Find free sources for our audience.

Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

A repressed artist receives ritual abuse from those who pass him as he paints portraits in the park. Gradually becoming more frustrated, anger builds up within the artist, leading him to embark upon a quest to gain revenge on all those who have humiliated him.

Ju Jin-mo as  I
Sim Yi-young as  Girl
Son Min-seok as  Other I
Kim Gi-yeon as  Comic Shop Owner
Kwon Nam-hee as  Butcher Shop Owner
Jeon Jin-gi as  Studio Owner
Jang Hyun-sung as  Flower Shop Deliverer

Similar titles

Faces of Death
Faces of Death
A moderator on an internet video-sharing platform stumbles across a potential snuff film ring hidden in the depths of the site's content. Are these gruesome videos merely a morbid work of shock-value fiction, or something all too horribly real?
Faces of Death 1
Witness in the Dark
Witness in the Dark
A killer breaks into an apartment to steal a valuable brooch. He kills an old woman, but in fleeing he encounters a young woman on the stairs who will become his target.
Witness in the Dark 1959
Raw Deal
Raw Deal
A revenge-seeking gangster is sent to prison after being framed for a crime he didn't commit. After seducing a beautiful young woman, he uses her to help him carry out his plot for vengeance, leading him to the crazy pyromaniac who set him up.
Raw Deal 1948
Messenger of Death
Messenger of Death
Wifes and children of the Mormon Orville Beecham become victims of a massacre in his own house. The police believes the crime had a religious motive. Orville doesn't give any comment on the case, is taken into protective custody. Journalist Smith persuades him to help him in the investigation - and finds out about economic motives for the murder.
Messenger of Death 1988
Oh! Heavenly Dog
Oh! Heavenly Dog
Browning is a PI with a bad cold, who's sent to investigate a case by a mysterious client. He stumbles across the body of a young woman and is stabbed to death, and when he wakes up in heaven, they tell him he's "marginal material," and they can only decide on his final destination through one last assignment: to go back and solve his own murder. As a dog. A cute fluffy little dog (Benji). Undaunted, Browning begins to investigate the case as best he can around his canine disabilities (dialing the phone presents a special challenge) to solve the murders, save the girl, and see justice done.
Oh! Heavenly Dog 1980
Cleopatra Jones
Cleopatra Jones
After federal agent Cleopatra Jones orders the burning of a Turkish poppy field, the notorious drug lord Mommy vows to destroy her.
Cleopatra Jones 1973
Tony Rome
Tony Rome
Tony Rome, a tough Miami PI living on a houseboat, is hired by a local millionaire to find jewelry stolen from his daughter, and in the process has several encounters with local hoods as well as the Miami Beach PD.
Tony Rome 1967
April Fool's Day
April Fool's Day
When an April Fool's Day prank turns deadly, Desiree Cartier, her brother Blaine, and five of their friends all become the targets of a twisted kill who begins hunting them down one by one.
April Fool's Day 2008
Harper
Harper
Harper is a cynical private eye in the best tradition of Bogart. He even has Bogie's Baby hiring him to find her missing husband, getting involved along the way with an assortment of unsavory characters and an illegal-alien smuggling ring.
Harper 1966
Pom Poms and Payback
Pom Poms and Payback
After being dumped, a group of high school cheerleaders seek revenge on their boyfriends, only to suspect that their new cheer coach is actually behind all their troubles.
Pom Poms and Payback 2021

