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You Think He's Your Toy?!?

Students come together for one last time to see their sick teacher. Invited up to her cottage, the memories begin instantly. Mrs. Park is confined to a wheelchair and bowed upon by her students, who wish her good luck and a long life. Every student seems to have a story in which the sick Mrs. Park had embarrassed or made fun of them in some way, yet they have forgiven her. Also, a small story comes to our attention of a certain kid being made fun of after his mother was struck and killed by a vehicle. Thrown into the mix is Mrs. Park's past; a misfit birth of a son who she locked away for no one to see and her husband who killed himself because he could not bare what his wife gave birth to. Each victim seems to know the person, for they are comfortable with the killer who reamians unseen until it is too late for them. with all the angles and repressed anger throughout every character; this just smells like a setup for a revenge flick in a rediculously hard guessing game. The acting is good in the film, as all Asain films I have ever seen, no one half asses their role and that keeps my head in it as a real event; good shit to be captured like that. The gore also scores points in my book, making this a movie one I'm glad I bought.

Mrs. Park: "Warm friends with bitterness, not sweetness; what they don't want to hear."

6/10
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Added by pamela voorhees
14 years ago on 17 August 2009 22:56