review film warning do not play

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You might be asked to choose a more specific reason why the Amazon When Amazon made a unilateral decision in early February to stop accepting documentaries and short films via Prime Video Direct (a policy that also covers “slide shows, vlogs, podcasts Untukurusan horor, film ini cukup membuat penonton terkejut. Di dalam film horor ada film horor, bisa dibilang Horor-ception. Sayangnya, akhir film ini cukup tersesat dan membingungkan. Film Warning Do Not Play merupakan film horor yang memiliki premis menarik. Kita diajak menelusuri misteri film horor yang dibuat hantu. Comment Ecrire Un Premier Message Sur Un Site De Rencontre. Kim Jin-won, director of the infamous Korean shocker The Butcher, returns with a very different horror…Korean writer director Kim Jin-won certainly made an impact with his debut way back in 2007 with The Butcher, one of the most brutal and sadistic horror films from Korea, or indeed anywhere, of the last couple of decades, as well as one of the most effective and nauseating uses of the found footage format. Quite possibly due to the infamy of the film, which wasn’t released properly in Korea and which quickly became notorious in international horror circles, it’s taken Kim more than a decade to make his second feature, which arrived in 2019 in the form of Warning Do Not Play, now streaming on postsArticle continues afterPerhaps unsurprisingly, Kim’s latest is a far more conventional slice of horror, following a new director called Mi-jung popular TV actress Seo Yea-ji, recently in It’s Okay to Not Be Okay, who has been stuck in development hell for some eight years trying to get a genre film made, and who’s struggling for inspiration. Becoming intrigued by the story of a haunted film which was supposedly directed by a ghost and which brings doom and disaster to those who screen it, she starts investigating the story, which seems to link to the tale of a dead actress. Managing to track down the film’s director Kim Jae-hyun Jin Seon-kyu, Svaha The Sixth Finger, she finds herself beset by increasingly strange and threatening visions, and her grip on reality starts to safe to say that Warning Do Not Play doesn’t have much in common with The Butcher as a horror film, and it’s a considerably more conventional affair that’s much more in line with what might be expected from the Korean ghost genre. Focusing on a lone female protagonist trying to track down a haunted/cursed film, the script clearly nods in the direction of Ringu and the long list of Korean films which tried to replicate its success, and Kim Jin-won does largely stick to following the usual formula. On this score, while there’s nothing new, the film is at least efficiently done, moving along briskly and clocking in at just 86 minutes, making it around half an hour shorter than many of its Korean horror peers, something which definitely wins it extra marks. Kim does a good job of balancing atmospheric creepiness with a handful of spooky set pieces, and the film is at its best when trying to pull the viewer into the same confused and unsettled mindset as its protagonist Mi-jung. Seo Yea-ji is great in the lead, and is quite different and both more understated and independent than her counterparts most similar films, and though the script doesn’t give her a huge amount to work with, she helps to keep things is a little frustrating is that Kim is clearly a talented director, and there are hints scattered throughout which suggest that something more substantial could have been achieved with Warning Do Not Play. Given that for those who could stomach it, at least The Butcher worked both as extreme torture porn and as a particularly vicious satire on the Korean industry, it’s easy to see some of the same here, with Mi-jung’s unpleasant experiences with the director Kim character, and the idea of her having been stuck trying to get a film made for eight years having a touch of the autobiographical to them, especially given the length of time between Kim’s own first and second features. Though the film’s scare scenes are all well-handled, its more surreal and ambiguous elements come across as being more key, and it’s hard not to think that if this had been the focus, it would have been considerably more it’s great to see Kim Jin-won back behind the camera, and Warning Do Not Play is certainly worth catching for horror fans, especially those who enjoy slightly self-reflexive films about the film industry. While nowhere near as memorable as The Butcher, it nevertheless shows him as being perfectly capable of working with more commercial genre fare, and hopefully there won’t be such a long