A man who loses recollection of the previous night gets framed for killing his wife and struggles to retrieve his memories. (Source: IMDb) Edit Translation
- English
- Español
- Português (Brasil)
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- Native Title: 아내를 죽였다
- Also Known As: Anaeleul Jukyeottda , Anaereul Jukyessda , I Killed My Wife
- Genres: Thriller, Mystery
Where to Watch Killed My Wife
Free (sub)
Free (sub)
Cast & Credits
- Lee Si Eon Main Role
- Ahn Nae Sang Main Role
- Wang Ji HyeJung Mi YoungMain Role
- Jung Do HyunYoo Ji HoonSupport Role
- Seo Ji YoungKim So JinSupport Role
- Kim Ki DooGi DooSupport Role
Reviews
A thriller movie without any thrills.
I was excited to see Lee Si Eon finally take the lead role but unfortunately his promising acting skills couldn't cover up the horrid script-writing. "Killed My Wife" was slow-paced, boring and overall mediocre. Worst of all, the ending made me regret starting the movie. It was as if the writer couldn't be bothered to finish the script so they just threw in whatever idea they had into the ending scene. I wouldn't recommend this to anyone. If you're looking for a much better film with a similar concept, I highly suggest watching "The Vanished" insteadWas this review helpful to you?
This review may contain spoilers
Cheesy predictable thriller.....
Killed My Wife (Anaereul Jukyessda)” is a guilty, sinking suspicion, a question and in the end an answer to a mystery, cryptically served-up in a solid genre thriller that keeps you guessing, thanks at least in part to a bit of cheating on the part of the filmmakerJung-ho is bitterly convinced that “love needs money,” an idea he uses to justify his depressing gambling habit. Money, he believes, is the reason his wife (the gentle Wang Ji-hye) threw him out of the house. When Jung-ho lost his white collar job, he didn’t have the courage to tell her he had been fired and was scrounging for work as day laborer. Little did he guess what job she was forced to find to survive, and even when he does find out, it doesn’t seem to make much of an impression.
Only a bunch of gangsters running a gambling and massage business are raking it in. Our hero has borrowed money from the evil Mrs. Kim (Seo Ji-young), a sneering boss lady who threatens to cut off his hand Kim Ki-duk style if he doesn’t pay up. Her sadistic gloating seems more at home in a comic strip than a film, but the bitter final reveal about her — again, satisfyingly realistic — comes like an unexpected slap in the face of genre conventions.
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