Not bad. This korean movie is a mix between an epic story and an action movie... Combats are very good. The plot is a bit confused. I had to watch it twice to understand some things. Dark warriors, with a large hat on their heads are very picturesque and the technique used by the main character remembers some techniques used is some video game (do you remember Ken and Ryu in Street Fighters and their "Aduken" shot?).
Saw it if you like wuxia movies. You could spend a glad evening watching it.
Keywords: goryeo dynasty
Plot summary
It is 14th century Yuan Dynasty China, the country is under Mongolian rule and the star-crossed lovers, Jinha and Sullie, illegitimate daughter of a Mongolian commander, are caught in the middle. When her mother died, SullieÕs father, Taruga, took her away and later planned to marry her off to form an alliance with a powerful Chinese warlord. Things get worse when Jinha learns that Taruga was the person who ordered the massacre of his entire family. Fuelled by hatred, he masters his family secret martial arts, the Bichun Secret Art. Many top pugilists, who are also after the secret scroll, try to kill him. During one of such attempts, Junkwang, a rich and powerful son of a Han lord, helps Jinha. But fate has it that Junkwang is the person that Sullie is forced to marry. When Junkwang knows about their love, he plots to have Jinha killed.
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Not bad indeed
Disappointing Korean swordplay outing
BICHUNMOO is a Korean historical action movie, set in China and clearly inspired by the wuxia genre in that country. It's a film about an outsider who falls in love with the wrong woman and ends up battling various evil factions intent on seeing him dead, and it's all rather par for the course for this particular genre. As a whole, though, it has too many negative aspects to make it a truly entertaining movie.
Director Kim Young-jun also helmed the later - and similarly-themed - LEGEND OF THE SHADOWLESS SWORD, which I think has the edge over this film. Because the storyline in BICHUNMOO is just too muddled, jumping all over the place with quick editing and failing to take the time to introduce all the new characters who keep appearing. Although it's a lengthy production it seems rushed throughout, with frenzied action getting in the way of proper characterisation and depth to the narrative.
The action isn't that great either. I didn't mind all the cool wirework and gravity-defying combat, but what I did mind was the super-fast editing, which is almost as bad as shaky cam. The viewer has little time to register the cool death effects and awesome moves before it jumps to the next fight, and the next after that. I think that action choreography and direction is a very fine art and it's easy to get it wrong; sadly BICHUNMOO offers far from the best that the genre has to offer. Add in some indifferent performances and you have a very forgettable sort of movie.
So-so big-budget Korean Wuxia-style movie.
Everyone in this movie wants to get their hands on the secrets of Bi Chun Shin Gi Sword Fighting; that's because once you've learnt it, you can make your sword go all glowy and send out bursts of energy that decimate your enemy. Luckily for Jinha, he and his 'uncle' have the only copy of the manual, and they aren't sharing with anyone.
Jinha is the only surviving member of the Yu family (who were wiped out by the evil General Taruga and his men whilst searching for the book). He and his pretty childhood sweetheart, Sullie, want to get hitched, but their plans go awry when Sullie is forced to leave the region by her father (who just happens to be the same nasty warmongering general who slaughtered her boyfriend's mum and dad). She vows to meet Jinha every full moon, but things go from bad to worse when Namgung Junkwang (snigger!),an influential aristocrat, declares an interest in Sullie and gets the full backing of Taruga.
When Jinha pitches up to meet Sullie, he fights Junkwang but is shot down by Taruga's archers. He falls over a cliff into some water and is presumed dead. Of course, he survives and, after being nursed back to health by a friendly stranger, he sets his sights on revenge.
Bichunmoo is a Korean film with a distinctly Chinese feel to it. The fights utilise the wire-fu techniques seen in many a Hong Kong (and, more recently, Hollywood) epic, whilst the story does its best to capture the romantic melodrama seen in countless Wuxia Pian movies. However, thanks to its complicated storyline, overlong running time, and difficult to follow fight scenes, it is only a partially successful attempt. The look is right (beautiful cinematography and a photogenic cast),there are some nice gory moments (arterial spray is always welcome in a film of this nature),the music is great and the plot contains all of the necessary elements (revenge, death, betrayal, love),but somehow it just doesn't quite gel as perfectly as one might hope.
The MTV-style editing during the action scenes is overdone, resulting in a visual mess of flailing limbs, blowing leaves and flapping cloth, and the story meanders aimlessly at times, making it hard to stay focused on events. But my major quibble is with Jinha's resurrection and subsequent reappearance as the leader of a team of mysterious assassins. Almost immediately after Jinha is pulled from the water and given a face-pack(!),the story shoots forwards a decade; Sullie has married Junkwang and has a son, and Jinha is in charge of a small army of bad-ass warriors. No explanation is given (I believe that the film was edited heavily to reduce the running time from three hours to just under two, but when the film suffers this much for it, this is no excuse).
With a tighter script, and better handling of the action, Bichunmoo could have been something special, but as it stands, I can only bring myself to give it 5 out of 10.