Tell Me Something Review

Tell Me Something
In Seoul a recently-widowed detective investigates the provenance of a number of dismembered bodies. Only to find they have all been involved with a young classical musician, Chae Su-Yeon

by Kim Newman |
Published on
Release Date:

16 Sep 2005

Running Time:

136 minutes

Certificate:

12A

Original Title:

Tell Me Something

Messy parcels containing bloody body parts are tripped over by various unwary Seoul residents.  Just-widowed detective (Han Suk-kyu) lands the red-ball case, along with his older, cheerier, obviously doomed-to-get-killed-at-the-end-of-act-two partner.  The dismembered victims, whose corpse bits are jumbled together out of order, all turn out to be ex-boyfriends of a strangely serene classical musician Chae Soon-yeon (Shim Eun-ya).  With several highly suspicious suspects (another ex, a perky best friend, a mysteriously missing father) in the game, generically-mandated plot and lots of Se7en-style driving rain, this is pretty much a made-to-order piece.  Director Yang Joon-hyun works scrupulously from the Hollywood serial murder playbook, and delivers something which does its job, even as its last reel flounders with several too many plot twists, but has no particular reason to exist.

A formula serial killer thriller, in Korean. Gruesome and twisted, but with few surprises.
Just so you know, whilst we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website, we never allow this to influence product selections - read why you should trust us