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Lady Vengeance

Original title: Chinjeolhan geumjassi
  • 2005
  • 16
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
90K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,803
427
Lee Yeong-ae in Lady Vengeance (2005)
20 years after its initial theatrical run, 'Oldboy' returns to theaters newly restored and remastered. IMDb sits down with filmmaker Park Chan-wook to discuss his career-long exploration into the themes of violence and eroticism that fuel his Vengeance Trilogy, how his characters lead him into those realms and toward those bloody endings, and how his family inspires him to keep creating. Director Park also reveals that if he were ever locked away for 15 years like Oh Dae-su (Choi Min-sik) in 'Oldboy,' what series he'd hope were on the television in his room.
Play clip4:33
Watch Director Park Chan-wook on Weaving Violent and Erotic Themes into 'Oldboy'
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyCrimeDramaThriller

After being wrongfully imprisoned for thirteen years and having her child taken away from her, a woman seeks revenge through increasingly brutal means.After being wrongfully imprisoned for thirteen years and having her child taken away from her, a woman seeks revenge through increasingly brutal means.After being wrongfully imprisoned for thirteen years and having her child taken away from her, a woman seeks revenge through increasingly brutal means.

  • Director
    • Park Chan-wook
  • Writers
    • Chung Seo-kyung
    • Park Chan-wook
    • Park Myeong-chan
  • Stars
    • Lee Yeong-ae
    • Choi Min-sik
    • Yea-young Kwon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    90K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,803
    427
    • Director
      • Park Chan-wook
    • Writers
      • Chung Seo-kyung
      • Park Chan-wook
      • Park Myeong-chan
    • Stars
      • Lee Yeong-ae
      • Choi Min-sik
      • Yea-young Kwon
    • 208User reviews
    • 224Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 13 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos1

    Director Park Chan-wook on Weaving Violent and Erotic Themes into 'Oldboy'
    Clip 4:33
    Director Park Chan-wook on Weaving Violent and Erotic Themes into 'Oldboy'

    Photos110

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Lee Yeong-ae
    Lee Yeong-ae
    • Geum-ja Lee
    Choi Min-sik
    Choi Min-sik
    • Mr. Baek
    Yea-young Kwon
    • Jenny
    Kim Shi-hoo
    • Geun-shik
    • (as Shi-hoo Kim)
    Oh Dal-su
    Oh Dal-su
    • Mr. Chang
    Lee Seung-shin
    Lee Seung-shin
    • Yi-jeong Park
    Kim Byeong-Ok
    Kim Byeong-Ok
    • Preacher
    Ra Mi-ran
    Ra Mi-ran
    • Su-hee Oh
    Young-ju Seo
    • Yang-hee Kim
    • (as Yeong-ju Seo)
    Go Su-hee
    • Ma-nyeo
    Kim Geum-soon
    • Prisoner 1
    Yeonsoo Song
    • Prisoner 2
    Lee Jung-yong
    • Pimp
    Ko Chang-seok
    Ko Chang-seok
    • So-young's Husband
    Hye-Ryeong Hong
    • Detective Choi's Wife
    Kim Jeong-nam
    • Won-mo's Relative
    • (as Jeong-nam Kim)
    Choi Hee-jin
    • Prisoner 3…
    Tony Barry
    Tony Barry
    • Jenny's Adopted Father
    • Director
      • Park Chan-wook
    • Writers
      • Chung Seo-kyung
      • Park Chan-wook
      • Park Myeong-chan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews208

    7.590.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8Xstal

    The Avenging Shadow...

    Revenge is a dish best served cold, in this case some 17 years old, as Geum-ja Lee plots, ways that Mr. Baek rots, it's a beautiful thing to behold.

    Cinematic poetry in motion, a sensual blast of emotion, such fortitude and drive, such cunning to contrive, the passion, the focus, intense devotion (can also be said of Woo-jin Lee in Old Boy).
    10emmily87

    standing ovation

    i usually don't enjoy movies that contain gore, suspense, and violence. still, sympathy for lady vengeance was undoubtedly, a movie worth watching. even for those who actively dislike movies in this certain genre, sympathy for lady vengeance is an absolute must. out of the trilogy, this one was the one i enjoyed most. there was nothing overly-excessive and/or gratuitous (which i honestly found oldboy and sympathy for mr vengeance had a bit of), and it definitely cannot be considered a brain-candy film. with an extremely intelligent and interesting plot, and visually stunning cinematography, it was a spectacular piece of art, from the start to the finish, and had me thinking about it and talking about it for days afterward.
    9autumnleaves87

