The balls-to-walls Korean crime drama The Yellow Sea electrifies with creative bloody combat using a machete, kitchen knives, and even a dog leg, intense chase sequences, and a riveting story. Cab driver Gu-nam, living in Yanji City, a Chinese region between North Korea and Russia dominated mostly by Joseonjok (Chinese citizens of Korean ancestry), goes deeply into debt to send his wife to Korea for work. After not hearing from her in six month, he fears she has left him. When largely due to his gambling problem, Gu-nam begins missing repayments to local thugs, he accepts an opportunity from powerful crime boss Myung-ga to wipe the slate clean. He must journey to South Korea and kill a man! While there, Gu-nam searches for his wife. Things goes horribly wrong and Gu-nam must escape the police and gangsters. The Yellow Sea is sure to thrill even the most jaded crime film fan.
Invasion of Alien Bikini opens when Young Gun, dressed in blue shorts, a yellow slicker, and perhaps the worst fake mustache to ever appear on screen, saves Ha Monica, a beautiful young woman, from the attacks of several men. Back at his place, Monica attempts to seduce the chaste hero. Turns out she is an alien that needs human sperm to propagate her species. Fun lunacy ensues with her trying a variety of methods to extract the fluid. A fake ad and “experts” explaining some of the more obscure aspects, cleverly interrupt the narrative. About 2/3 in, a sudden, massive tonal shift occurs that completely derails what up to then was an intelligent and light-hearted story. Then even more jarring, the movie attempts to return to the original light hearted feel. It fails.
Nacho Vigalondo, director of the lauded Timecrimes, returns for his second feature film Extraterrestrial. The hungover Julio wakes up in a strange bed. After re-acquainting with his hook up from the previous evening Julia, the pair realizes that the TV, phone, and Internet do not work. The streets are oddly deserted. Then they discover the giant spaceship hovering high above the city. Julia’s creepy next door neighbor brings news of an alien invasion. Her live-in boyfriend Carlos comes home, further complicating matters. The quartet begin to adjust to the strangeness of their lives while attempting to uncover exactly what happened.
One of the most anticipated premieres of the festival, founder Tim League revealed Extraterrestrial was the single most requested screening. An extra row of folding chairs were brought into the theater to accommodate some of the demand. Even with that I heard of many people who couldn’t get tickets. To further excite the crowd, free Shiner Bock was available (one pint per customer).
Vigalondo did not disappoint the crowd either with the movie or his post-feature interview.
During the interview, Producer Nahikari Ipiña said the movie only took 3 weeks to shoot! Vigalondo confided that he was drunk after drinking a bottle of wine while watching the world premiere of his newest film. Extraterrestrial is so different from Timecrimes in story and tone largely because he feared being typecast as a director ala M. Night Shyamalan. On the metaphors that occur throughout the movie, Vigalondo laughingly reveled that most of them were accidents but prefers people to “pretend I had my metaphors in mind… that I’m so clever.”
The complex romantic comedy offers plenty of laughs and mystery. Vigalondo expertly combined superior direction with his intelligent, witty script replete with shocking ending. The odd yet familiar tale features unusual props such as a tennis ball cannon, a large jar of peaches, and a giant coffee cup. Alongside Let the Bullets Fly and The Yellow Sea, Extraterrestrial delivers one of the early highlights of Fantastic Fest ’11.
Fantastic Fest Day Three: Of Superheroes and Gangsters
Fantastic Fest Day Two: Extraterrestrial Cometh or Free Beer was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon