Project Wolf Hunting review: The violent Korean thriller will control you | Movies | entertainment

Project Wolf Hunting is a loud, funny, and painfully violent B-movie that doesn’t take its foot off your throat for a second. The site is a 58,000-ton cargo ship traveling between the Philippines and South Korea.

For the first half hour, it appears that most of the action will involve dozens of filthy Korean killers, serial killers, and rapists being transported back to their home country under an extradition treaty.

But, unbeknownst to the cops, crew, and criminals on board, something far more sinister lurks in the engine room.

Flashbacks reveal a secret Japanese experiment conducted during the occupation of Korea. And this dark secret will return to torment the passengers in increasingly terrifying ways.

What begins as a Korean Con-Air will turn into a K-Alien movie as the monster continues to rampage, limbs being ripped off and heads being squashed like watermelons.

When the violence is repeated, we get another twist, a plot and the sudden appearance of a hero. After two hours of rest, viewers with strong stomachs will be left wanting more.

  • Wolf Hunting’s project, CIRT 18, is in cinemas now



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