Things go wrong for a high ranking mobster when he doesn't follow his boss's orders.Things go wrong for a high ranking mobster when he doesn't follow his boss's orders.Things go wrong for a high ranking mobster when he doesn't follow his boss's orders.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 14 nominations
Kim Yeong-cheol
- Mr. Kang
- (as Kim Young-Chul)
Hwang Jung-min
- President Baek
- (as Jeong-min Hwang)
Kim Roe-ha
- Mun-suk
- (as Roe-ha Kim)
Kim Hae-gon
- Weapon smuggler
- (as Hae-gon Kim)
Eric Moon
- Gun Dealer's Brother
- (as Eric)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe Korean title "Dalkomhan Insaeng" and the name of the bar "La Dolce Vita" translate to "The Sweet Life". As an ironic touch the International English title is called "A Bittersweet Life".
- GoofsToward the end of the film, when Kim Sun-woo is walking down the corridor searching for his former boss, a guard sitting and reading a newspaper gets up to stop him. Kim Sun-woo shoots him but his gun is not pointed at the guard. Rather, it is clearly pointed at the wall where fake blood appears after the shot like a paint gun.
- Quotes
Sun-woo: One late autumn night, the disciple awoke crying. So the master asked the disciple, "Did you have a nightmare?" "No." "Did you have a sad dream?" "No," said the disciple. "I had a sweet dream." "Then why are you crying so sadly?" The disciple wiped his tears away and quietly answered, "Because the dream I had can't come true."
- Crazy creditsAt the end of the credits, the sign above the bar that says "La Dolce Vita" is seen exploding.
- Alternate versionsTwo versions of the film exist, the original theatrical version and the director's cut. The director's cut's edits include slight cutting and re-arrangement of scenes, swapping music placement and some additional scenes that do not appear in the original version of the film.
- ConnectionsReferences La dolce vita (1960)
Featured review
Overall a good film and while it plays with the action and drama, the film has massive potential to be so much more. As my title suggests the film is essentially two different films, which begins brightly before fading fast. The first half effortlessly introduces our protagonist and the majority of the cast effortlessly. While stereotypes are put into play they all show something a little different and the plot at it's quietest plays out quite well and to a high standard expected of korean cinema. Yet as Sun Woo's life begins to break down after a costly mistake, the quality and drama quickly takes a backseat to the all too familiar genre of action and revenge. Yet it is disappointing how a country full of great examples and almost infamously associated with the revenge genre can fail so easily. As with many action films it weaves a lot of style at the expense of logic and only gets worse exponentially as guns are introduced and you have a stylish action film which could've been born out of western cinema that lacks the story telling quality it started with. Muddled with a untidy conclusion the film would've been better if the last hour was taken out and the last few minutes kept in
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $10,080,808
- Runtime1 hour 59 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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