Now' and Oliver Stone's 'Platoon,' Kang Je-Gyu forces Jin-tae to explore his own budding evil, and this journey is not without its own relative scars. Once a man has crossed over and embraced wartime madness, can he ever truly find a way out? Arguably, if 'Taegukgi' suffers from any setback, it is that perhaps Jin-tae goes too far for an audience to accept his madness: believing his brother to have been killed by North Koreans, Jin-tae turns traitor once he is captured and seeks to wipe out every soldier serving South Korea. While the story offers the motivation for so drastic a change, it's hard to believe that the man who once fought so valiantly against the spread of Communism would suddenly choose to embrace it.

    Still, it's a small diversion … but it's necessary to bring the aspect of brotherhood full circle, to have these two unique men face their darkest hour, and to make one final statement on the role that family inevitably plays in every man's life.

    Recently, thanks to the worldwide success of 'Taegukgi' and 1999's blockbuster 'Shiri,' Director Kang Je-Gyu has signed an agreement with Hollywood's own powerhouse, CAA, to produce his next film in America. Only time will tell whether or not this agreement will afford some of the 'Korean sensibility' to American films, but certainly having one of South Korea's premier directors breaking into the Hollywood film system is a tremendous advantage for fans of international film.

    Only the passage of time will earn 'Taegukgi' its rightful spot alongside the other great films dealing with the consequences of war.
    calvin0272

    An Epic

    I never liked subtitled movies, until this one. Just watched it last night and couldn't stop thinking about it.

    The movie started with the life of two brothers before the war, a life that was almost perfect until the war shatters all. Everything goes downhill from there. Despite all their best intentions, the two brothers helplessly watched their fate sinking and themselves drifting apart, with only dotted moments of hope and triumgh, when unconditional love and human spirit break through the darkness.

    Comparing to "Saving Private Ryan", this movie gives characters a more human touch. "SPR" seems to moralize too much, no flaws, just hero's. The result is the characters came off plain and two-dimensional. Agree with Saturday-3's comment on SPR posted on 9/13/04 that "SPR almost seems like nothing more than a visually stunning, flag-waving movie". By the way, I am a big fan of Steven Spielburg and Tom Hanks, so there wasn't any bias there. On a side note, "Band of brothers", on the contrary, is very very good.

    What I don't get, is how a mediocre subtitled movies such as "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Hero" gets so much marketing effort and a truly amazing one like this gets nothing. By the way, I am a Chinese currently living in the States. So I guess that wasn't a very patriotic thing to say. IMHO, "Hero" is just a compilation of beautiful pictures. "Crouching Tiger" is even worse. (It's probably because I was able to understand the original dialogue and can tell how little effort was put into anything other than making the pictures look pretty.)

    Hats off to Koreans for making such a great epic. "Tae Guk Gi" is a reminder of the difference between art and entertainment, a reminder that wars, as well as movies, are not about bang-bang actions and special effects. They are about human beings.

    The only complaints that I could think of are: 1. The music during the beginning of the movie seems a little too sentimental. 2. The camera shakes too much during action scenes, probably deliberately, to create the chaos with a limited budget. But I don't have a problem with the length of the movie. The two and half hours felt like 1.5 hour when you were drawn into the intensity of the film.

    If you are still wondering if you want to see this movie, go watch the trailer on the internet. Make sure you watch the one starting with the announcement of "ShowBox". Oh, hell, just watch the movie. Chances are you won't regret it.

    As for myself, I am going to pre-order the DVD. I can't remember when was the last time that I want to see the bonus material of a movie so badly.

    If you like the movie, I would also recommend "When trumpets fade" and "Band of Brothers".
    9qfb1

    One of the Best Movie About War

    It started out like so many other movies, a short clip of the present and then a long flashback. And then it blew me away with its depiction of war and all of its complexities. The changes in the attitudes of the two brothers as the Korean War progresses helps us understand that war is not merely about good and evil. The most well intentioned soldier or commander can go astray. The Korean War turned brother against brother based on little more than time and place, conviction, or happenstance.

    Take Guk Gi is the best antiwar movie that I have seen since Johnny Got His Gun.

    It reminded me of the beginning of Saving Private Ryan, which I thought captured some of the reality of war while avoiding the pitfalls that Saving Private Ryan fell.

    If the DC crowd watched the Battle of Algiers but missed the message, All Americans should see Tae Guk Gi to better understand the horror and tragedy of war.
    10wldbest

    Harry's Top Ten Movies of 2004 - No.1

    That's what this movie is. Pure hell. If you're that person that screamed in agony when Shakespeare IN LOVE beat SAVING PRIVATE RYAN – find this movie and realize just how much better TAE GUK GI: BROTHERHOOD OF WAR is than just about every war film ever made. A story of two brothers during the Korean War. The movie is spectacle larger than any film made this year, but as intimate as a tale of brothers could ever be. I grew up with Sam Fuller, Peckinpah, Spielberg and the war films of Hollywood. This thing… it's just amazing. I went to see it on "Can Day" here in Austin… where you donate 3 cans of food to the homeless and see any movie you want. I saw 4 films that day, this was the 3rd – and it just completely blew me away. I instantly got the Korean Box Set – and have seen it many times since… Unfortunately – the day I saw it in the theater was the last day it was showing in Austin. A BRILLIANT FILM. The film will just shake you to the core. The South Koreans are making brutally brilliant films. Amazing. Should be re-released with a major advertising campaign. The trailers you could cut of this thing… my god. Stunning film and my pick for the best film of 2004 ! Check the site - http://aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=19054
    100U

    Great

    Let's be real; Saving Private Ryan is a better movie then Tae Guk Gi. This is movie tries too hard to be exactly like Saving Private Ryan- the action, the cinematography, the camera work... But behind all the technicalities comes a very moving and powerful character-driven story that is more riveting then Saving Private Ryan. In comparison to the incredibly gritty "Saving Private Ryan", Tae Guk Gi is more of a blockbuster movie that has more stylized action and drama. Still, this is a must watch.

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    War

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To recreate the battle at Doo-Mil-Ryung, the scene required 15,000 bullets, 3,000 extras and 500 stunt experts. Instead of rifles being fired, fist fights were the main focus of the scene and all of the cast were specially trained. The shoot lasted three weeks with about 50 minor accidents a day on average, but the scene was finally wrapped without any major accidents.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where North Korean soldiers ambush Jin Tae and several other South Korean soldiers while they're laying mines, one of the South Koreans steps on a mine and it blows his leg off. However, the M15 Anti-tank mine, which was the mine they were using, requires a force of 350 to 750 lbs to detonate.
    • Quotes

      Jin-seok: I wish this was all just a dream. I want to wake up in my bed, and over breakfast, I'd tell you that I had a strange dream. Then I would go to school, and you and mom would go to work.

    • Alternate versions
      Also released in a director's cut running 148min, 8min longer than the US and original version.
    • Connections
      References Il faut sauver le soldat Ryan (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Oppaneun punggakjaengi
      Written by Kim Song Kyu and Park Yeong Ho

      Sung by Park Hyang Rim.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 11, 2005 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Hermandad De Guerra
    • Filming locations
      • A-San City, South Korea(Jin-tea's home)
    • Production companies
      • Kang Je-Kyu Film Co. Ltd.
      • KD Media
      • KTB Network
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,800,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,111,061
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $260,135
      • Sep 5, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $81,407,286
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 20m(140 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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