Oldboy (2003 film)


Oldboy is a 2003 South Korean action thriller film directed and co-written by Park Chan-wook. A loose adaptation of the Japanese manga Old Boy by Garon Tsuchiya and Nobuaki Minegishi, the film follows Oh Dae-su, who is imprisoned for 15 years without knowing the identity of his captor or his captor's motives. When he is released, Dae-su finds himself trapped in a web of conspiracy and violence as he seeks revenge against his captor who promises that if Dae-Su cannot find him within five days, the captor will kill himself and thus ensure that Dae-Su will never find the truth behind his capture. His quest becomes tied in with romance when he falls in love with a young sushi chef, Mi-do.
Oldboy attained critical acclaim and accolades worldwide, including winning the Grand Prix at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival, where it garnered high praise from Quentin Tarantino, the president of the jury. In the United States, film critic Roger Ebert stated that Oldboy is a "powerful film not because of what it depicts, but because of the depths of the human heart which it strips bare". The film's action sequences, particularly the single shot corridor fight sequence, also received commendation for their impressive execution.
The film's success led to two adaptations: an unauthorized Hindi remake in 2006 and an official American adaptation in 2013. As part of Park Chan-wook's The Vengeance Trilogy, it serves as the second installment, following Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and preceding Lady Vengeance.
The film is regarded as one of the greatest films of all time and has been included in numerous "best-of" lists by many publications. In 2008, Oldboy was placed 64th on an Empire list of the top 500 movies of all time. In 2020, The Guardian ranked it number three among the classics of modern South Korean cinema.

Plot

In 1988, businessman Oh Dae-su is arrested for assault and drunkenness, consequently missing his daughter's fourth birthday. Shortly after being collected by his friend Joo-hwan, Dae-su is abducted. He awakens in a sealed room with a television, from which he learns that he has been framed for his wife's murder. Growing deranged from the solitude as years pass, Dae-su theorizes about the identity of his captor, trains himself in martial arts, creates a hole in the wall with chopsticks to attempt to escape through, and attempts suicide by slitting his wrists.
In 2003, Dae-su is sedated, hypnotized, and released. At a sushi restaurant, he collapses after receiving a call from his captor. The chef, Mi-do, takes him in; the two gradually become close. The two attempt to track down Dae-su's daughter but is informed that she has been adopted by a foreign family. Via the restaurant that prepared his meals, Dae-su locates his former prison, where people pay to have others incarcerated. He tortures and interrogates the warden, Park, who claims Dae-su was imprisoned for "talking too much." Dae-su escapes after fighting off Park's thugs.
Dae-su's captor, calling himself "Evergreen," sets up a meeting with Dae-su and promises to commit suicide by remotely deactivating his pacemaker if Dae-su uncovers his motive within five days; otherwise, Evergreen will kill Mi-do. Dae-su returns to Mi-do's apartment to find Park and his thugs molesting her. Park prepares to torture Dae-su, but stops when Evergreen sends a briefcase of cash. Dae-su threatens to remove Park's hand before the latter leaves.
Dae-su and Mi-do eventually become sexually intimate. He wakes up the following morning to find Park's severed hand in a box. Remembering his high school slogan, "Evergreen Old Boys," he identifies Evergreen as his former schoolmate Lee Woo-jin. He calls Joo-hwan, who recounts that his late classmate Lee Soo-ahWoo-jin's sisterwas a "slut"; an eavesdropping Woo-jin angrily stabs him to death.
After seeking out and consulting Soo-ah's friends, Dae-su recalls having seen Soo-ah and Woo-jin have sex in high school. Unaware that he was witnessing incest, Dae-su casually mentioned the incident to Joo-hwan, who subsequently spread gossip about Soo-ah's promiscuity, culminating in a rumor that she was pregnant and driving her to suicide.
Dae-su confronts Woo-jin at the latter's penthouse. He implicates that Woo-jin killed Soo-ah, fearing the consequences of impregnating her, and shifted the blame to Dae-su to alleviate his guilt. Woo-jin maintains that Soo-ah was merely experiencing phantom pregnancy as a result of the rumors. He gives Dae-su a photo album, which reveals that Mi-do is Dae-su's daughter, and explains that he orchestrated Dae-su and Mi-do's meeting and relationship via hypnosis. A horrified Dae-su desperately pleads for forgiveness, ultimately cutting out his own tongue as penance. Woo-jin agrees not to tell Mi-do the truth and gives Dae-su the pacemaker remote. When Dae-su tries to use it, it plays a recording of his tryst with Mi-do. Dae-su collapses in despair. In the elevator, Woo-jin smiles smugly, but becomes distraught after hallucinating Soo-ah's death and fatally shoots himself.
Dae-su locates the hypnotist and asks her to erase his knowledge of Mi-do being his daughter. Touched by a specific line in his letter, "Even though I'm no better than a beast, don't I have the right to live too?", she guides him to envision the part of himself that knows the truth dying. Mi-do finds Dae-su lying alone in the snow and professes her love for him. The two embrace while Dae-su smiles, which soon turns into a tortured grimace.

