(originally titled ) is a 2004 Thai melodrama directed by Ong-Art Singlumpong
When we look back at South Korean cinema from the early 2000s, we often think of high-octane thrillers or sweeping historical epics. However, the 2004 release The Sin (IMDb title: Sin-bu-il-gi) took a much more intimate, provocative route. the sin 2004 imdb
The film is set in a gloomy, industrial corner of the Basque Country, a setting that acts almost as a character itself. The story follows Ismael (played with heartbreaking vulnerability by Manuel Manquiña), a middle-aged, intellectually disabled man who lives a solitary but routine life working at a landfill and caring for his elderly mother. (originally titled ) is a 2004 Thai melodrama
A young man returns to his coastal home in southern Thailand after a ten-year absence. The Encounter: A young man returns to his coastal home
Directed by Michael Hurst, this 2004 crime-thriller flies under the radar for most, overshadowed by the big-budget blockbusters of that year. But for fans of the genre, it offers a specific kind of low-budget, high-tension charm that defines the era.
The film’s climax is deliberately ambiguous. Viewers are left to wonder if the monster Michael faces is a literal demon or a manifestation of his own repressed violent urges. The tagline on the original DVD release read: "Confession won't save you. Absolution is a lie."