Sunday, January 25, 2026

“No Other Choice” is a potent cocktail with equal parts smart, funny and cruel

What do you do when you lose your job and you can’t get a new one? You eliminate the competition, of course.

By murdering them.

If the premise for “No Other Choice” sounds ridiculous, that’s because it is. But that’s what’s so fun about Park Chan-wook’s dark comedy. You find yourself cheering on Yoo Man-su (Lee Byung-hun) as the film’s murderously endearing hero — an unlikely killer who waffles his way through a twice-baked plan hatched to restore his employment.

And why not? Man-su has worked at Solar Paper for 25 years. It’s provided him with enough income to buy his childhood home (complete with a greenhouse), serve his family eel and keep his wife in tennis lessons and dance class. He is even able to provide expensive cello lessons for his daughter.

Man-su is so joyous and sure of his place in the world that in the opening scene he gathers his family in a gleeful hug and proclaims, “I’ve got it all.”

It all goes downhill from there.

Man-su gets laid off, and after 13 months of dead ends, they have to sell their house, re-home their dogs and (gasp) cancel Netflix. 

Our hero decides that he has to do something drastic to get a new job; he must kill off the candidates who are better-qualified than he is to better his chances of employment. He has “no other choice.”

This film is poignant and timely, dabbling in themes relating to AI and capitalism, in a world where everyone is replaceable. You’ll also pick up themes relating to male vulnerability, violence against the environment, and the urge to stick with old traditions, whether they make sense or not.

As Man-su struggles to find meaning and purpose in a life that has replaced him with a robot, he clings to his plan…a deliciously dark adventure that makes no promises. Overall, “No Other Choice” is a cruel, capricious caper laced with laughs and chilling insights.

Movie Times: Click here

Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama, Thriller

Director: Park Chan-wook

Actors: Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-Jin, Park Hee-soon, Lee Sung-min, Yeom Hye-ran

Running Time: 2 hours 19 minutes

Rating: R



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Christine Van Tuyl
Christine Van Tuyl
Christine has been writing and telling stories since she could hold a crayon. She started working for The Coronado Times in 2020 just a few weeks before the global pandemic, and it’s only gotten more exciting! She graduated from UCSD with a degree in Communications and earned her Masters in Journalism from Harvard in May 2024. She has worked as a news writer for KUSI-TV, a reporter for the San Diego Community News Group and as an editor for Greenhaven Press. In Coronado, she writes for Crown City Magazine, in addition to reporting for The Coronado Times, where she covers education, social justice, health and fitness, travel and the arts. She loves a good human interest story and writing anything about animals. When she’s not working, you’ll find her at home with her husband, two teenage girls and English Bulldog, at the barn with her horse, or headed far away on a new travel adventure. You’ll also spot her at yoga, running along the Bay, walking dogs at PAWS or eating a burrito. Christine loves living in Coronado and always finds something to write about in this dynamic, exciting little town.

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