wait for his next Do Not Play is available to stream on Shudder the author James Mudge From Glasgow but based in London, James has been writing for a variety of websites over the last decade, including BeyondHollywood in the US and YesAsia in Hong Kong. As well as running film consultancy The Next Day Agency, James is also the Festival Director of the Chinese Visual Festival in London, an annual event which showcases Chinese language cinema... More » Read all posts by James Mudge On this day Eight years agoDragon BladeJohn Cusack and Adrien Brody co-star with Jackie Chan in this messy hamfest’… more… Read on → On this day 15 years agoThe WigWhat’s this? A wig that will make you look and act just like all those other scary Asian horror girls? My word, is no one safe? more… Read on →Trending this month...The best in festival coverageComing soon* Beyond Utopia 16 June, 2023 Revenge Adauchi 19 June, 2023 The Execution Game 20 June, 2023 Mad Fate 23 June, 2023 The Night Owl 27 June, 2023 *Dates may change While Korean cinema has a long and pretty terrifying history when it comes to ghost films, the spooky sub-genre doesn’t tend to be forefront in people’s minds when the discussion of South Korean films leans towards horror. Without a doubt, the far more prevalent and easily more recognisable revenge’ model is the go-to for many film fans. So with 2020 being the year that a Korean film is the first foreign language film to take home the Best Film Oscar, Shudder are frontloading their offerings with everything they can grab from the country’s fully stocked library of films waiting for a release. And while April’s MHz did next to nothing for most fans of the genre, the company’s latest acquisition, Warning Do Not Play may fare a little better. An aspiring film maker, Mi-Jung Yi-Ji Seo – Diary of a Night Watchman is frantically trying to come up with a new idea for a horror film. When her friend tells her a tale of a haunted film, supposedly made by a ghost and banned from ever being shown, Mi-Jung sets out to find out if the urban legends and rumours are true. Her search for the scary film that may, or may not, have killed somebody durning a university screening doesn’t only turn into an obsession for the young filmmaker, it becomes the inspiration for her own film. She will document her hunt for “Warning” and that will become her own scary movie. Tracking down the director, Jae-Hyun Seon-kyu Jin – Kingdom, getting her hands on a copy of this damned film and getting to the bottom of why the film is so feared might not be as easy as Mi-Jung thinks. But as tales of a young actress burned to death, a cursed film, and a vengeful ghost begin to feel more like real-life, Mi-Jung finds her dream project and the urban legends she is chasing come colliding together with horrific consequences. READ MORE Video Game Remakes – Why Are We So Excited? In 2007, director Kim Jin-Won not to be confused with the excellent Kim Jee-Woon made The Butcher; a found footage style film that took on the taboo of snuff movies, and looked at footage from the angles of the maker and the victim. It was a fun little film with something interesting to say but fell flat with audiences that saw it; primarily for its inability to live up to films like The Good, The Bad and The Weird or The Host that surrounded it. But the filmmaker had an obvious love for the way films are created, and telling stories around their production. Warning Do Not Play, while slightly self-indulgent, is a love letter to the creation of low-budget found footage horror films, even invoking the name of The Blair Witch Project in his script which, for the most part, is solid and tense. While not wholly original, much of the tension in this film is built up through the use of a tiny phone flashlight and us knowing, knowing, something is going to come out of the dark straight at us. Early jumps are telegraphed, faked, and then delivered with excellent timing and awareness of audience knowledge. We know that shadow is going to come at us, and we are pretty sure when. Kim Jin-Won knows we know this and racks up the tension before delivering scares accordingly. Sadly, the director’s tricks don’t last long, and this 85 minute film loses the ability to make you catch your breath and draw goosebumps quite early on. That being said, the scares that hit are good and the ones after that point are still delivered well while looking and feeling creepy, but the story of cursed crews and disastrous shoots has taken over and this horror movie becomes more of a mystery needing solving. Yi-Ji Seo convinces as the desperate director clinging onto the hope of a great idea to turn into a film. Her insistence in putting her life in the