Cobweb Review: Artistic Vision Meets Reality

Showbiz Satire or Sentimental Ode? Cobweb's Uneasy Tonal Balance

You may know Korean director Kim Jee-woon from his stylish thrillers like A Tale of Two Sisters or his slam-bang Western homage The Good, the Bad, and the Weird. With Cobweb, Kim tries his hand at a “movie within a movie”—films that peek behind the curtain to show the madness and mayhem of moviemaking.

We follow Director Kim (played by Parasite star Song Kang-ho) in 1970s South Korea as he attempts to reshoot the ending for his latest picture, the ominously-titled Cobweb. Convinced the new finale will transform Cobweb from run-of-the-mill thriller into a bonafide masterpiece, Director Kim rallies his cast and crew for two more days of filming under the ever-watchful eye of government censors.

Of course, nothing goes smoothly. Egos clash, romances curdle, and Equipment breaks down as Kim fights to wrangle his artistic vision into reality. Part showbiz satire, part ode to directorial obsession, Cobweb lets Kim flex his filmmaking chops while wearing his cinephile heart on his sleeve. Time will tell if Kim’s dice roll pays off, but his love for the art form sparkles through either way.

Masterpiece or a Glorified B-Movie? The Madness Behind the Camera

Cobweb takes us back to 1970s South Korea, when filmmakers worked under the watchful eye of government censors even as they tried achieving their artistic visions. Director Kim believes his latest picture, a soapy thriller called Cobweb, could be his masterpiece—if only he could nail the ending.

Cobweb the movie follows a love triangle between a factory owner (Oh Jung-se), his wife, and a young worker (Jung Soo-jung). After the shoot wraps, Director Kim has a breakthrough and realizes only reshoots of the finale will elevate Cobweb to greatness. But the censorship board already approved the existing cut. Undeterred, Kim recruits his weary cast and crew, who begrudgingly sign on, unaware of the behind-the-scenes drama bubbling beneath the surface.

Leading man Ho-se juggles his affair with the young starlet Yu-rim, who hides a pregnancy that threatens to derail the reshoot. Studio head Baek aims to honor her late brother’s legacy, even as her niece Mido obsessively backs Kim’s artistic gambit. Throughout the controlled chaos, Kim battles clashing egos, failing equipment, and the ever-present censors to stage his grand artistic statement before the sets are struck in two days. The question lingers—is Cobweb a new masterpiece, or just another B-movie in disguise?

A Love Letter to Moviemaking—Warts and All

Underneath the winking humor and showbiz satire, Cobweb harbors a deep affection for the art and agony of filmmaking. Kim lovingly skewers the dueling egos and insecurities that drive the process, even as he champions the creative fire that makes it all worthwhile.

Cobweb Review

The fictional film-within-a-film device allows Kim to indulge his stylistic flair. Cinematographer Kim Ji-yong shoots the fake Cobweb thriller in moody black-and-white, evoking classic Hollywood noir. Scenes burst with German Expressionist shadows, canted angles, and winding staircases shrouded in spider webs. The visual contrast heightens when we return to the “real” 1970s world awash in faded, nostalgic colors. Kim uses this deft sleight of hand to blur fantasy and reality as Director Kim descends into artistic madness.

But the real soul of Cobweb lives in Director Kim’s quixotic quest to cheat mediocrity and fashion a masterpiece—whatever the cost. Kim sympathizes with that endless striving, often at the mercy of studios, stars, and censorship boards. In scene after scene, Director Kim fights for creative control to finally share his uncompromised vision. While the results may prove messy or ridiculous, Kim views that trial-by-fire process as a badge of honor—the necessary toll to produce real art.

In the end, Cobweb stands as Kim’s own masterpiece about the struggle for masters. A love letter to moviemaking penned in pencil and splattered with plenty of eraser smudges. Kim embraces his characters, flaws and all, celebrating the collective madness required when trying to catch lightning in a bottle. It may not always be pretty, but that shared dream of transcendence makes it all worthwhile.

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A Cast Firing on All Comedic Cylinders

While the plot careens from melodramatic to absurd, Cobweb finds its anchor in Kim’s talented ensemble. Song Kang-ho brings infectious conviction as Director Kim, emitting both childlike wonder and tunnel-vision obsession. We believe that Kim believes his ragged opus could genuinely be a game-changing masterwork, which grounds the comedic payoff.

