Primarily an action movie, Slate also has a wry sense of humor beneath the swashbuckling sword-play. Despite a plot that veers wildly and doesn’t always develop or pay off certain narrative threads, Jo and company turn in an engaging, energetic film with a sneaky heart lurking below a strange, off-kilter exterior that’s quirky enough to capture your attention but not so quirky it gets annoying.
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At times the film goes overboard editing the battles, but this is more of an issue in the early going. As Slateprogresses, Jo makes the wise decision to let the actors handle the choreography and the film is much better for this choice. And I don’t know her background, but Ahn is more than up to the challenge, slicing and dicing her way through an imaginative world full of shady goons and power-hungry warlords.
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Yes, Slate has some hiccups. A few subplots play clunky and never pay off. Early on, the film hangs a lot on Yeon-hee’s orphan status and the heavy, life-long burden left by her father, which it it ultimately abandons, probably for good, though it leaves a bit of an emotional void. Among other issues. But overall, Jo serves up a strong, entertaining, odd-enough-to-standout action film, and if Ahn Ji-hye becomes a big international action star, much worse things could happen. She only has a handful of credits, and as far as I can tell, nothing much in this realm, but she’s badass, charismatic as hell, and is the saving grace of a scattered movie. [Grade: B]
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