

Nonetheless, the subordinates release the video of the coaching to prove Choi's connection with Jang, and what is more, they order Jang's henchman to ambush Choi at a charnel house and murder him in revenge.
Ironically, DNA testing finally succeeds on the body of one of the girls mentioned earlier, and Lee is proved as the real attacker all along. As Choi receives his promotion and the lieutenant's family mourns, Choi's subordinates become suspicious and privately capture another one of Jang's henchmen, who served as Jang's videographer and who recorded Jang's death and the ensuing fight. During the struggle, Choi accidentally kills his lieutenant, and afterward stabs the dead body with a knife, so that the police will assume that Jang's assistant and the lieutenant killed each other. However, this incident is seen by Choi's lieutenant, who wrestles with Choi and tries to stop him. Choi reacts by murdering Jang using a rigged elevator, and pretends to make peace with Jang's assistant before murdering him as well. Meanwhile, Jang, who is tired of being black-mailed by Choi, has saved recordings of Lee's coaching session, and black-mails Choi in return. Choi, in response, pleads with Joo not to dismantle his career, and the two agree on a truce. This makes Joo furious and he investigates Choi, with the help of a corrupt journalist, finding evidence of his and Jang's partnership. In response, Jang sends the earlier henchman to suffer arrest and murder Lee from within the jail. At the police station, Lee is denied immunity to the death penalty, and as such, reneges on the deal and tells Joo the truth. The photographs are mailed to Joo to ensure that Jang will never be prosecuted. At the same time Jang takes photographs of Kim and Joo playing golf, and has a henchman approach Kim and murder him. Meanwhile, a corrupt prosecutor named Joo cancels the criminal charges, brought about by an investigation lead by Choi, against a corrupt businessman named Kim, who is also Jang's rival in a bid for a construction deal.Ĭhoi searches through several profiles of rapists, and having settled upon Lee, a school-bus driver, he enlists Jang and his henchmen to kid-nap Lee and coach him in how the confession should be delivered. Choi, in return, is promised a promotion and the dismissal of an internal investigation against him, which was caused by his brother-in-law receiving money from Jang, a corrupt businessman. Under pressure from the Blue House, a senior police official assigns Choi, a police captain, on a highly sensitive mission, namely to find a former child rapist who can take the blame. This leads to bad publicity because the guilt of the suspect cannot be proved, and the real attacker may still be at large. PlotĪfter the rape and murder of 5 elementary schoolgirls, a crime which deeply upsets the entire country, a fleeing suspect is shot and killed by the police. Lead actors Hwang Jung-min and Ryoo Seung-bum previously worked together in Bloody Tie (2006). This is director Ryoo Seung-wan's fifth collaboration with his younger brother, actor Ryoo Seung-bum. It was a critical and commercial success, with 2.7 million admissions at the box office and winning several awards, including Best Film, Best Director and Best Screenplay at the 2011 Blue Dragon Film Awards.

It is a dark and bitter denunciation of corruption in the South Korean justice system. "Bad deal" or "Unfair trade") is a 2010 South Korean action crime film by Ryoo Seung-wan. Hwang Jung-min Ryoo Seung-bum Yoo Hae-jin Koo Bon-han Kim Yun-ho Ryoo Seung-wan Kang Hye-jung Han Jae-duk
