Reviewer's Rating 2 out of 5
Brotherhood (TaeGukGI) (2005)
15Contains strong bloody war violence and horror, and strong language

The tale of two siblings press-ganged into fighting for the South in the Korean War, Brotherhood is unusual in only one respect: it's an Asian film that rips off an American source. From its English-language title through to the shamelessly slushy score, Kang Je-Gyu's film sticks to the Spielberg brand of conflict-management suggested by Saving Private Ryan and Band Of Brothers. As a result, it merely resembles any other movie battlefield of the last ten years.

Director Kang Je-Gyu has clearly invested in DVDs of Full Metal Jacket, Black Hawk Down and Gladiator to go alongside Spielberg's benchmarks. Yet, just in case all this second-hand carnage appears impersonal, he's trowelled the sentiment on thick. Lee Dong-June's music goes beyond the call of duty at the sight of an old man's shoes. Making the soldiers literal brothers - impulsive Jin-Tae (Jang Dong-Kun) and sensitive Jin-Seok (Won Bin) - only gives rise to further soap.

"STUCK IN NO MAN'S LAND"

After two-and-a-half hours of bloody violence and no-less-gratuitous violins, it's clear Brotherhood's real interest in history extends only to past box office successes. So clearly tailored is it to Western audiences, it's a surprise the film hasn't been released in a dubbed version, like the equally costly German production Stalingrad. As it is, it's stuck in no man's land, with nothing in its artillery but some very familiar manoeuvres and a whole lot of tear gas.

In Korean with English subtitles.

End Credits

Director: Kang Je-Gyu

Writer: Kang Je-Gyu

Stars: Jang Dong-Kun, Won Bin, Lee Eun-Ju, Kong Hyeong-Jin, Lee Yeong-Ran, Choi Min-Sik

Genre: World Cinema, War

Length: 148 minutes

Cinema: 03 June 2005

Country: South Korea

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