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Tunnel: Directed by Seong-hun Kim. With Ha Jung-woo, Bae Doona, Dal-su Oh, Shin Jeong-geun. A man is on his way home when the poorly constructed tunnel he is driving through collapses, leaving him trapped.

“A man is on his way home when the poorly constructed tunnel he is driving through collapses, leaving him trapped.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu0026quot;Tunnelu0026quot; comes to us from writer-director Seong-hun Kim, who is likely not very well known in the United States, though some fans of Korean cinema may have seen his previous film, u0026quot;A Hard Dayu0026quot; (2014). The star of u0026quot;Tunnelu0026quot; is Jung-woo Ha, who you will most likely recognize from u0026quot;The Handmaidenu0026quot; (2016), which is being heavily promoted by Amazon. (Perhaps the PR folks behind u0026quot;Tunnelu0026quot; can build off of this?)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis is one of those films that works well because it relies on a very simple plot with a high amount of tension. We have just about the smallest stage possible (the inside of a car), though it does cut to other areas from time to time. (Would it work better if it just stayed in the car? Maybe.) Others have said the film runs a bit too long, and I have to agree. Although you can often make a u0026quot;slow burnu0026quot; go for two hours or more, this one may not hold the tension as well as it could. I donu0026#39;t know. Opinions will vary.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu0026quot;Tunnelu0026quot; is out now (May 2017) from WellGo, available on DVD. Why it is not being released on Blu-ray is unclear, and the DVD is very much a bare bones affair. While the movie is good enough to stand on its own, there is literally nothing on the disc that would make it an improvement over a streaming option.”

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