hands of her phone’s measly light in the hope of getting inspiration are admirable and stupid in equal measure. She has audiences begging her to turn and run and screaming at her for going into that basement we all know is going to be far worse for her than she realises. But we can feel the longing for that killer idea in her and while we know it is almost certainly going to end badly, we understand the things pushing her down those stairs and into the dark. READ MORE The Analogy of Jordan Peele’s Get Out and why you should stop watching The Help Seo’s performance is the main reason to stick with Warning Do Not Play. Her torture at the hands of the ghosts haunting her film is brilliantly portrayed,, even if the hints at her troubled past are frustratingly left by the wayside. She desperately needs a bigger and better film to showcase her talents. Warning Do Not Play is a mish-mash of its influences. From Ringu and Ju-On, to Lights Out with a healthy dose of One Cut of the Dead, the film homages all these great films while never honouring them quite as much as it thinks it is. It is a film to go into with slightly lowered expectations and a less than critical eye. Warning Do Not Play premieres on 11th June on Shudder UK. 3 star haunted video horror/mystery. Warning Do Not Play is a South Korean Shudder original horror film written and directed by Kim Jin-won The Butcher. It is available on , a premium horror/thriller streaming service and also on Shudder UK. “Do you have a religion? Stop thinking about Warning, start going to church.” Mi-Jung Ye-ji Seo – Save Me, Lawless Lawyer is a young film director. She has been contracted to make a film on the back of film festival success but is struggling to come up with the goods. With her final deadline looming, things look bleak, her dreams provide her with some ideas but not enough. As luck would have it, good friend and former colleague Joon-Seo Yoon-ho Ji – In Between Seasons, Argon remembers a rumour that he heard. A student filmmaker produced a film for his graduation project which was supposedly so scary that half the audience ran out and one of them died of a cardiac arrest. Unfortunately he knows neither the title nor the year it was made, just the University. Spotting an opening, Mi-Jung heads off to Daejeon University to investigate, but runs up against resistance there too until she speaks to the students, who all know the rumours about the film “Warning”, supposedly made by a ghost. Finally, she is able to track down director Kim Jae-hun Seon-kyu Jin – The Outlaws, Kingdom, however he is less than pleased to see her and offers a stark warning to leave well alone. Of course she does not do this and events begin to spiral out of control as the lines between truth and fiction blur. Warning Do Not Play is an interesting addition to the haunted film genre. It approaches from several angles, traditional horror film style for Mi-Jung’s activities and found footage style for the actual film she is researching, as well as a making-of feature. Clever as all this is however, it does eventually result in the story becoming a little fragmented and rather confusing and difficult to follow in places. It does have a good and very surprising twist and the whole thing is carried by an excellent acting performance by Ye-ji Seo who really makes it believable. The majority of the horror comes towards the end of the film, prior to that it is more of a mystery. Once it arrives it is a blood soaked eyeball fest and quite satisfying. Well worth a watch as something a little different in this genre, sure to delight fans of Korean horror and haunted films. “So, what happens to the director and her friend, in the end?” Warning Do Not Play is available to stream now on Shudder.  DirectorKim Jin-won GenreHorror/mystery StarringYe-ji Seo, Seon-kyu Jin, Yoon-ho Ji June 9, 2020 In WARNING DO NOT PLAY, Mi-Jung Ye-ji Seo is a horror filmmaker in search of her next story. With only two weeks to deliver a script before her development deal falls through, the young writer begins to investigate the urban legend of a student film so frightening it caused chaos – and even a heart attack – at its premiere. But the salacious story doesn’t stop there. Rumor has it the picture was actually created by a ghost that killed the production’s crew before making the movie herself. Unfortunately, while there is plenty of lore surrounding the feature, there aren’t many facts. The filmmakers, and even the movie’s name, seem to be lost. The only clue Mi-Jung has is the name of the school the doomed film team attended. Things become increasingly spooky as Mi-Jung dives deeper into the mystery. Turns out the film was selected for a festival, but