The Guard Post

DVDfever.co.uk – The Guard Post DVD review Dom Robinson reviews

The Guard Post
Distributed by
Showbox Media Grop Ltd Cover

  • Cert:
  • Cat.no: SBX450
  • Running time: 122 minutes
  • Year: 2008
  • Pressing: 2008
  • Region(s): 2, PAL
  • Chapters: 24 plus extras
  • Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Languages: Korean
  • Subtitles: English
  • Widescreen: 1.85:1
  • 16:9-Enhanced: Yes
  • Macrovision: Yes
  • Disc Format: DVD 9
  • Price: £12.99
  • Extras: The Briefing Room (Behind the scenes), The Barracks (set design), Guard Post Head Office (special effects and make-up), Storyboards, Trailers
  • Vote and comment on this film: View Comments

    Director:

      Su-chang Kong

    (The Guard Post, R-Point)

Producer:

    Kim Wan Sik

Screenplay:

    Su-chang Kong

Music :

    Christophe Beck

Cast :

    Sgt Major Noh: Ho-jin Chun
    Corporal Kang: Young-hoon Lee
    Guard Post Head, First Lt Woo: Hyun-Jae Cho
    Senior Sgt: Seung-hoon Lee


At Guard Post 506 when this secret military South Korean border outlet stops reporting in, an army team are sent in to find out what’s going on, led by Sgt Major Noh (Ho-jin Chun).

They find all but one of the 21 guards dead, and the one who’s found alive is standing over them, Guard Post Head, First Lt Woo (Hyun-Jae Cho), holding an axe, covered in blood from head to toe and with an evil grin fixed on his face. As the investigation begins, that man falls into a coma and the authorities only have eight hours to figure out what happened before the army start to cover it all up so not a word of it gets out. Once they do get chance to question him, clearly things don’t look good for his chances, especially when the blood-stained words “Kill them all” are posted on one of the walls underground.

One man, Sgt. Ma, is still unaccounted for, and he’s really not quite feeling himself today, and neither is something he’s just munched on…


There are many flashbacks to explain what happened, although these are fairly disparate and not at all joined up so you lose focus on precisely why all these things would be happening, and that doesn’t help to maintain interest – it just makes it all rather confusing. As for how it plays out, it’s very slow and there are some well-weird moments during the film, not only during the flashbacks but also – for a reason to be revealed – during the current events too. However, the sum is less than its parts and it’s not enough to make it a film that you can heartily recommend although after sitting through it, things did improve for the final 20 minutes.

The Guard Post, aka GP506 in other territories, features some great make-up as the gory moments kick-in, but any attempt at horror does come off as being on the laughable side.

I’ve not listed a full cast for this movie as I couldn’t find any more than a couple of cast names anywhere online – well, there’s a lot of names on the IMDB but they’re not attributed to any character – and a couple more in the behind-the-scenes piece.


The anamorphic widescreen print used here is rather soft – a little grainy, even, and I can only presume that the aspect ratio really is 1.85:1 as that’s how this DVD is presented and the picture looks okay, frame-wise, although the IMDB states 2.35:1. The Dolby Digital 5.1 sound really kicks a punch quite often, however.

Extras-wise, the main one is a behind-the-scenes piece, The Briefing Room (31:09, filmed in 4:3 with letterboxed film clips – as are the other pieces), which mixes in some cast interview snippets with on-set footage during the recording of the film and some stills taken during production. I guess it’s fine for those who want to know more about the film, but while I may check it out in full later, for the time being I’ve just spent two hours rolling about in the dark and I’d like some daylight in the meantime.

There’s also The Barracks (13:42), taking a look at the set design – which is certainly brilliantly well done to convey the dark atmosphere of the movie, as does the special effects and make-up which is looked at in Guard Post Head Office (9:55), which helps to make it look even more deliciously grim. Storyboards (9:56) show key scenes in that format, sometimes mixed in with the movie footage to show how it all fits in, and then there’s a Trailer Gallery which includes two trailers for this film – the latter of which gives away too much – although I prefer to see the film before the trailers, and trailers for: Apartment 1303, Dragon Tiger Gate, Chocolate, Fatal Contact, Ghost Game, Flashpoint, Battleground 625 and An Empress and the Warriors.

There’s also a trailer for Monkey Magic (1:45, windowboxed 2.35:1) which is a new version of the classic, rather mad, series Monkey, which looks like it rather keeps with the style of the original whilst updating the special FX. It’s subtitled but, of course, we’ll once again need a ridiculously-bad dubbed version of it like we used to watch on TV all those years ago.

The film is very well-chaptered with 24 of them, the main menu features clips of the movie and a small piece of the background music all on a loop and the English subtitles kick in by default and can’t be turned off, even though my Xbox 360 said ‘subtitles off’ when I tried it.


FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS


OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2008. View the discussion thread.blog comments powered by Disqus = 0) {query += ‘url’ + i + ‘=’ + encodeURIComponent(links[i].href) + ‘&’;}}document.write(”);})();//]]]]>]]>

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