"Death Bell"
("Go sa: pieui junggan gosa")
An SK Telecom release of a Core Contents, SK Telecom presentation of a
Water n Tree, Core Contents Media production. (International sales:
Core Contents, Seoul.) Produced by Kim Gwang-su, Seong Been. Directed by Chang. Screenplay, Kim Eun-gyeong, Chang.
With: Lee Beom-su, Yun Jeong-heui, Nam Gyu-ri, Kim Beom.
There's no shortage of South Korean high
school frightfests, but "Death Bell" has a neat concept that almost
goes the distance. Slightly similar to the recent Spanish suspenser
"Fermat's Room," with trapped victims having to solve puzzles to rescue
their colleagues, this first feature by mono-monikered musicvid
director Chang generates enough shocks and gore to keep genre addicts
contented on ancillary. Remake potential is also strong.
An elite
group of students at Chang-in High, including nightmare-haunted Gang
Yi-na (Nam Gyu-ri) and troublesome teen Gang Hyeon (Kim Beom), is
taking a special class for the college entrance exam. After Gang Hyeon
is almost strangled by one student, and another is throttled in a
restroom stall, the classroom TV screen suddenly switches to a horrific
image of a top-ranked femme student in a fish tank that's slowly
filling with water.
A disembodied voice announces a student will
die for every test question the class gets wrong -- and the first will
be the girl in the tank. Anyone trying to leave the premises will also
die a horrible death.
Trapped along with the teens are head teacher Chang Wook
(star Lee Beom-su) and pretty English teach Choi So-yeong (Yun
Jeong-heui). But it's Yi-na who starts to unravel the mystery by
realizing students are being killed in order of their rank in the
class, from the top. Unfortunately for her, she's ranked No. 5. After a
fairly conventional half-hour setup, the pic keeps the tension high
with tight cutting and a no-flab script that ups the student body count
in some especially inventive ways. Solution to the whodunit is less
convincing than the lead-up, with a finale that doesn't deliver on
expectations. But the journey there is fine, with Lee, better known for
comedy, interestingly cast as the students' tough prof.
Technical
credits on DigiBeta version caught were fully pro, even though
post-production on the August release had been rushed to meet its
festival preem.
Camera (color, DigiBeta), Heo Seong-ryeong; editor, Yu Yeong-ju; music, Kim Jun-seong; sound (Dolby Digital). Reviewed at PiFan Film Festival (Puchon Choice), Bucheon, South Korea, July 23, 2008. Running time: 87 MIN.
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