    A sinful opera

    The final instalment of Park's Revenge Trilogy concluded well. In fact, I personally feel that it is the best out of the three film, excellent cinematography and beautiful classic music that blended perfectly well into the story. Lee Youngae gives fantastic performance in her role, a complete impression from her previous kind-hearted and sweet looking role in "Jewel in the Palace". Cold and filled with vengeance , yet she exudes fine elegance with her subtle body language and facial expression. The soundtrack works well at suitable moments, infusing classic into this art-house film. It was a pity the film didn't win any grand awards in the Venice Film Festival, Park definitely deserves recognition for his excellent works.
    bob the moo

    Interesting but not as emotionally impacting as I would have liked

    Aged 19, Geum-ja Lee confesses as the woman who abducted and murdered the child Won-mo Park. At the time the tabloids cause a clamour against her but this dies down once she is inside and forgotten. She is reached out to inside and finds faith and redemption. However almost 14 years later she is released and decides she no longer has need for this and sets out to catch up with those she knew from inside her prison, all the while working up to her plan to take revenge on the man who robbed her of this chunk of her life.

    Having surprised myself by how much I liked Oldboy, I decided to watch this film as a follow-up. For the majority of it, the story has enough to it to hold the interest easily; the actual core deed is not as interesting on its own as it is shorn of the mystery of Oldboy, however in theory this means it is more about the people and the emotional impact of the act and the vengeance more than the violence. I say in theory because I must be honest and say that I found it a lot less emotionally engaging than I would have liked. In some ways it is strong in this area but mostly it didn't have the heart that I thought it was trying to get to. The narrative is still enough to fill the running time but the second half is, dare I say it, a bit duller than it should have been just because the humanity wasn't there.

    Park must shoulder some responsibility for this but he does make up for it with the style and delivery that drew me into Oldboy. He has scaled it back from that (hence the feeling that this was meant to be more about the heart) but it is still visually engaging and uses various techniques to enhance the delivery. Yeong-ae Lee appears to have been given more insight into the material than I was because her delivery is full of emotion and hurt. She brings it out whenever she can but for some reason the film generally doesn't support her in this. The support cast are mostly good but the film belongs to her and is best when the scenes centre on either her story or her character.

    Overall though, not as good as the praise and ratings here would suggest but still an engaging film on several levels. Stylish and interesting it only stuttered by being surprisingly emotionally muted for large chunks where I felt it needed to be more convincing and impacting. Fans of the other Park films will enjoy it as a conclusion to the trilogy but it is hard not to feel that it could have done more.
    7Gigo_Satana

    Lady Repentance

    I guess it was somewhat convenient and clever for Park to have conceived this film as the third and final installment to his two pragmatically different films. Seeing as how Lady Vengeance shares two similar themes of unjust imprisonment and child kidnapping with her elder brothers Oldboy and Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance. Clearly if this picture wouldn't have been regarded in the trilogy, many would proclaim Park as stagnant and unable of moving away from these akin proses dealing with revenge.

    Film opens with the release of Lady Vengeance, a.k.a. "The Witch", a.k.a. "kind-hearted Geum-ja", played by the elegant Yeong-ae Lee. I was quite surprised by how heavily narrated this film was from the get-go, as I was expecting the major breakdowns and motives revealed at a much later time, lets say right before the final pinnacle. But I preferred this to how Oldboy played, in a sense that Lady Vengeance didn't largely depended on the "big shocker" to end the film and instead moved along steadily, revealing everything piece by piece.

    Making comparisons with Park's past two films was much tangible here as with each beautiful classical piece mirroring one from Oldboy there was also the unexaggerated violence similar to that of SFMV. The music was again well chosen and played in melancholic and elating waves without any use of mainstream ballads or electronic beats. Some of the compositions were used multiple times and while they might come off a bit repetitive, most of them were either recurring for the sake of certain notions and themes that the characters were going through or just because.

    Aside from the tight main cast, many known and capable faces of Korean cinema made appearances in short and shorter interludes throughout the film. Not much else could be said, apart from them doing just as much as the script was asking of them. While the visual and musical aspects of the film are simply splendid, the story here might cause some viewers to contend whether everything premeditated and executed by our leading lady was truly worthful.

