Xuenou > Movies > “Decision To Leave” Is A New Mystery Film From “Oldboy” Director Park Chan-Wook, And It’s A Slow But Intriguing Burn
“Decision To Leave” Is A New Mystery Film From “Oldboy” Director Park Chan-Wook, And It’s A Slow But Intriguing Burn
"It's an exploration of how tragic love can be and what loss can do."

“Decision To Leave” Is A New Mystery Film From “Oldboy” Director Park Chan-Wook, And It’s A Slow But Intriguing Burn

If you’re the kind of moviegoer who loves a dark romantic thriller, then Decision to Leave should 100% be added to your list of must-see films this year.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

Now, if the story of a detective falling for his suspect sounds familiar to you, that’s because it’s a pretty popular trope in movies. Whether it’s erotic thrillers like Basic Instinct and Jagged Edge or classic noir films like Vertigo and The Maltese Falcon, a cop falling for a femme fatale is a story we’ve seen many times before. And Park’s latest film follows in these famous footsteps.

© TriStar / Courtesy Everett Collection

Decision to Leave tells the story of Hae-joon (Park Hae-il), a detective at the top of his game who’s so engrossed in his work that he keeps an apartment in the city and only goes home to his wife on weekends. Heck, he even keeps a vision board of all the unsolved cases he’s had over the years in his apartment.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

The mystery begins when Hae-joon and his young but eager partner begin to investigate the death of a man who fell from a mountaintop.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

At first glance, most people would probably brush off the incident as an accident (he’d apparently been climbing the very steep mountain, after all).

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

However, once Hae-joon meets the dead man’s wife, Seo-rae (Tang), he starts to suspect her. She does strange things like laugh to herself while being interrogated…

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

…but he also begins to feel an attraction to her. In fact, one could easily jump to the conclusion that he’s hoping to impress her by doing things like treating her to an expensive sushi lunch — during the interrogation. ? ? ?

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

What unfolds is a slow-burning mystery and romance that intends to have the audience questioning, alongside Hae-joon, whether Seo-rae was involved in her husband’s death or whether she’s an innocent victim herself.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

Adding to the noir flavor of the film is the gorgeous cinematography by Kim Ji-yong. It’s beautifully shot and enhances the complicated, dark nature of the star-crossed lovers’ journey.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

Now, if you’re familiar with Park’s more ~shocking~ work, like the aforementioned Oldboy and The Handmaiden, be prepared to find out that Decision to Leave doesn’t quite pack the same OMG punch as his previous titles.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

While it’s still an engrossing tale, for a story that’s half mystery, there’s never really a sense of much mystery. Much like in Basic Instinct (except without all the sex), it seems pretty obvious throughout the story that our femme fatale is exactly that…and that our hero is easily blinded, and ruined, by love.

MUBI

By the end of the film, you won’t be left wondering what the truth is. Both the main mystery and one that evolves later are solved fairly easily. Instead, you’ll be left with a haunting image and end. And maybe that’s even better…if you’re into tragic romance.

MUBI / Courtesy Everett Collection

Despite touches of noir, comedy, and murder, Decision to Leave is, at its core, a love story. It’s an exploration of how tragic it can be, and Park’s presentation of what loss can do to a person is a truly intriguing ride. It’s a slow but subtle, elegant, and worthwhile watch.

MUBI

Rating: 7/10.

Decision to Leave opens in limited release Oct. 14 and wide across the US on Oct. 21, and you can watch the trailer for it here:


View this video on YouTube

MUBI / Via youtube.com

Looking for more recommendations? Check out some of my other reviews from this year:

Halloween Ends

Don’t Worry Darling

Pearl

Barbarian

Bodies Bodies Bodies

Nope

The Black Phone

Elvis

Men

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

The Northman

Everything Everywhere All at Once

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