Reviews

EVOL666
2000/06/24

REAL FICTION is a mildly enjoyable "experimental" rage-spree style film whose most notable feature is that the entire film was shot with no retakes using several cameramen in a little over three hours. An ambitious undertaking on behalf of director Ki-Duk Kim, but unfortunately the only really impressive aspect of the film.A young street artist lives a miserable life of solitude and timidity, where he spends his days drawing sub-par portraits in a park for money and is constantly beaten and harassed by local thugs. In a strange and confusing scene, the artist comes face-to-fact (so to speak) with his "dark-side" and decides to take revenge on all those in his past who have wronged him. The rest of the film is a somewhat entertaining but ultimately unsatisfyingly typical vengeance film where the artist goes from one person to the next in his past, taking out those that contributed to his current anti-social and introverted state...until a "twist" ending reveals that the whole film may not have played out as the viewer may have been lead to believe...My first problem with REAL FICTION is the subtitling. It seemed very "off" in places, and made it hard to follow conversations at several points. Another issue, is that with a film as straight-forward as this, the violence was very weak and understated. This is understandable in the fact that I assume the director was trying to make some sort of point by shooting a film in three hours, and therefore may not have been able to stage better on-screen violence - but honestly, shoot it in 6 hours and give me some more of the red-stuff. I like rage/revenge films as a whole, but they're just no fun without the "payoff". Also the twist ending - though not ridiculously over-done as has been seen in many films nowdays, seems a little too obvious and done as a way to add another element to a relatively dull plot. On the up-side - the acting is well-done for a film with no re-takes, and to be honest, had I not been aware of the way the film was being shot, I probably would have never known that the "no-retakes" aspect was it's claim-to-fame. Also, as stated before, REAL FICTION was relatively entertaining (as in, I didn't fall asleep...) it just wasn't very original. I would say that it may be worth a look to experimental film fans or rage/revenge films for a one-time view, but I think the draw of this film will be more about HOW it was done, not the film itself, and personally - I'm more about the finished product. 6/10

... more
I_John_Barrymore_I
2000/06/25

Another fine film from Kim Ki-duk, although not in the same league as his two masterpieces The Isle and Bad Guy.At its heart a simple revenge tale, it's elevated by an interesting psychological aspect that prevents it from being just another low-budget shocker. The protagonist is a put-upon street artist who meets an alternate version of himself who jolts him into action and convinces him to exact revenge on those who have wronged him.Or he's the alternate version of a reclusive pseudo-guru who uses him to exact revenge on his enemies. It's not clear, but I'd bet on the former. The acting is very good all round, especially from the lead, and there are numerous comic scenes that don't intrude, but serve to lighten the potentially very dark drama. Worth a look.

... more
bastard wisher
2000/06/26

Another fascinating and frustrating film from Kim Ki-Duk. He reminds of Lars Von Trier in a lot of ways, in that they both have a lot of the same weaknesses along with being remarkable filmmakers. The thing that bothers me the most about both of them is the degree to which their films obviously serve as allegories. In this film in particular (like Von Trier with Dogville) this aspect is particularly emphasized to a debilitating extent. Also, it's worth noting that both filmmakers seem to have a lot of the same questionable ideas when it comes to women, but that's somewhat besides the point.As Kim Ki-Duk's films go, this one is actually one of the more obviously ambitious and noteworthy. The whole thing was shot in real time, with a bunch of cameras running simultaneously (including one digital camera that is incorporated into the story itself, to alternately ingenious and irritating effect). Objectively, this is one of the most promising things the filmmaker has attempted, although the method is less noticeable in the final film than it perhapse should have been. Still, in the moments where the technique is used effectively (particularly in scenes shot in public places), it proves to be one of the most admirable things Kim Ki-Duk has done.On a whole though, the film still has a fair share of flaws. Along with the aforementioned problems i have with the un-reality of his films, Kim Ki-Duk again proves he is pretty much worthless when it comes to using music. To begin with, the film (as is the case with many of his) has awful sounding, cheap music. But even then, in one scene in particular Kim Ki-Duk has the music come in at a terrible moment that ruins what could have been a very emotional scene. In other ways as well, the (understandable) low-budgetness of the project becomes glaringly obvious in a way it shouldn't, particularly in the way in which the film deals with violence.That said, as always, there is still enough genuine talent and obvious artistic vision that shines through in his work to make me not only not dismiss Kim Ki-Duk, but make me consider him one of the most interesting filmmakers working today. Even if, on a whole, the film falls short of it's ambitions (it seemed to be attempting a lot of what Man Bites Dog had already done wonderfully), it's still a very admirable and interesting undertaking.

... more
Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream thousands of hit movies and TV shows