    **The following comments contain spoilers**

    A lot was shown of what Geum-ja was like during the prison time where she was boldly portrayed as a calculating, 'devil in God's clothes' of a woman who had a conveniently good eye for helping those who could later help her. Geum-ja was able to put on a quite a good by finding faith and making public speeches. But she had the best part reserved for Mr. Baek, played by the powerhouse actor Min-sik Choi. Mr. Baek had betrayed Geum-ja and made her take the blame for a murder of a child that he himself committed. And if then 19 year old Geum-ja was to refuse, he would've simply killed her (illegitimate) newborn child.

    More was revealed about Mr. Baek who continued working as a kindergarten teacher for when Geum-ja captured him with the help of her former cell mate, who returned her a favor by marrying Mr. Baek and coping with his demeaning ways. Apparently Mr. Baek's past crime with that child wasn't a singular case as he had a fetish for capturing little kids and taping their deaths on camera for his viewing pleasure.

    After toying with Mr. Baek, but holding back from completely destroying him, Geum-ja revealed her grand plan. Standing in the middle of an abandoned school, in a classroom of irregularly filled seats, Geum-ja gathered the family members of those kids that Mr. Baek had killed. After screening the tapes, Geum-ja gave those people options to either have their way with Baek or call upon the law to deal with him instead.

    Watching these characters nauseate over the tapes of their little children being tortured in a way deflated Geum-ja's arc as a character and somewhat weakened the film's final punch in my eyes. So many years spent in jail and questions surrounding the well-being of her daughter must have been undoubtedly excruciating for her, but standing next to these people, who unlike her seemed so much more humane and relatable, I felt a lot more sorrow for them than I did for Geum-ja, most likely due to how mechanical and manipulative her character was made to look, which to say the least was brave of the director, if not a bit overzealous. Her struggles with gaining forgiveness from the dead boy and the symbolism of the white cake representing her state of repentance, overshadowed the climax of the revenge, however the scenes with the family members going in one by one after Mr. Baek were the essence of the film.

    **End of spoilers**

    In the end I found Lady Vengeance more infatuated with itself than Oldboy, but not as fundamentally visceral and unrelenting as SFMV, which remains to be my favorite film from Park to date. Lady Vengeance felt like an amusement park, filled with hard facts mixed with dreamy imagination sequences, en route of sardonic pokes at religion and sexual deeds. A film with a little bit of everything for everyone, that's if you don't strip away its flashy overtones and comic-book-like personifications, which gracefully coat the film's otherwise improbable scheme, fantasized by a random cell-woman, unjustly imprisoned for a crime she didn't commit.

    I think Park needs to make a film that will not only disassociate him from his well talked about and highly debated trilogy flicks, but will devoid him from being thrown into the pool of devaluing comparisons to Hollywood films like Kill Bill as also witnessed with the response to A Bittersweet Life from the press and movie fans. Park has all the right tools and he has shown us the many faces of revenge, now it's time for him to show us something else.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The snow during the closing scene is not real. They brought two trucks of salt and scattered it all over the street; the falling snow is CGI.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Geum-ja Lee: Listen carefully. Everyone make mistakes. But if you committed a sin, you have to make an atonement for that sin. Atonement, do you know what that means? Big Atonement for big sins. Small Atonement for small sins.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two different versions of the film. One is full color. The other, called "Fade to Black Version", shifts from color to B&W over the course of the movie. Like Sin City, there are color highlighted, even in the B&W scenes. The second version is what the director intended, but he was not able to complete it properly until the Korean DVD (which includes both versions).
    • Connections
      Featured in MsMojo: Top 10 Best Female Revenge Movies of All Time (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      Mareta no'm faces plorar
      Composed by Jordi Savall

      Vocal by Montserrat Figuera, Arianna Savall

      Baroque Guitar by Xavier Diaz-Latotte

      Baroque Flutes Traversieres by Mare Hantai

      Bass Viola da gamba by Jordi Savall

      Courtesy by Alia Vox

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 16, 2005 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Languages
      • Korean
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Señora Venganza
    • Filming locations
      • Seoul, South Korea
    • Production companies
      • CJ Entertainment
      • CJ Capital Investment
      • Centurion Investment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • ₩4,200,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $211,667
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,850
      • Apr 30, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,835,242
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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