Advertisement
Supported by
‘Unlocked’ Review: A Surveillance Thriller Best Left Offline
A woman experiences paranoia, loss and bodily danger after a serial killer hacks her phone.
- Unlocked
- Directed by Tae-joon Kim
- Crime, Drama, Mystery, Thriller
- 1h 57m
When you purchase a ticket for an independently reviewed film through our site, we earn an affiliate commission.
In the sleepy cyberthriller “Unlocked,” Na-mi (Chun Woo-hee) forgets her phone on the bus after a night of revelry. It’s discovered by Jun-yeong (Yim Si-wan), who returns it to her — and who turns out to be a methodical serial killer. He’s bent on using the personal device to isolate Na-mi: first by kidnapping her doting father, then by destroying her promising marketing job, and finally by breaking the bond she shares with her best friend.
It’s not a particularly difficult task: He runs a phone repair shop, where he has hacked the device to observe texts and notifications, overhear calls and even access the camera. When Na-mi uses the phone’s selfie mode, it acts, in a sense, as a point-of-view shot. The director Kim Tae-joon and the cinematographer Yong-seong Kim smartly subvert the empathy such a composition provokes by leaning into the dread of unknowingly being watched.
The film, unfortunately, struggles to build on that aesthetic choice. Na-mi’s sole personality trait is her tendency to trust too much — a characterization that could work for a short-lived victim but that evaporates in a protagonist. Jun-yeong’s father (Kim Hee-won), a detective ridden with guilt over his seven-year estrangement from his son, is weakly drawn, too. The detective desperately wants to catch Jun-yeong before he kills again, but a last-second twist undermines the arc’s pathos.
“Unlocked” moves at a glacial pace. Jun-yeong is too apathetic, too quiet to keep a viewer enthralled for the entire film. In a cinematic landscape where the anxiety of surveillance has been sufficiently explored — with movies like “The Conversation,” “Enemy of the State” and “Kimi” — this simplistically dreary offering doesn’t crack a new code.
Unlocked
Not rated. In Korean, with subtitles. Running time: 1 hour 57 minutes. Watch on Netflix.
Explore More in TV and Movies
Not sure what to watch next? We can help.
Mikey Madison Breaks Out of Her Shell: The soft-spoken actress is winning raves (and Oscar talk) for her turn as a tough-as-nails sex worker in the Palme d’Or-winning film “Anora.”
The Many Versions of Hugh Grant: The seemingly droll, breezy star is actually sentimental about his family and utterly serious about his work, including his villainous turn in “Heretic.”
Playing Blandness With Intensity: As an “energy vampire,” the actor Mark Proksch has been the most relatable menace in the FX comedy “What We Do in the Shadows,” which begins its final season.
Streaming Guides: If you are overwhelmed by the endless options, don’t despair — we put together the best offerings on Netflix, Max, Disney+, Amazon Prime and Hulu to make choosing your next binge a little easier.
Watching Newsletter: Sign up to get recommendations on the best films and TV shows to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox.
Advertisement