Technology

No Other Choice director Park Chan-wook and star Lee Byung-hun discuss reuniting after 20 years for their new black comedy thriller about a murderous job-hunter: "As the actor playing Man-su, I was always on his side cheering him on"

2026-01-23 16:41
862 views
No Other Choice director Park Chan-wook and star Lee Byung-hun discuss reuniting after 20 years for their new black comedy thriller about a murderous job-hunter: "As the actor playing Man-su, I was always on his side cheering him on"

Big Screen Spotlight | Park Chan-wook and Lee Byung-hun tell us about their twisted, darkly funny new thriller, No Other Choice

  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies
  3. Thriller Movies
No Other Choice director Park Chan-wook and star Lee Byung-hun discuss reuniting after 20 years for their new black comedy thriller about a murderous job-hunter: "As the actor playing Man-su, I was always on his side cheering him on" Features By Molly Edwards published 23 January 2026

Big Screen Spotlight | Park Chan-wook and Lee Byung-hun tell us about their twisted, darkly funny new thriller, No Other Choice

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Lee Byung-hun as Man-su in No Other Choice (Image credit: MUBI) Share Share by:
  • Copy link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google

Yoo Man-su has it all. A loving family, two adorable dogs, ownership of his beautiful home, and a career of 25 years that he takes great pride in.

But, in Oldboy director Park Chan-wook's latest black comedy thriller No Other Choice, it only takes a few seconds to rip it all away. Man-su's beloved career evaporates when the new American owners of his paper factory lay him off. After an attempt to break back into the industry falls excruciatingly flat when a nervy Man-su bombs an interview, he decides his only path forward is to stage a fake job opening for a paper company, then kill off the competition one by one. Easy, right?

Well, wrong. Man-su quickly discovers murder is not an easy task – not just morally, but logistically, too – and his madcap quest to return to the paper industry at all costs sets him on a path that threatens to obliterate him and his family.

You may like
  • Tim Robinson as Ron Trosper, making a toast Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV
  • Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning as Gustav and Rachel in Sentimental Value Elle Fanning and Stellan Skarsgård discuss unlikely friendships and avoiding cliche in Sentimental Value
  • David Jonsson, Cooper Hoffman, Ben Wang, and Tut Nyuot in The Long Walk The Long Walk is one of the best Stephen King adaptations of all time – and the saddest movie of 2025

Sympathy for the devil

Lee Byung-hun as Man-su in No Other Choice

(Image credit: MUBI)

No Other Choice is arriving decades into director Park's career, but the legendary filmmaker – the mind behind instant classics like The Handmaiden, the Vengeance Trilogy, and Decision to Leave – has had his sights set on an adaptation of Donald Westlake's The Ax for almost as long.

"It's been 20 years since I first read the novel and decided that I wanted to adapt it, but I have actually been doing the work of the adaptation for around 16 years," director Park tells us when we meet with him and star Lee Byung-hun at London Film Festival. "And, I initially wanted it to be an English-language film in accordance with the original novel, but none of the studios offered the level of budget that I wanted for the project. And that's when I thought to myself, 'Why can't I just make this into a Korean film?' And ever since that thought occurred to me, everything has very quickly developed, and, after that, I've been able to cast amazing actors like Lee Byung-hun."

Lee, who is perhaps most recognizable as Squid Game's villainous Front Man, stars as the hapless Man-su. This ostensible family man starts out flawed but sympathetic, floundering at the thought of losing his home, but aghast at the concept of downsizing to an apartment. Luckily, Man-su's wife, Son Ye-jin's Miri, proves more pragmatic. She makes the difficult decision to temporarily rehome their dogs – to the agony of their youngest daughter – and even cancels Netflix, to the disdain of their son. Just like Man-su can't comprehend finding work outside of the paper industry, he also can't comprehend any significant lifestyle changes. He even struggles with Miri working as a dental assistant, increasingly paranoid that she might be having an affair with her boss, and convinced that, as the man of the house, it's his job to provide for his family.

Big Screen Spotlight

Shining a light on the under-the-radar theatrical releases that you need to know about, with a new article every Friday

Man-su's murderous scheming does even more to fracture this already fragile family, however, as his escapades take him away from the loved ones that need him in pursuit of a goal we're always painfully aware is absurd. Despite this, the film accomplishes a fine balancing act of making Man-su sympathetic, even though he has much in common with his victims – who themselves are former paper workers who have fallen on hard times – and is obliviously turning the ruthless competition of job-hunting under capitalism into a literal bloodbath.

Sign up for the Total Film NewsletterContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

"One characteristic of this story is that when you're typically eliminating and murdering somebody in the film, the audience follows the emotions of the protagonists," Lee tells us. "There are strong themes of revenge in those types of stories, so the audience is typically cheering on the protagonist, supporting them, really wishing that they'll get rid of and eradicate this other person.

"However, here in this film, Man-su is eliminating people that he has no prior relationship with. In fact, when he closely observes them and gets to know them, he even empathizes with them and has a lot of sympathy with them, which makes it really harder for him to act upon and execute his plans following his decision," he explains. "So, the audience could be following Man-su, cheering him on, and then all of a sudden depart from him, and just observe him from far away at a distance, which is quite an unusual, odd experience for the audience. So, then they can go back to him and then resonate and sympathize with him, and then again, jump out and observe him from further away. And the film is a repetition of that. However, for me as the actor playing Man-su, I was always on his side cheering him on."

Make 'em laugh

Lee Byung-hun as Man-su in No Other Choice

(Image credit: MUBI)

On paper, No Other Choice might sound like a deeply serious thriller, then. But, like many of director Park's films, pitch-black humor abounds – some critics have even compared Man-su's antics to Looney Tunes. While Lee is indeed giving a physically comical performance, he never viewed his role as slapstick.

