The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
Slick production values can’t disguise the lack of imagination.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Korea · 2016
2h 23m
Director Cho Ui-seok
Starring Lee Byung-hun, Gang Dong-won, Kim Woo-bin, Uhm Ji-won
Genre Action, Crime
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A financial crime unit begins investigating a con man involved in nationwide scams across South Korea. As they search for the culprit, they uncover a multi-level marketing scam, One Network Inc., that reveals a far greater network of financial and political corruption lurking underneath.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
Slick production values can’t disguise the lack of imagination.
RogerEbert.com by Brian Tallerico
Cho finally delivers in these scenes, twisting and turning his plot, while also giving us the car chases and gunfire we’ve been waiting for. The only question is if you’ll still be awake by the time he gets there.
The film is seemingly terrified of boring us, offering one elaborate montage of catch and release (or of survey and flee) after another.
The Hollywood Reporter by Justin Lowe
The film is often so deterministically plotted that a sense of creative detachment hangs over far too many scenes, leaving an impression that the filmmakers may sometimes be more interested in making grand statements than in engaging interest.
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