the screening was canceled. When she finally tracks down the director, the terrified Jae-Hyun Seon-Kyu Jin demands she forget the film and start “going to church.” Even the movie itself – when she finally gets ahold of it – appears to be a “making of” documentary rather than the fabled horror film. As the lines between real life and the film she’s hunting began to blur, Mi-Jung finds herself faced with increasing threats both tactile and supernatural. WARNING DO NOT PLAY is a terrific story that deftly expands on modern ghost tales and found footage film tropes to create something fresh. Writer/director Kim Jin-wons love of the genre is on full display as the story zooms around every twist and turn. The central mystery is compelling and keeps you leaning forward as Mi-Jung’s efforts uncover increasingly horrifying details of just what happened to the makers of this enigmatic movies. There’s really not a dull moment in the eight-six minute runtime. Along with cinematographer Young-soo Yoon, Kim creates some breathtaking images that will stick with you. One of the standout sequences comes when the supernatural elements first take hold. Kim and Yoon raise the visual stakes by balancing the stark white light of a camera phone with saturated reds and blues that would make Dario Argento proud. Indeed, red and blue are a subtle theme throughout this movie, with red acting as a surrogate for the menacing force unknowingly seeping into the protagonist’s life. But it’s not just the colors that are captivating. The best images in a ghost story are ones that recreate that gut-dropping moment when a shadowy outline tricks the brain into seeing a human form that isn’t there. It’s an important shot to nail, and Kim captures it perfectly. Ye-ji Seo carries the film effortlessly as the plucky horror-loving Mi-Jung; while Seon-Kyu Jin’s performance as the film-within-a-film’s director will leave you just as shaken as any spectral threat. So should you put WARNING DO NOT PLAY on your must-watch list? I think so. Just be forewarned. As Mi-Jung so perfectly says, “It’s a horror film, so definitely not a happy ending.” WARNING DO NO PLAY will premiere on Shudder Thursday, June 11, 2020. Author Recent Posts Adrienne is a writer and editor living in the rain clouds of Seattle. When she is not writing about horror for various websites and institutions, she's staring out the window thinking about commas as a production editor for both fiction and nonfiction books. The rest of the time she can be found screening strange and obscure films for anyone brave enough to join in the fun. Adrienne Clark Kim Jin-won Nightmarish Conjurings reviews shudder WARNING DO NOT PLAY Ye-ji Seo Movie Reviews Post navigation Shudder Shudder continues to impress fans with its exclusive content. Shows like The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs and Cursed Films are getting considerable buzz, while the films they’re securing exclusive streaming rights to are reliably worth a look. Such is the case with one of the newest offerings, Warning Do Not Play. This South Korean horror effort is from director Kim Jin-Won 2007’s The Butcher. It follows Mi Jung, a young director who’s been preparing a new film for 8 years. She finds herself entangled in pursuit of an infamous banned film that was supposedly made by a ghost. Her search for the film leads her into a web of horror and deceit that she and those around her may never escape. RELATED Shudder’s One Cut of the Dead’ Coming to DVD/Blu-ray Warning Do Not Play is often effective in its use of tension and atmosphere, despite some distracting use of jump cuts and close-ups. There is some imagery that is also quite chilling. With that said, much of the creepy elements of this film feel a little recycled. There’s nothing particularly cutting edge with the design or style of Warning Do Not Play, and it ultimately ends up not being very memorable visually. Much of the film’s strength is in its story. Not without it’s blemishes, the plot of this film spins a bizarre web of history behind the infamous ghost film and the theater that is central to the narrative. It almost feels like a dedication to the passion for movies. A scary statement about how far a filmmaker is willing to go to complete their films. Shudder’s newest exclusive is definitely worth a look. The story is engaging and the atmosphere is effective. What it lacks in style, it makes up for in execution. If Warning Do Not Play and the recent Japanese cult hit, One Cut of the Dead, are any indication, Shudder will be a good place to see new buzzworthy Asian horror films that are worth the watch. RELATED Clive Barker is Suing to get Hellraiser’ Back

review film warning do not play