You may like
  • Tim Robinson as Ron Trosper, making a toast Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV
  • Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning as Gustav and Rachel in Sentimental Value Elle Fanning and Stellan Skarsgård discuss unlikely friendships and avoiding cliche in Sentimental Value
  • David Jonsson, Cooper Hoffman, Ben Wang, and Tut Nyuot in The Long Walk The Long Walk is one of the best Stephen King adaptations of all time – and the saddest movie of 2025

"For me, honestly, Man-su is an ordinary man facing an extreme situation, leading him to make very extreme decisions as well," Lee tells us. "And in this process of acting upon his extreme decisions, he undergoes many changes psychologically and emotionally, ultimately leading up to his self-destructive situation. So, during this journey, for me, I gave my total focus on all the changes in his emotions that he goes through, and that was what I put my most thought and efforts into.

"And, even after I'd finished the film, I never considered that I was doing slapstick comedy in any way," he continues. "When we went to Venice and Toronto, and various journalists and critics were reviewing it as such, I was like, 'Okay, yeah, I can see why that would appear as being a slapstick comedy.' When you look at the protagonist closely, he's actually in a very desperate situation, falling on hard times. However, if you span out… I can see why it will look funny. And I think that's really the appeal of this film."

Last week's...

The poster for The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring with a close-up of Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins

(Image credit: New Line Cinema)

25 years later, I'm still convinced The Lord of the Rings trilogy is the greatest film adaptation we'll ever see

Lee's performance is an effortless, tonally perfect fit for this hilarious dark satire, so it might not come as a surprise to discover that this is not his and director Park's first collaboration. The duo first worked together on 2000's Joint Security Area, a poignant procedural in which Lee plays a South Korean soldier who befriends two guards on the opposite side of the Demilitarized Zone, and again on the short film Cut, part of the horror anthology Three… Extremes, which stars Lee as a successful film director who endures a nightmarish evening at the violent mercy of one of his extras.

"I guess if you look at it in terms of years that have passed in our careers, it has been many years since we've worked together," Park says. "But over those years, we've always stayed friends and caught up quite often. So, it didn't feel that long to me. In fact, I was surprised to find out that it's been so long since we'd last worked together, so it didn't feel like a lot of time had passed at all."

With No Other Choice receiving near-universal critical acclaim, here's hoping another collaboration comes sooner rather than later.

No Other Choice is in US theaters now and UK cinemas from January 23. For more on what to watch, check out the rest of our Big Screen Spotlight series.

TOPICS Big Screen Spotlight Molly EdwardsMolly EdwardsSocial Links NavigationDeputy Entertainment Editor

I'm the Deputy Entertainment Editor here at GamesRadar+, covering all things film and TV for the site's Total Film and SFX sections. I previously worked on the Disney magazines team at Immediate Media, and also wrote on the CBeebies, MEGA!, and Star Wars Galaxy titles after graduating with a BA in English.

Show More Comments

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

Logout Read more Tim Robinson as Ron Trosper, making a toast Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV    Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning as Gustav and Rachel in Sentimental Value Elle Fanning and Stellan Skarsgård discuss unlikely friendships and avoiding cliche in Sentimental Value    David Jonsson, Cooper Hoffman, Ben Wang, and Tut Nyuot in The Long Walk The Long Walk is one of the best Stephen King adaptations of all time – and the saddest movie of 2025    Harry Melling and Alexander Skarsgård as Colin and Ray in Pillion Leave your expectations for Alexander Skarsgård's new movie Pillion at the door: it's steamy and sexy, but it's so much more than a rom-com    Emma Stone as Michelle in Bugonia Poor Things director's new movie Bugonia is a madcap sci-fi dark comedy that features Emma Stone's best performance    Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi as Dek in Predator: Badlands Predator: Badlands stars praise director Dan Trachtenberg for "adding heart" to the sci-fi horror franchise and encouraging "play" on set: "Whenever there was an ad-lib, he had to learn it in Yautja"    Latest in Thriller Movies Ice Cube in War of the Worlds War of the Worlds dominates nominations for anti-Oscars the Razzies, though we're not super surprised given its 4% Rotten Tomatoes score    Chris Hemsworth in Crime 101 Chris Hemsworth looks criminally good in the new Crime 101 trailer    Sydney Sweeney as Millie in The Housemaid Sydney Sweeney's new thriller The Housemaid gets a sequel after the surprise hit made $133 million at the box office    Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in The Rip Ben Affleck and Matt Damon can't tell friend from foe in the trailer for Netflix's upcoming thriller The Rip    Disclosure Day The truth is (almost) out there for Emily Blunt and Josh O'Connor in gripping first trailer for Stephen Spielberg's UFO thriller    Rian Johnson at the Poker Face season 2 premiere Rian Johnson has his dream pick cast member for his next Knives Out Mystery    Latest in Features Lee Byung-hun as Man-su in No Other Choice No Other Choice's Park Chan-wook and Lee Byung-hun discuss reuniting after 20 years for their new black comedy thriller    Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Simon Williams talking with Ben Kingsley as Trevor Slattery in Wonder Man. The Marvel movies you've got to watch before tuning into Disney Plus show Wonder Man    Fortnite South Park The Fortnite x South Park collab has me yearning for a canceled GTA-inspired game from 2005    Halo: Combat Evoled screenshot showing a grunt running away from an explosion in the sand The head of Xbox Game Studios on Developer Direct reveals, multiplatform strategy, and hard lessons learned from 2025    Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob in One Battle After Another Oscars 2026 predictions: who will win Best Picture, Best Director, and the major acting awards?    Yerin Ha as Sophie Baek in season 4 of Bridgerton. New on Netflix in February 2026: all the latest movies and shows streaming this month    GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS