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I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies

I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies

Dec. 07, 2006105 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: 싸이보그지만 괜찮아 2006 123movies, Full Movie Online – A young woman who believes she’s a cyborg hears voices and harms herself while at work making radios. She’s hospitalized in a mental institution where she eats nothing and talks to inanimate objects. She’s Young-goon, granddaughter of a woman who thought she was a mouse (and whose dentures Young-goon wears) and a mother who’s a butcher without much social grace. Young-goon comes to the attention of Il-sun, a ping-pong playing patient at the institution who makes it his goal to get her to eat. Will he succeed? Which way does sanity lie?.
Plot: Young-goon, mentally deranged and frequently electro-charging herself with a transistor radio, has been admitted into a mental institution. Firmly believing herself to be a cyborg, she refuses to consume like a human being. Il-soon is another patient, who catches the eye of Young-goon and soon becomes a close friend. Il-soon is now confronted with the biggest task: to cure Young-goon’s mental problem and have her eat real food.
Smart Tags: #six_word_title #female_protagonist #female_psychiatric_patient #female_cyborg #south_korea #theft #cyborg #psychiatric_hospital #bizarre_comedy #electroshock_therapy #surrealism #trauma #sympathy #schizophrenic #rain #radish #kleptomania #healing_process #grandmother #flashback #eating_disorder


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Ratings:

7.0/10 Votes: 24,538
92% | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 401 Popularity: 11.006 | TMDB

Reviews:

flawed in some small ways, but overall a crazily sincere masterpiece
There are ways to do romantic comedies, just as their are ways of doing sincere dark comedies set in mental hospitals, and Chan-Wook Park goes to fantastic and unexpected lengths of subverting expectations with truly nutty- and this may be the nuttiest movie to come out of Korea this, uh, month- ideas and visuals being explored, while never skimping on making these people to care about. And yes, the “cyborg” Cha Young-Goon (Su-Jeung Lim), at first seems like a typical nut, or what one might stereotype as. Indeed, as I thought more about it, what Park goes for is almost experimental; what would it be like to have as the pivotal character of a movie the person in the loony bin who is near unresponsive to other people and who won’t eat any food? At first we’re plunged into her mind-set: she’s a cyborg, after all, and she marks up her energy levels by her toes lighting up, and takes in such energy by licking batteries as opposed to regular consumption.

But she also has a troubled past, though more-so in the memories of her grandmother, whom she was closest with, and who we see in flashbacks was tossed away into a sanitarium, as Young-Goon was eventually, instead of actually dealing with them as real fellow family members. It’s hard not to get caught up further into her much more real plight when shock treatment comes around, and that the feeding tubes just won’t do any good. From the sound of this it sounds like a really tragic story, and in a way it is. But on the other hand, it absolutely isn’t all the same. It’s Park’s funniest film, loaded with his bravura sense of style that is brutally self-conscious with the camera (lots of wonderful usages of color from greens to reds to whites and blues and so on, 360′ pans, high-flying shots, a great split-screen involving two characters in two separate solitary rooms connected by two cups and a string) as well as with very assured direction. To see someone make films like ‘Cyborg’ or Oldboy is to see someone who doesn’t mind obviously flashy moments, because there are just as many moments that are more intimate in connection between the characters.

But as I said, it’s a very funny movie, with the various character in the mental hospital veritable caricatures: there’s one guy who got tossed in by apologizing to everyone involved in an accident he wasn’t involved in, and one fat woman who when not stealing Young-Goon’s food is trying to get static electricity going from rubbing her feet, and random characters doing wacky things in the halls behind main characters talking. There’s a big belly laugh at the ‘picture book’ of the Cyborg’s, where it lists the seven deadly sins, inexplicably linked to the torture and murder of cats in the classic storybook pictures. There’s even an actor who comes closest to looking like the Korean Bruce Campbell! And the scenes with Young-Goon going into super-violent mode as the cyborg and shooting everything in sight ranks right up with the corridor fight sequence in Oldboy as Park at his most staggering in choreographing mayhem.