Newcomer Krystal Jung also delights as the ingenue actress Yu-rim, whose rapid rise to fame fuels her diva antics on set. Jung nails the preening vanity and hormonal mood swings with aplomb. As aspiring filmmaker Mido, Jeon Yeo-been matches Song beat-for-beat as Kim’s wide-eyed sidekick devoted to his auteur vision. Yeo-been’s sincere intensity proves the perfect foil for Song’s controlled chaos.

The supporting players also shine when Kim aims for laughs over substance. Dramatic confrontations between philandering actors and disapproving execs turn splendidly silly through shrill line readings and epic scenery chewing. An awkward scene with Mido unsuccessfully standing in for an absent actor wrings plenty of cringe humor but falls strangely flat given the surrounding outrageousness.

While dramatic elements fizzle, the cast clicks during comedic moments. Jung’s petulant starlet, in particular, seems ripe for a spinoff expanding on her diva exploits. But the performers can only elevate the thin material so far. In the end, the fate of Cobweb rests squarely on Director Kim’s shoulders. Luckily, Song brings enough talent and gravitas to carry the entire production on his own.

An Overstuffed Tonal Misfire

For all its comedic charms, Cobweb buckles under its own lofty ambitions. At 135 minutes, Kim’s sprawling character study overstays its welcome trying to juggle too many plot threads and tonal shifts. The chaotic structure mirrors the filmmaking madness on display, but leaves the audience exhausted.

Kim struggles to strike a balance between satirical farce and thoughtful drama. Broad comedic strokes often undercut the story’s emotional core. Big reveals that should land as poignant feel rushed as Kim races to the next punchline. Other critical themes around artistic integrity get trampled by all the winking irony.

It doesn’t help that supporting characters carry full subplots that lead nowhere. The details of the central mystery surrounding Director Kim’s mentor remain murky even after the bloated resolution. Perhaps no surprise that the fictional film-within-a-film seems far more compelling than the sloppy machinations behind the scenes.

This makes for quite the disconnect with Kim’s early masterworks known for their razor focus and technical wizardry. Cobweb lacks the intricate elegance of The Age of Shadows or the genre bending thrills of I Saw The Devil. Instead, Kim gets lost down the meta rabbit hole, leaving characters and audience alike waiting for his grand artistic statement to materialize.

Cobweb arguably works best when mining laughs from its goofy cast and absurdist premise. But as an incisive showbiz satire or poignant drama, Kim’s reach far exceeds his grasp this go around. Less masterpiece than meandering misfire.

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Imperfect But Passionate Ode to Moviemaking

At the end of the day, Cobweb plays like an unfortunate consolation prize for a tantalizing unseen masterpiece. We only glimpse fragments of Kim’s lush fictional thriller, while the making-of pseudo-dramedy consistently bites off more than it can chew.

Yet there is something oddly endearing about Kim’s sloppy ambition. What Cobweb lacks in tonal clarity, it makes up for in gusto. Kim barrels forward with such infectious zeal that it’s easy to root for him to pull it all together, even as the picture threatens to unspool.

The strengths lie in the margins—Song Kang-ho’s dedicated performance, Krystal Jung’s scene-stealing histrionics, cinematographer Kim Ji-yong’s visual razzle dazzle. For fans of the players or builders involved, Cobweb offers enough flickers of brilliance to warrant a look.

But those seeking the polished perfection of Kim’s earlier work may leave feeling unfulfilled. Cobweb stands as his most unabashedly personal effort, a movie about passion projects gone awry. One senses Kim sees a bit of himself in Director Kim’s relentless crusade. In the end, both are striving—and stumbling—in service of their art. There may not be a masterpiece on display, but Cobweb overflows with love for the trying.

The Review

Cobweb

6 Score

Cobweb aims admirably high but loses itself in the tangled web of its own lofty ambitions. Too many plot threads and tonal shifts obstruct the view of the artful genre film seemingly lurking underneath. Still, Kim’s infectious passion proves oddly endearing.

PROS

  • Strong central performance by Song Kang-ho
  • Impressive visual style and cinematography
  • Effective comedy and satire of film industry
  • Captures madness and passion behind the scenes
  • Ambitious themes about artistic integrity

CONS

  • Uneven tone and messy plot
  • Overlong runtime that drags
  • Underdeveloped characters and relationships
  • Lacks narrative focus and coherence
  • Falls short of potential

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 6
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