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[Fantasia Review] Limbs Fly in Ultra-violent, Vixen-led ‘The Villainess’!

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This is how all love stories should end – not with a whimper, but with a sword fight to the death that takes you crashing out of a window and soaring down the side of a building as cut glass sprinkles around you like sharp snowflakes in a storm. This is the newest film from director Byung-gil Jung called The Villainess, and it not to be missed.

Hell hath no fury like a woman betrayed too many times, and Sook-hee is living proof of it. It all started when she was a little girl, and she watched her father being brutally murdered while she quietly hid under her bed. Quickly discovered, she was nearly assaulted and fileted herself when suddenly she was rescued by a kind stranger. Her life forever changed, Sook-hee set out on a life of vengeance, growing up as a trained assassin, and living only for two things: the quest for revenge, and the man who had stolen her heart. Together, she and her new partner in crime collected payments off of the bounties of bodies of bad men, fulfilling Sook-hee’s thirst for blood, and molding her into one of the deadliest killers to ever walk the globe.

It all seemed so perfect – this chance to turn her tale of tragedy into a thrilling account of triumph. She has lost her father, but gained a lover who would die for her – but at the same time, could fend off anyone who dare try. That is, until one horrible day, while she was on her honeymoon no less when she lost the man she loved forever and became enslaved in a secret agency wherein she was forced to become a killing machine for a new group of baddies – and set up for yet another doomed office romance.

[Related] All Fantasia Film Festival Reviews and Coverage Here!

The opening of this film is absolutely brilliant. Shot in the style of a first person POV long oner, all the audience can see are two mysterious black gloved hands, slicing and dicing their way through a warehouse and an army of men. Blood splatters wildly, limbs fly carelessly through the air, waves and waves of armed men pour into the frame, only to be swiftly skewered and reduced to just another casualty. No one is safe from this mystery assassin, and all who dare approach quickly regret their entrance. Deep red crimson paints the walls as the camera whips and pans to catch every moment in startlingly close proximity – it’s as if we, the audience, are the assassin, and no one can take us on.

It’s not until the killer’s head is smashed into a mirrored wall that the identity of the attacker is revealed – it is a woman, and she is smiling through blood soaked teeth. One tiny girl took all these massive men down, leaving dozens of bodies in her wake, and cannot be calmed until armed authority officials rush in and eventually seize her in the rain-soaked alleyway.

The Villainess has its issues, but holy shit is it badass. Clunky and confusing at times, some of the storyline is a bit hard to follow – who exactly killed her father? Why are they after he daughter? Why is it so important to trick Sook-hee into marrying a fellow assassin from the agency? – but the action scenes more than makeup for the messy bits, even if they are slightly weighed down by the romantic narrative. It slows down a bit in the middle, but it’s worth watching this one through to the end, just so you can see a lover’s quarrel escalate into a full on bloody brawl. I mean, a sword fight that takes place during a high-speed chase atop motorcycles zooming down a highway!? What more can you ask for in a movie? The Villainess has it all, including one of the fiercest lady killers in quite some time – a treat that feels long overdue. Vixen-led vengeance doesn’t get much more exciting than this.

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’28 Years Later’ Releasing Summer 2025!

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28 Years Later/ 28 Days Later Best Horror Films

Danny Boyle and Alex Garland are reteaming for the long-awaited 28 Years Later horror sequel trilogy, and the first film in that new trilogy now has a release date.

28 Years Later arrives in theaters on June 20, 2025 from Sony.

Jack O’Connell (Amy Winehouse: Back To Black) has joined the previously announced Jodie Comer (Alone in the Dark, “Killing Eve”), Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kraven the Hunter), and Ralph Fiennes (The Menu) in the upcoming 28 Years Later.

Alex Garland will write the first film and Boyle will return to direct. Nia DaCosta (Candyman, The Marvels) will direct the second installment in the trilogy from Sony Pictures.

Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer) is on board as executive producer.

The original movie in 2002 starred Cillian Murphy and was written by Alex Garland and directed by Danny Boyle. In the smash hit horror film, “Four weeks after a mysterious, incurable virus spreads throughout the UK, a handful of survivors try to find sanctuary.”

A sequel, 28 Weeks Later, arrived in 2007. Juan Carlos Fresnadillo took over as director. In the sequel, which starred Jeremy Renner, “Six months after the rage virus was inflicted on the population of Great Britain, the US Army helps to secure a small area of London for the survivors to repopulate and start again. But not everything goes according to plan.”

Talks of a third installment in the franchise have been coming and going for the last several years now – at one point, it was going to be titled 28 Months Later – but it looks like this one is finally getting off the ground here in 2024. Stay tuned for more updates soon!

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