On its surface, the plot is classical tragedy. Sun-woo (Lee Byung-hun in a career-defining performance) is the perfect manager of a luxury hotel owned by crime boss Kang. He is efficient, cold, and silent. When Kang suspects his young mistress, Hee-soo (Shin Min-a), is cheating, he orders Sun-woo to handle it—and if necessary, to kill her. But Sun-woo watches Hee-soo from afar. He sees her smile, her nervous energy, her life. When he confronts her and her lover, he does not raise his gun. He walks away.
The film’s first half is a masterclass in controlled composition. Kim Jee-woon shoots Sun-woo’s world like a Tom Ford advertisement: mahogany desks, tailored suits, crystal glassware, and the sleek chrome of a Mercedes. The violence, when it comes, is stark and geometric—a single gunshot, a shovel to the face, a pit in the rain. Sun-woo digs himself out of a shallow grave (a sequence of visceral, mud-caked desperation) and the film transforms. It ceases to be a study of restraint and becomes a symphony of revenge. A Bittersweet Life 2005
For this act of mercy, he is buried alive. On its surface, the plot is classical tragedy
The final shot is devastating. Sun-woo, bloodied and broken, looks up at the ceiling of his beloved hotel as the light pours in. He smiles again. It is the same smile from the apartment. Then the screen goes black, and the title appears. When Kang suspects his young mistress, Hee-soo (Shin
A Bittersweet Life. It is not a warning. It is a eulogy—for a bulldog who dreamed, just once, of being a poet.
That is the thesis of Kim Jee-woon’s brutal, beautiful, and profoundly lonely neo-noir. A Bittersweet Life is not a gangster film about honor or redemption. It is a film about the terrible luxury of feeling something—and the price the modern world exacts for it.