Re: Oldboy: I'm lovin' it
Benny_ said:
Far from the best Asian movie ever made. Agree with walrusbear 100% about it being too contrived. The movie cheats with the explanation a bit really. What 'the truth' all boiled down to in the end was the bad dude having more than a few screws loose. I hate explanations like that, it really kills the payoff.
I think calling it contrieved, you may be missing the point. I can tell you that was the exact same impression I had the first time I watched the movie, but the second time through I couldn't get over how perfectly crafted the film actually was.
***SPOILERS***
Let me try and explain.
As far has "having more than a few screws loose', what I think this film was trying to say here was the pointlessness of revenge. The whole indiscretion on Oh Dae-Su's part (shooting his mouth off at an innappropriate time) was
extremely minor, and yet the fact that Woo-Jinn went to such lengths to secure vengence, to square the blame on Oh's shoulders and punish Oh Dae-Su for his
own crime of euthanising/murdering his sister, clearly shows the denial oneself will go to in order to relieve guilt and somehow make "amends" with one's conscience.
BUT. Woo-Jinn cannot forget his crime. He remembers in the elevator the death of sister and cannot truly forgive himself, and blows his brains out right then and there. Again, revenge did nothing for him, and Park wants us to know that revenge relieves none of the soul's pain.
"Even though I am a monster, don't I have the right to live?" - This line is about accepting one's crimes, and moving on with one's life in spite of the guilt and regret. Woo-jinn could not do this - he had to find an unlucky scapegoat - Oh Dae Su, who truly did not deserve his fate - to rationalise the blame unto. It didn't work, he couldn't forget his part. It was too late for him.
In the final scene, Oh Dae Su tries to forget through hypnosis, and the ending is left ambiguous (the smile, then crying) on whether or not he truly has forgotten and can live with himself (having done what he has). This poses the answer to the film's question solely on the audience's lap.
Now, next time you see it, keep all this in mind. There are other aspects that pop up during the narrative that also make the film immensely re-watchable.