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| Endgame Investigation |
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[TV Daily reporter Han Seo-yul] Jae-hyuk (Bae Sung-woo), once the top investigator on a regional task force, exposed his superior’s corruption and was reassigned to Boeun Police Station. There he crosses paths with an unexpected ally and an unforeseen case. What begins as an effort to catch petty thieves who stole a speaker and an amp soon reveals traces connected to a far grimmer crime — the murder of a nightlife worker with a bloodied blunt instrument — and the investigation swells into a much larger storm. After years of letting stubbornness narrow his view, can veteran detective Jae-hyuk finally get his reckoning?
The film Endgame Investigation (dir. Park Cheol-hwan), which opened April 2, follows a demoted ace detective, Jae-hyuk, and a brash rookie, Jungho (Jung Ga-ram), a former influencer, as a routine arrest of a rural thief pulls them into an urban homicide. Adapted from a real Japanese case and reshaped for Korean audiences, the film finished shooting in 2019 but was delayed by a lead actor controversy and the pandemic, ultimately arriving in theaters seven years later.
At its core, the film’s premise isn’t novel. The pairing of Jae-hyuk — a hard-nosed detective who refuses to compromise — with Jungho — an energetic, mission-driven rookie — follows a familiar crime-drama template. Likewise, the trajectory from a minor incident to a major conspiracy aligns with established genre conventions. Where the film distinguishes itself is in how it retools that partnership. Rather than portraying generational conflict as one-sided lecturing or power games, Endgame Investigation lets the characters acknowledge each other’s flaws and develop a complementary working relationship. Their friction, which might have settled into routine antagonism, instead becomes a dynamic, adaptive collaboration that powers the story. The film also leans into a nostalgia for old-school detective dramas. As many recent genre films chase slick thrills with flashy CG and pristine cinematography, Endgame Investigation opts for a retro investigative texture. The filmmakers emphasize the actors’ physical performances and the raw ambient sounds of the set over technical flourishes, resulting in a rougher but more convincing portrayal of police work.
The cast breathes life into this lean procedural. Bae Sung-woo renders Jae-hyuk as stubborn and sometimes ragged, yet precise and razor-focused when it counts, lending the role emotional weight and credibility. Jung Ga-ram turns Jungho — the son of a reportedly 20 billion KRW family (15 million USD) and a former influencer — into a sharp, polished counterpoint to Jae-hyuk’s bluntness, producing a chemistry that exceeds expectations. Jo Han-chul and Yoon Kyung-ho also make memorable contributions. Jo calibrates tension with a layered performance that shifts between reason and emotion, while Yoon sheds his familiar persona to deliver a chilling, unexpected turn. The clash of characters with distinct emotional temperatures generates an energy that sustains the film through to its final frame.
[TV Daily reporter Han Seo-yul news@tvdaily.co.kr / Photos courtesy of Ace Maker Movie Works]
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