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Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3 (2006)

Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3 (2006)

GENRESComedy,Crime,Drama
LANGKorean
ACTOR
Hyeon-jun ShinWon-hie KimJae-hun TakKim Su-Mi
DIRECTOR
Yong-ki Jeong

SYNOPSICS

Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3 (2006) is a Korean movie. Yong-ki Jeong has directed this movie. Hyeon-jun Shin,Won-hie Kim,Jae-hun Tak,Kim Su-Mi are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2006. Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3 (2006) is considered one of the best Comedy,Crime,Drama movie in India and around the world.

Mrs. Hong's family launches a new business (a kimchi manufacturing company) after putting an end to their crime-related dirty business. It's a huge success due to Mrs. Hong's culinary talent, and she, with her three sons and their wives, write a new chapter for their family history (learning what an ordinary man's life is like); but, the Hongs hit a crisis when former prosecutor Bong, imprisoned for manipulating evidence (and now released), prepares for revenge on the Hongs, who largely contributed to his conviction.

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Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3 (2006) Reviews

  • Marrying the Mafia 3: Formulaic mindlessness for escapist masses

    OCOKA2007-01-01

    The Yeosu-based Baekhopa (White Tiger) Gang hailing from gangster country in Korea's southwestern corner, is back again in this, the third installment of the highly predictable and formula-laced albeit commercially successful "Marrying the Mafia" franchise. Although originally entitled in Korean "Gamun-ui Buhwal: Gamunui Yeong-gwang 3", which translates to: 'The Legacy's Resurrection: The Legacy's Glory', the producers opted for the more user friendly "Marrying the Mafia III". While the first two MMs capitalized on the idea of a commoner marrying into a Korean underworld family, the third installment is nothing like the previous two. The first two were cute with a reasonably cohesive and entertaining plot. This one isn't and doesn't. In MM3, the story is all over the place, the plot line is cheesy, and the dialog, in places, is annoying beyond belief. The saving grace of this film is its cast of familiar faces, whom you'll easily recognize if you saw MM2. The 'Joan Rivers of Korean cinema', the inimitable Sumi Kim, is back in her reprisal of Hong Deok-ja, the matriarch of the Baekhopa gang. This time, her profanity-laced mafia boss character has forsworn the family trade and decided to go legit by opening up a kimchi factory, complete with home-shopping TV ads and an IPO to boot. Her incompetent three gangster sons, however, are loath to give up their stock in trade and cannot seem to suppress their innate dime-store hood personaes -- business casual and boardrooms notwithstanding. The story starts out compellingly enough with the upcoming release of Prosecutor Bong from prison, whom as you remember, was humiliated and disgraced by the Baekhopas in MM2 when they exposed him for fraud, bribery, conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and a host of other no-no's that landed him a lengthy prison sentence. Now, Bong's back in MM3, and this time, he's madder than hell and stronger than ever -- what with all the spare time he's had in prison practicing one-fingered handstands, flying kicks, and other assorted whatnots. Not only is he out on a full pardon, he's out to get back at the Baekhopas big time. The first on his list is Jin-kyung Kim (played by the absolutely darling Won-hie Kim) and her fiancé, the second-in-command of the Baekhopas and now respectable Kimchi company CEO, Kyung-jae Jang, played by Hyeong-jung Im. Bong's partner in crime, who helped him get a parole, is none other than the Baekhopa's rival gang leader, whom you'll immediately recognize from "2", especially with that cringe-inducing Busan dialect. With Jin-kyung's return to the Seoul District Prosecutor's Office -- the position vacated by Bong at the end of MM2 -- the story flits back and forth between the family's new kimchi enterprise and the second son's philandering. The second son's extracurricular activities not only conflict with his wife's desire to conceive, it also dovetails perfectly with former-prosecutor Bong's hatchet plan to disgrace the Baekhopa Gang and get revenge on Hong family syndicate once and for all. Along with the predictable twists and over-the-top dialog, we get the feeling that we've seen this Korean gangster movie many times before. And in fact we have. MM3 is mindless escapism that has proved to be the opium of the masses here in Korea, although it will prove to be less so elsewhere -- at least for the time being.

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  • Dull and not funny at all...

    paul_haakonsen2015-12-31

    Without having seen parts 1, 2 or 4 for that matter, I sat down to watch "Marrying the Mafia 3" (aka "Gamunui buhwal: Gamunui yeonggwang 3") as it was labeled a comedy and in a hope that it might be similar to the "My Wife Is a Gangster" movies. I was sorely disappointed, as this movie was a snoozefest of epic proportions. I must be honest and admit that I gave up about halfway through the movie, because there was no laughs to be had and the story wasn't particularly interesting to me in any way. And the characters in the movie weren't memorable and lacked personalities. The actors and actresses did good enough jobs with their roles, they were just hindered by an awful script. For an Asian comedy, a South Korean comedy in particular, then "Marrying the Mafia 3" was a weak addition to the genre. I don't plan on finishing the movie, and will say that it has somewhat deterred me from watching parts 1, 2 and 4. If you enjoy Asian comedies then "Marrying the Mafia 3" is a poor choice for entertainment, and your time and money is better spent elsewhere.

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