But then there’s Rain’s character Park Il-sun, who is the counterpoint for Young-Goon, as he’s just a crazy thief in on his fifth voluntary commitment. He’ll be hopping around one moment, or imagining himself going very tiny so as to not be noticed. But what the two of them share, no matter what, is vulnerability, which soon they see in each other (or at least Il-Sun sees in Young-Goon), with scenes showing either one crying their eyes out actually being earned. It’s as much of a credit to the actors as it is to Park that none of this is false sentimentality, and out of the wild comedy there is subtext always present, of the director meeting the willing audience member halfway- it is a mental hospital, and no matter how crazy it can be they aren’t tapped out of life completely. This makes up the emotional tie between the two main characters, and the struggle to compromise a mental state that can’t be fixed and a more pragmatic goal- eating food- leads to a real emotional highlight.

Only the denouement, or what could be considered that perhaps, as there’s a nuke/bomb element thrown in with outdoor rain scenes that feel real unnecessary (albeit there’s a tremendous final shot for the film), and little bits involving the supporting characters that could be left out (what’s with the guy that won’t stop yelling?). Otherwise, this is still prime work going on, daring even, as far as blending together some real surrealistic tendencies with the kind of spirit that went into One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. It takes guts to put the personal with the wacky, but somehow I’m a Cyborg, But That’s OK pulls it off better than any other film I can’t think of in recent memory.

Review By: Quinoa1984
A Colossal Misfire
Chan Wook Park is nothing if not inventive. I’M A CYBORG BUT THAT’S OK is chock full of amusing little technical flourishes with some ingenious ideas sprinkled in between. Attempting to walk in the footsteps of the likes of Marc Caro and Jeunet (CITY OF LOST CHILDREN, DELICATESSEN), Park embarks on a fanciful, lighthearted tale which is a radical departure from his usual morbid fare. Hardly one to be faulted for his ambition or his vision, it is genuinely unexpected, then, to see all Park’s effort add up to so very little.

I’M A CYBORG BUT THAT’S OK seems astonishingly to subtract from itself as it goes along, with the the end result being a fraction of the sum of its parts. The premise is promising, gags are copious and offbeat humour abounds but it all fails miserably to create any meaningful connection with the audience. The characters are cute and quirky and played with gusto by the cast, but, try as i might, i could not bring myself to care for any.

SYMPATHY FOR LADY VENGEANCE was a misstep, indicating perhaps that Park was overindulging himself a little bit, but it still managed to showcase some of the director’s unique flare and in the wake of an impressive filmography, was readily forgiven. None of the assured confidence that commanded JOINT SECURITY AREA or SYMPATHY FOR MR. VENGEANCE is evident here. I’M A CYBORG BUT THAT’S OK left me so utterly unengaged i caught myself instinctively fast forwarding from time to time (more regularly as the film progressed). I gave LADY a 5/10, and by that measure, this probably deserves no more than a 3. For old time’s sake, i’ll be generous: 4/10

Review By: fastfoodi

Other Information:

Original Title 싸이보그지만 괜찮아
Release Date 2006-12-07
Release Year 2006

Original Language ko
Runtime 1 hr 47 min (107 min), 1 hr 45 min (105 min) (South Korea)
Budget 0
Revenue 4354510
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Comedy, Drama, Romance
Director Park Chan-wook
Writer Park Chan-wook, Jeong Seo-kyeong
Actors Lim Soo-jung, Rain, Kim Byeong-Ok
Country South Korea
Awards 8 wins & 8 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Thomson VIPER FilmStream Camera
Laboratory HFR (digital intermediate)
Film Length N/A
Negative Format S.two D.MAG (Uncompressed DPX), Video (HDTV)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate, S.two D.MAG DPX (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm

I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
I’m a Cyborg, but That’s OK 2006 123movies
Original title 싸이보그지만 괜찮아
TMDb Rating 7.1 401 votes

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