Cast

  • Choi Min-sik as Oh Dae-su, a businessman who seeks revenge after being held in a mysterious prison for 15 years. Choi Min-sik lost and gained weight for his role depending on the filming schedule, trained for six weeks, and did most of his own stunt work.
  • * as young Dae-su.
  • Yoo Ji-tae as Lee Woo-jin, the man behind Oh Dae-su's imprisonment. Park Chan-wook's ideal choice for Woo-jin had been actor Han Suk-kyu, who previously played a rival to Choi Min-sik in Shiri and No. 3. Choi then suggested Yoo Ji-tae for the role, despite Park believing he was too young for the part.
  • * Yoo Yeon-seok as young Woo-jin.
  • Kang Hye-jung as Mi-do, Dae-su's love interest.
  • as No Joo-hwan, Dae-su's friend and the owner of an internet café.
  • * as young Joo-hwan.
  • Kim Byeong-ok as Mr. Han, Woo-jin's bodyguard.
  • Yoon Jin-seo as Lee Soo-ah, Woo-jin's sister.
  • Oh Dal-su as Mr. Park Cheol-woong, warden of the private prison.
  • Oh Kwang-rok as Suicidal man.

Production

The corridor fight scene took seventeen takes in three days to perfect and was one continuous take; there was no editing of any sort except for the knife stabbed in Oh Dae-su's back, which was computer-generated imagery.
The script originally called for full male frontal nudity, but Yoo Ji-tae changed his mind after the scenes had been shot.
Other computer-generated imagery in the film includes the ant coming out of Dae-su's arm and the ants crawling over him afterwards. The octopus being eaten alive was not computer-generated; four were used during the filming of this scene. The eating of squirming octopuses as a delicacy exists in East Asia, although it is usually killed and cut, not eaten whole and alive; the squirming is a result of postmortem nerve activity in the octopus' tentacles. When asked in DVD commentary if he felt sorry for Choi, director Park Chan-wook stated he felt more sorry for the octopuses.
The final scene's snowy landscape was filmed in New Zealand. The ending is deliberately ambiguous, and the audience is left with several questions: specifically, how much time has passed, if Dae-su's meeting with the hypnotist really took place, whether he successfully lost the knowledge of Mi-do's identity, and whether he will continue his relationship with Mi-do. In an interview with Park, he says that the ambiguous ending was deliberate and intended to generate discussion; it is completely up to each individual viewer to interpret what is not shown.

Soundtrack

Nearly all the music cues that are composed by Shim Hyeon-jeong, Lee Ji-soo and Choi Seung-hyun are titled after films, many of them film noirs.
; Track listing

Reception and analysis

Box office

In South Korea, the film was seen by 3,260,000 filmgoers and ranks fifth for the highest-grossing film of 2003.
Oldboy grossed a total of US$17,052,444 worldwide.

20th anniversary re-release

The film was theatrically re-released in the United States by NEON for its 20th anniversary on 16 August 2023, remastered in 4K, featuring bonus commentary by Park Chan-wook.
In 2025, the film was showcased in the section 'Decisive Moments in Asian Cinema' at the 30th Busan International Film Festival, as part of the special "Asian Cinema 100", being the signature work of the director Park Chan-wook.

