Not because it makes it a better film, not because it makes more sense, but just because it will appease most audience members. The directors went for the easy ending where things end up happy just for the sake of ending happy. Furthermore, it completely cheapens and saps any tensity or meaning from the final fight scene that came just before.
And they never even explained how she avoided this fate. When mere scenes earlier she was literally seconds away from having her eyes scooped out of her head. Out of nowhere, the girl is alive and unharmed. I thought the ending was a complete and utter cop out. If I'm wrong, obviously just disregard what I say below. I'm assuming this is the moving I am remembering. Within the comment sections, recommendations for non-Netflix content will sometimes be allowed. The primary focus of this sub should be content available on Netflix, and all top level recommendations and questions should be about Netflix. Hover over to read.Īdd regional flair tags to your submissions so we know what Netflix region you're posting from CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION
Please write a short blurb either in the submission title or the text if you do a self post to explain why this movie/show is worth watching.Īdd spoiler tags as a courtesy.
Please link to the description page of the movie or show you are posting. If the same title appears simultaneously in the top 50, it may be removed at the mod's discretion.
Stop complaining about reposts and stop messaging the mods about it. The mods are leaving it up to the community to utilize downvotes if they feel that reposts are too excessive. The front page of this subreddit is meant to be a living representation of quality content on Netflix and you might see the same submissions multiple times. Reposts are not only allowed, but are encouraged to some extent. Normally I'm not a fan of English-language remakes, especially of my beloved South Korean genre cinema scene (cc: Spike Lee's Oldboy), but in this case, the filmmakers and material seem an almost too-perfect match.įor more on the world of Stahelski, here's our in-depth interview with him and David Leitch.The primary purpose of /r/NetflixBestOf is to shitpost about Breaking Bad. Beyond Stahelski, producers include 87Eleven's Jason Spitz and New Line's Richard Brener, Josh Mack and Chris Pan. Stahelski and Kolstad are working on the movie through their 87Eleven Entertainment production/stunt-team banner, which means you know the action is gonna kick ass (even though they haven't announced a director yet either). While no premise details of the remake have been specified, I can't imagine they'd move too far from the source material, given its bare simplicity and similarity to the Wick-verse already.
The original premise of the picture reminds me a touch of John Wick, with a little Léon: The Professional thrown in for good measure - Won plays a mysterious, deadly man who embarks on a single-minded, violent chase of rescue and revenge when his only friend, a little girl played by Kim Sae-ron, is kidnapped.