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Der vermutlich durch eine Überdosis INDEPENDENCE
DAY und MEN IN BLACK durchgeknallte Byung-Goo hat eine Mission:
Er will die Erde vor einer Alien-Invasion retten.
Dazu schnappt er sich, gemeinsam mit seiner
unterbelichteten Freundin Sooni, den Obermotz der Außerirdischen.
Dieser führte bisher auf unserem Planeten als Konzernchef
Kang Mak-Shik ein unbehelligtes Leben. Jetzt soll der in einen
Keller gesperrte, als Mensch sehr überzeugende, arme
Entführte sich mittels Elektroschocks und diverser medizinischer
Folterinstrumente seine extraterrestrische DNS bis zum nächsten
Vollmond extrahieren lassen.
Dass ausgerechnet des Weltenretters Mutter Opfer
eines Chemie-Unfalls durch Kangs Unternehmen wurde, ist nur
einer der gallenbitteren Twists, die uns der Verlauf der Story
um die Ohren haut, und die das vielfach ausgezeichnete Genre-Crossover
aus Hostage-Drama, Science Fiction und Öko-Thriller mit
irrem Grinsen im Gesicht zu einer originellen Perle machen.
Theres
no time to waste. At the next lunar eclipse, the alien prince
will arrive from Andromeda, enter Earths orbit and await
the signal from his earthbound accomplice to conquer the planet.
Its up to Lee Byung-Goo to capture the accomplice and
save the world.
So Byung-Goo and his dim-but-loyal girlfriend,
Sooni, don their alien-proof helmets, kidnap Kang Mak-Shik,
powerful CEO and suspected alien agent, and set to their gruesome
interrogation of him in Byung-Goos underground laboratory.
Problem is, Byung-Goo just may be wrong.
If we were to describe much more of Save
the Green Planet! wed risk ruining the exhilarating
minute-by-minute surprises that this nutjob masterpiece offers
up. Its a truly head-spinning extravaganza that begins
as a slapstick kidnapping comedy, morphs into a police procedural,
a revenge thriller, an edge-of-your-seat escape drama, a science
fiction epic and then goes on to redraw human evolution as
a Mad magazine version of 2001: A Space Odyssey crossed with
the Bible, only gorier. And more, much more, than just a crazy
cult item, Green Planet has a sweet, sad soul, as it recounts
the whole wretched history of human aggression, and the love
of two lonely misfits. Thrilling, gorgeous, hilarious and
heartbreaking, its a wonder to behold.
"Prepare yourself: Save the Green Planet
could be compared to last year's South Korean shocker, Sympathy
for Mr. Vengeance - but with a laugh track. As up-and-coming
actor Shin Ha-kyun (JSA) plays the kidnapper in both films,
this time around it could be called "Sympathy for Mr.
Alien."
First-time director Jang Jun-hwan's
story veers from wacky black comedy to detective caper, from
sci-fi to touching drama, all told with a unique, dark vision.
It starts off as a rather extreme comedy, but looking into
Lee's fragile and misdirected mind, the film transcends the
comedic boundaries it seems to set for itself. Laughs aside,
Jang paints a portrait of a young man lost in a world of conspiracies
and psychotic delusions which have taken root in the fertile
ground of his tragic past. A story that goes against the grain
of the mainstream, Save the Green Planet just might be the
first cult film to emerge from South Korea." Toronto
Film Festival
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