Critical response

Oldboy received critical acclaim, and is considered an influential cult classic. Praise was also given to the film's action sequences, specifically highlighting the "all-timer" single shot hallway fight sequence. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 82% based on 160 reviews. The site's critics consensus reads: "Violent and definitely not for the squeamish, Park Chan-Wook's visceral Oldboy is a strange, powerful tale of revenge." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 78 out of 100 based on 33 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four out of four stars and remarked: "We are so accustomed to 'thrillers' that exist only as machines for creating diversion that it's a shock to find a movie in which the action, however violent, makes a statement and has a purpose." James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave the film three out of four stars, saying that it "isn't for everyone, but it offers a breath of fresh air to anyone gasping on the fumes of too many traditional Hollywood thrillers."
Stephanie Zacharek of Salon.com praised the film, calling it "anguished, beautiful, and desperately alive" and "a dazzling work of pop-culture artistry." Peter Bradshaw gave it 5/5 stars, commenting that this is the first time in which he could actually identify with a small live octopus. Bradshaw summarizes his review by referring to Oldboy as "cinema that holds an edge of cold steel to your throat." David Dylan Thomas points out that rather than simply trying to "gross us out", Oldboy is "much more interested in playing with the conventions of the revenge fantasy and taking us on a very entertaining ride to places that, conceptually, we might not want to go." Sean Axmaker of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer gave Oldboy a score of "B−", calling it "a bloody and brutal revenge film immersed in madness and directed with operatic intensity," but felt that the questions raised by the film are "lost in the battering assault of lovingly crafted brutality."
Jamie Russell of the BBC movie review calls it a "sadistic masterpiece that confirms Korea's current status as producer of some of the world's most exciting cinema." In 2019 on The Hankyoreh, Kim Hyeong-seok said that Oldboy was the 'zeitgeist of the vigorous Korean cinema in early 2000s', and a 'boiling point that led history of Korean cinema to new state'. Manohla Dargis of the New York Times called the film "a trivial genre movie," writing, "The fact that Oldboy is embraced by some cinephiles is symptomatic of a bankrupt, reductive postmodernism: one that promotes a spurious aesthetic relativism and finds its crudest expression in the hermetically sealed world of fan boys." J.R. Jones of the Chicago Reader was also not impressed, saying that "there's a lot less here than meets the eye."
The film is regarded as one of the best films ever made and has been included in numerous "best-of" lists by many publications. In 2008, Oldboy was placed 64th on an Empire list of the top 500 movies of all time. The same year, voters on CNN named it one of the ten best Asian films ever made. It was ranked #18 in the same magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010. In a 2016 BBC poll, critics voted the film the 30th greatest since 2000. In 2020, The Guardian ranked it number 3 among the classics of modern South Korean Cinema. In 2025, the film ranked number 43 on The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and number 40 on the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list.

''Oedipus the King'' inspiration

Park Chan-wook stated that he named the main character Oh Dae-su "to remind the viewer of Oedipus." In one of the film's iconic shots, Yoo Ji-tae, who played Woo-jin, strikes an extraordinary yoga pose. Park Chan-wook said he designed this pose to convey "the image of Apollo." It was Apollo's prophecy that revealed Oedipus' fate in Sophocles' Oedipus the King. The link to Oedipus Rex is only a minor element in most English-language criticism of the movie, while Koreans have made it a central theme. Sung Hee Kim wrote "Family seen through Greek tragedy and Korean movie – Oedipus the King and Old Boy." Kim Kyungae offers a different analysis, with Dae-su and Woo-jin both representing Oedipus. Besides the theme of unknown incest revealed, Oedipus gouges his eyes out to avoid seeing a world that despises the truth, while Oh Dae-su cuts off his tongue to prevent the truth from being revealed.
More parallels with Greek tragedy include how Lee Woo-jin is portrayed as akin to an immortal Greek god while Oh Dae-su is merely an aged mortal. Lee Woo-jin looks young compared to Oh Dae-su, though they are supposed to be contemporaries at school. Throughout the movie Lee Woo-jin is portrayed as an obscenely rich young man who lives in a lofty tower and is omnipresent due to having listening devices planted on Oh Dae-Su and others, which furthers the parallel between his character and the secrecy of Greek gods.
Mi-do, throughout the movie, comes across as a strong-willed, young and innocent girl, and has been compared to Sophocles' Antigone, Oedipus' daughter. Though Antigone does not commit incest with her father, she remains faithful and loyal to him, similar to how Mi-do reunites with Oh Dae-Su and takes care of him in the wilderness. Another interesting character is the hypnotist, who, apart from being able to hypnotise people, also has the power to make people fall in love, which is characteristic of the power of Aphrodite, the goddess of love, whose classic act is to make Paris and Helen fall in love before and during the Trojan War.

Park Chan-wook's focus on the irrational

Park Chan-wook has said there is a deep influence from author Franz Kafka in this movie, and that this provides the absurdity and surrealism. In interviews, Park Chan-wook has also spoken about his movies "portraying something irrational: a phenomenon that cannot be explained logically. A portrait of humanity as neither good nor evil but rather as a complex existence." This is not only evident in Oldboy but also other movies made by Park and Bong Joon-ho. For example, Parasite, Memories of Murder, and Decision to Leave do not contain archetypal good characters. There is no moral protagonist for the audience to follow. Korean Studies professor and cultural critic David Tizzard has described this as a quality of Asian cinema: "Gone are the simple ideas of good and evil. Erased are the ideas of a moral protagonist and their immoral antagonist. But because they are not good, or at least defined as such by their creators, they become something much larger, realer, and more complete than the archetypes we are spoon-fed elsewhere."

