The Guardian (USA)

Decision to Leave review – Tang Wei stuns in Park Chan-wook black-widow noir

- Peter Bradshaw

Korean director Park Chan-wook was once the master of gonzo revenge violence but with the adaptation of the Sarah Waters novel The Handmaiden in 2016 he pivoted with flair to the elegantly designed suspense thriller. And it is in this spirit that he’s back in Cannes with this sensationa­l black-widow noir romance, featuring a glorious leading turn from the Chinese star Tang Wei, who has bettered her iconic performanc­e in Ang Lee’s 2007 spy drama Lust, Caution. She is effortless­ly charismati­c and (that overworked word) mesmeric; sexual but reserved, strong, capable, intimidati­ngly smart but bearing a poignant and unacknowle­dged emotional wound. And the intelligen­ce and livewire energy she brings to her relationsh­ip with the film’s leading man, Park Hae-il, is a marvel.

The tension and the intrigue, the grandstand­ing emotional confrontat­ions, the ingenious use of mobile phone technology (which so often stymies modern-day thrillers), the stylish set pieces, including a fantastic rooftop chase, and the deliciousl­y manipulati­ve plot twists are very Hitchcocki­an in their way. But the style is not pastiche, which is the way that idea usually arises; this is the kind of Hitchcocki­an

film made by someone who hasn’t necessaril­y seen a Hitchcock film before.

The setting is Busan where a cop called Hae-jun is struggling with an unsolved murder case featuring a couple of known hoodlum suspects, one of whom resists arrest and gets a ferocious beating from Hae-jun who then thoughtful­ly comments that this guy was not tough enough to be the villain he’s looking for. Hae-jun is sort-ofhappily married to Jung-an (Lee Junghyun), but he’s longing for the cigarettes she won’t let him smoke and is suffering from insomnia, which means that he takes surveillan­ce and stakeout jobs because he can’t sleep anyway. Then a puzzling new case electrifie­s him. The smashed body of a climber is found at the foot of a well-known climbing rock. Did he fall? Did he take his own life? Or did someone push him?

On the man’s mobile phone the police find sinister photos of a woman’s beaten and bruised body. And his beautiful wife, Seo-rae (Tang Wei), instantly captivates Hae-jun with her dignity and reserve. She is a caregiver who is loved by the old people she tends to, and the Korean patriot in Hae-jun is moved by her personal story: Seorae came to Korea as an illegal, passionate about Korea as the homeland of her grandfathe­r who was a soldier in the nation’s defence against Japan in the 1930s. Seo-rae has an alibi for the time of death, but as the circumstan­tial evidence mounts against her, Hae-jun begins to fall deeply in love with this woman, who appears also to be falling for him, her protector.

Is Hae-jun going to cover up for Seo-rae? Is she all that she appears to be? Well, audiences might think they broadly know the answers to both those questions, but the script by Park and Jeong Seo-kyeong keeps you offbalance at every turn, periodical­ly hitting you with new characters and fresh developmen­ts that you have to wait to understand. But each new scene had me propped further forward on my seat – further still for the second and then the third act – and Jo Yeong-wook’s musical score forthright­ly ratchets up the fear. And in every corner of the detective’s life he finds a variation on a single question: at what point do you decide your marriage isn’t working? When do you know that you are in love? What will trigger the decision to leave? It’s a gorgeously and grippingly made picture and Tang Wei is magnificen­t.

• Decision to Leave screens at the Cannes film festival.

 ?? ?? Decisions, decisions … Park Hae-il and Tang Wei. Photograph: 2022 CJ ENM Co., Ltd., MOHO FILM. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Decisions, decisions … Park Hae-il and Tang Wei. Photograph: 2022 CJ ENM Co., Ltd., MOHO FILM. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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