Oldboy (American 2013) Film Review & Nikita Season Premiere Recap

Disturbing, gritty, and horrifically gory are not the exact ingredients one could see as the recipe for a typical Spike Lee Joint, but Oldboy shows a different side to Lee’s directing.
Oldboy follows Joe Ducett (Josh Brolin), a missing-in-action father, who finds himself in an isolation cell padded like a cheap motel room. Ducett spends 20 years in the cell unaware of his crime, eating the same meal everyday, in a state of what looks like psychosis. His captors, lead by Samuel L. Jackson’s character Chaney, free him in the middle of a field and he spends his freedom searching for them and the person they’re working for.
Josh-Brolin-and-Elizabeth-Olsen-in-Oldboy-2013-Movie-Image
Oldboy is the urban American rendition of the second installment of The Vengeance Trilogy, a manga (Japanese comic) by Garon Tsuchiya and Nobuaki MInegishi. The manga was made into a South Korean film, under the same title, that gained international acclaim and became a cult classic after it was released in 2003. Screenwriter Mark Protosevich (I Am Legend) wrote the present day remake.
The film is well-casted and well-written. The graphic images are the only aesthetics to the plot. Unless you followed the manga trilogy, the story is unpredictable from beginning to end. Lee and Protosevich leave audiences only seeing the story unfold from the ground level along with the protagonist and his associates. The only things that you could foresee was the comedic moments of Samuel L. Jackson’s stylish rants like an old-time sailor.
Brolin’s performance as a middle-aged pathetic man who literally lost touch with reality and then emerges as a kung fu thug should make him an automatic cast member of The Expendables 3 or the Hulk’s stand-in. Brolin fought off groups of men in such a charismatic and brutal style that added a break from the mystery and drama. His performance is a great imitation of Min-sik Choi’s 2003 portrayal.
The character who stands out the most is the villain, played by Sharlto Copley (The A-Team), who isn’t even heard from until later in the film as a shrilly man’s voice coming through a phone. Copley usually plays kooky characters so his version of the villain was funny and theatrical even though he was creepy and sadistic.
Because of its surreal story line and the way it ends, Oldboy is a mystery thriller that is like a cold shower compared to the movies out currently. The movie is entertaining; it has comedic moments and a great mystery on its hands. But if you favor Disney’s standard happy endings, you might want to sit this one out.

Last week, Nikita returned to CW for its fourth and final season. CW announced the news in May of this year and after watching the first episode of Season 4, I’m having a hard time seeing why this show is ending in only six episodes.
Unfortunately, Amanda was a few steps ahead of Nikita and the pursuit turned out to be a trap. Nikita ended up being spotted, taking Dale hostage and then going viral thanks to modern technology. Luckily, that technological glitch in Nikita’s plan created a loophole in Amanda’s plan and Team Nikita and her former teacher, Michael, intervened.The episode picked up with Nikita (Maggie Q) still on the run from being America’s most wanted after her supposed assassination of the President of the United States in season three. Nikita went rogue on Team Nikita (who has headquarters in an aircraft, by the way), leaving them behind to be safely tucked away in hiding from Amanda (Melinda Clarke), while shepursued esteemed journalist Dale (played by Todd Grinnell) who works at Equinox News Network (ENN), to clear her name.
Just when matters looked like they were getting better, it turns out Amanda’s influence reigns high on the FBI’s totem pole and stretches out globally with her partnership with The Shop. Amanda’s abilities is a great example of why the public fears giving so much power to one person, especially when the person looks like the Devil wearing Prada.
Photo Credit: Sven Frenzel/The CW
Photo Credit: Sven Frenzel/The CW
While the men are helping Nikita, Sonya (Lyndie Greenwood) and Alex (Lyndsy Fonseca) are on a separate mission staking out a human trafficking deal. The stakeout goes awry when one of the trafficker’s goons sniffs out Alex and she is forced to take action, which ended with a pile of bodies and two men escaping. The plot thickened even more when Owen, the man who betrayed Nikita last we saw him in Season 3, appeared with a gun to Alex’s head.
As we cut back to Nikita, she is wandering the streets with a bullet wound in her arm, her getaway car is crashed, and Team Nikita have lost contact with her once again. On top of that, Dale may be dead and the FBI agent everyone trusted is one of Amanda’s goons. If only Nikita could fuse with Scandal, then all would be action-packed dramatic gold in TV land.