The Hole (1997 film) explained

The Hole
Native Name:
Child:yes
Hide:no
Header:none
Hangul:올가미
Hanja:(None)
Rr:Olgami
Mr:Olgami
Director:Kim Sung-hong
Producer:Kang Woo-suk
Kim Se-chang
Starring:Yoon So-jeong
Choi Ji-woo
Park Yong-woo
Music:Kim Dong-seong
Cinematography:Lee Dong-sam
Editing:Park Gok-ji
Studio:Cinema Service
Distributor:Cinema Service
Runtime:100 minutes
Country:South Korea
Language:Korean

The Hole (; literally "The Trap") is a 1997 South Korean film directed by Kim Sung-hong.

Plot

Jin-sook has a close relationship with her son, Don-woo, and is surprised when he announces his engagement to Su-jin. After the wedding, the three end up living together, with a nervous Su-jin keen to impress her new mother-in-law. But Jin-sook is determined to sabotage her son's marriage.

Cast

Release

The Hole was released in South Korea on 1 November 1997 and received a total of 141,717 admissions in Seoul, making it the tenth biggest selling Korean film of that year.[1]

Critical response

David Cornelius of DVD Talk found the film somewhat limited in scope, saying, "The limitations placed upon the story prevent any broadening of ideas, leaving us only with a clichéd chunk of domestic thriller that plays out by the numbers". However, he also acknowledged that such limitations also helped the film in other areas, saying, "The Hole becomes very claustrophobic, with a tension that never lets up for the last forty-some minutes. It's grandiose and outrageous, yes, but it's also highly effective in building the right kind of scares".[2]

Notes and References

  1. "The Best Selling Films of 1997". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved on 27 June 2009.
  2. Cornelius, David. "The Hole (Region 3) ". DVD Talk, 1 June 2006. Retrieved on 27 June 2009.