*This content was translated by AI.
Cho In-sung's action and Park Jung-min's "melodramatic style" were all blended well under Ryu Seung-wan's slate. Ryu Seung-wan's intelligence, which he hasn't seen in a long time, bursts on the screen.
The movie "Humint" (director Ryu Seung-wan) is a story of people with different purposes in Vladivostok, where secrets and truth are buried in a cold sea of ice.
Director Cho of the National Intelligence Service (Cho In-sung) lives with his family who is not making a family to carry out his duties, but he feels compassion for the human rights (intelligence agency) who failed to keep during his mission and carries out the next operation. Cho, who went to Vladivostok to confirm the import of North Korean drugs into South Korea and the drug trade of the North Korean and Russian mafia, meets Chae Sun-hwa (Shin Se-kyung) at the North Korean restaurant Arirang and embraces her to make her his source. In the end, Chae Seon-hwa, who became a human being for Chief Cho, continues her relationship of delivering information and receiving medicine from her sick mother for several months, but she shakes when she encounters Park Gun (Park Jung-min), a North Korean security guard who came to Vladivostok to find her.
Meanwhile, Hwang Chi-sung (Park Hae-joon), North Korea's consul general, conducts a background investigation on Park Gun for fear that the corruption he is committing will be discovered by Park Gun, and finds out that he has become a human being in South Korea while digging behind Chae Sun-hwa. In the end, Hwang Chi-sung plans to remove both Park Geon and Chae Seon-hwa, pretends to repatriate Chae Seon-hwa to North Korea after interrogation, and then hand over Chae Seon-hwa to the Vladivostok Mafia, where he was engaged in drug and human trafficking.
According to Chae Sun-hwa to protect her human rights, Chief Cho goes to rescue Chae Sun-hwa after seeing this, and Park Gun also goes to save her after learning that Chae Sun-hwa was in the hands of the mafia.
"Humint" depicts a clash between South Korean NIS agent Cho, who said he would save his own informant, and Park Gun, who risked his life to protect his beloved woman. In the chaotic stories of the division of North and South Korea, drugs, North Korean defectors, and human trafficking, action, intelligence, and even melodrama are unfolded.
Cho In-sung performs perfect action using his long limbs. Cho In-sung, who is taciturn, leads the film by silently and eating his duties. The compassion reflected on the lonely manager Cho's face toward Humint meets the charm of the actor Cho In-sung and doubles. Cho In-sung, who is already working with director Ryu Seung-wan for the third time, properly expressed the manager Cho Seung-wan wanted, and director Ryu Seung-wan focused on Cho In-sung's character.
Park Jung-min made a melodrama in his dark and cold face. Park Geon, who is not a familiar person and a sad Park Jung-min, but with sad eyes, is not likely to bleed even if he pokes it, but he captures women's hearts by collapsing only in front of Chae Sun-hwa. Without proper expression of love or touch, he created the melodrama of the movie by drawing his heart for Chae Sun-hwa. Park Jung-min is likely to make women's hearts flutter once again.
Shin Se-kyung is the kick of 'Humint'. Initially, the movie suffered from the issue of replacing the heroine, but I think Chae Sun-hwa's character is perfect for Shin Se-kyung. Shin Se-kyung, who looks pretty and brave but has a story, shows her beautiful appearance in a movie that she has appeared in for the first time in a long time, and shows her acting that has melted into the play.
Park Hae-joon, who returned as a villain in "National Dad Yang Gwan-sik," gives young people an ordeal with his cheeky appearance. Park Hae-joon, who has acted as a villain in various works, is attracting the audience's eyes with another result in this work.
Director Ryu Seung-wan made Ryu Seung-wan's way of telling stories that are now unfresh. Action and movie making are good enough to live up to his name. Cho In-sung's action, Park Jung-min's melodrama, and Shin Se-kyung's face were combined to create Ryu Seung-wan's spy melodrama. The two-hour running time is fun and not boring at all. "Humint," which has a melodrama created with eyes on intelligence material that reminds people of "Berlin," seems to be fun to watch action in theaters for the first time in a long time.
Released Feb. 11. Running time 119 minutes. For ages 15 and up.
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*This content was translated by AI.

