Acclaimed filmmaker Park Chan-wook has returned with a vengeance — and a laugh — in No Other Choice, a darkly comedic social thriller that confronts South Korea’s modern anxieties about job insecurity and moral decay.
The film, which premiered to critical acclaim at the Venice International Film Festival, has been officially selected as South Korea’s official submission for the 98th Academy Awards in the Best International Feature Film category.
The story centers on You Man-su (Lee Byung Hun), a middle-aged factory worker who suddenly finds himself unemployed after decades of loyal service. Facing mounting debt, a crumbling sense of dignity and an unforgiving job market, Man-su’s desperation takes a sinister turn when he decides to eliminate the only thing standing between him and a new position — his competitors. What begins as an absurd plan for self-preservation unravels into a biting satire on ambition, capitalism and the illusion of “choice” in a world dictated by power and profit.
True to Park’s style, No Other Choice is visually immaculate and psychologically unrelenting. The film oscillates between bleak realism and absurdist humor, its tone shifting as unpredictably as its protagonist’s moral compass. Park frames sterile corporate offices and fluorescent factories with chilling precision, turning ordinary spaces into battlegrounds of quiet despair. The result is a film that feels both deeply Korean and universally resonant: a mirror of a generation struggling to survive under the weight of economic systems that demand constant reinvention or extinction.
Critics have praised Park’s deft command of tone and Byung Hun’s haunting performance. Lee captures Man-su’s slow unraveling with remarkable restraint, embodying a man whose rage simmers just beneath a polite smile. Supporting performances, particularly by Kim Hye Soo as his weary wife and Yoo Jae Myung as a fellow jobseeker turned rival, lend the film emotional depth that balances its dark humor.
Yet, No Other Choice is not without risk.
The movie shifts from tragic to comic and from violent to absurd, challenging audiences expecting a traditional thriller. But the movie’s unpredictability is what makes Park’s storytelling so singular. He refuses to let viewers settle comfortably into one moral position. By the time the final scene fades, we are left not with catharsis but with a chilling question: when survival is at stake, how many of us would make a different choice?
For Park, No Other Choice extends his legacy of pushing cinematic boundaries. He is known internationally for Oldboy (2003), The Handmaiden (2016) and Decision to Leave (2022). Park has long been celebrated for his meticulous visuals and moral complexity. But with No Other Choice, he trades operatic vengeance for something quieter but no less violent — the slow erosion of human conscience under social pressure.
In selecting No Other Choice as its official Oscar submission, the Korean Film Council praised the film’s “bold direction and piercing social commentary.” The decision signals South Korea’s continued momentum in global cinema following Bong Joon Ho’s Parasite triumph in 2020. Whether Park’s latest work will secure the country another golden statuette remains to be seen, but one thing is certain: No Other Choice cements Park Chan-wook’s position as one of the most fearless storytellers in contemporary world cinema.