Home media

In the United Kingdom, the film was watched by 300,000 television viewers on Channel 4 in 2011. This made it the year's most-watched foreign-language film on a non-BBC television channel in the UK.

Awards and nominations

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
Asia-Pacific Film FestivalBest DirectorPark Chan-wookWon
Asia-Pacific Film FestivalBest ActorChoi Min-sikWon
Austin Film Critics AssociationBest FilmOldboyNomitated
Austin Film Critics AssociationBest Foreign FilmOldboyWon
Bangkok International Film FestivalBest FilmOldboyNomitated
Bangkok International Film FestivalBest Director Park Chan-wookWon
Belgian Film Critics AssociationGrand PrixOldboyWon
Bergen International Film FestivalAudience AwardOldboyWon
Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest DirectorPark Chan-wookWon
Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest ActorChoi Min-sikWon
Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest Supporting ActressKang Hye-jungWon
British Independent Film AwardsBest Foreign Independent FilmOldboyWon
Cannes Film FestivalPalme d'OrOldboyNomitated
Cannes Film FestivalGrand PrixOldboyWon
Chicago Film Critics AssociationBest Foreign Language FilmOldboyNomitated
Critics' Choice Movie AwardBest Foreign Language FilmOldboyNomitated
Director's Cut AwardsBest DirectorPark Chan-wookWon
Director's Cut AwardsBest ActorChoi Min-sikWon
Director's Cut AwardsBest ProducerKim Dong-jooWon
European Film AwardsBest Non-European FilmPark Chan-wookNomitated
Golden Trailer AwardsBest Foreign Action Trailer OldboyWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest FilmOldboyNomitated
Grand Bell AwardsBest DirectorPark Chan-wookWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest ActorChoi Min-sikWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest New ActressKang Hye-jungNomitated
Grand Bell AwardsBest Adapted ScreenplayPark Chan-wookNomitated
Grand Bell AwardsBest CinematographyChung Chung-hoonNomitated
Grand Bell AwardsBest EditingKim Sang-bumWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest Art DirectionRyu Seong-hieNomitated
Grand Bell AwardsBest LightingPark Hyun-wonWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest MusicJo Yeong-wookWon
Grand Bell AwardsBest Visual EffectsLee Jeon-hyeong, Shin Jae-ho, Jeong Do-anNomitated
Hong Kong Film AwardsBest Asian FilmOldboyWon
Korean Film AwardsBest FilmOldboyWon
Korean Film AwardsBest DirectorPark Chan-wookWon
Korean Film AwardsBest ActorChoi Min-sikWon
Korean Film AwardsBest ActressKang Hye-jungNomitated
Korean Film AwardsBest Supporting ActressYoon Jin-seoNomitated
Korean Film AwardsBest CinematographyChung Chung-hoonNomitated
Korean Film AwardsBest EditingKim Sang-bumNomitated
Korean Film AwardsBest Art DirectionRyu Seong-hieNomitated
Korean Film AwardsBest MusicJo Yeong-wookWon
Korean Film AwardsBest SoundOldboyNomitated
Online Film Critics SocietyBest Foreign Language FilmOldboyNomitated
Saturn AwardsBest Action or Adventure FilmOldboyNomitated
Saturn AwardsBest DVD or Blu-ray Special Edition ReleaseUltimate Collector's EditionNomitated
Sitges Film FestivalBest FilmOldboyWon
Sitges Film FestivalJosé Luis Guarner Critic's AwardOldboyWon
Stockholm International Film FestivalAudience AwardOldboyWon

Remakes

Bollywood controversy

Zinda, a Bollywood film directed by writer-director Sanjay Gupta, bears a striking resemblance to Oldboy and is not an officially sanctioned remake. It was reported in 2005 that Zinda was under investigation for copyright violation. A spokesman for original distributor Show East said, "If we find out there's indeed a strong similarity between the two, it looks like we'll have to talk with our lawyers." Show East had already sold the film's rights to DreamWorks in 2004, and initially expressed legal concerns but no legal action was taken as the studio had shut down.

American remake

Steven Spielberg originally intended to produce a remake starring Will Smith in 2008. He commissioned screenwriter Mark Protosevich to adapt the screenplay. Spielberg pulled out in 2009.
An official remake directed by Spike Lee was released on 27 November 2013. 39 percent of critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes were positive for the remake, indicating mostly negative reviews. It was also a box office bomb, grossing $5.2 million worldwide against a production budget of $30 million.