Mom’s an Assassin in the Delightful Korean Thriller Kill Boksoon

“Killing people is simple compared to raising a kid.”
Any mother will recognize the emotion with which veteran Korean actress Jeon Do-yeon delivers this line, playing ruthless assassin Gil Bok-soon. I may know nothing about the ability to mark an opponent’s neck with a felt-tip marker, but I am well-familiar with the exhaustion and constant gnawing in your mind, especially when you’re a single parent.
When the trailer first dropped for Kill Boksoon, as it was making waves at the 73 Berlin International Film Festival last month, I was immediately intrigued. After all, I had been watching Jeon’s popular K-drama Crash Course in Romance. In it, Jeon plays a former handball champion now running a banchan (side dishes in Korean cuisine) shop, and raising a teenager who is not her biological daughter. Unlike other parents, her character isn’t concerned about her adopted daughter’s grades, but her happiness.
Kickass thriller Kill Boksoon, then, provides a delightful irony. Here was another mom committed to providing a good life for her daughter—except she’s a deadly assassin. Just as Crash Course in Romance is wholesome, Kill Boksoon is a stylish and slick action film, featuring exhilarating fight sequences and cool camera angles to amp up the drama.
The plot keeps it simple. We meet Boksoon on the job. She’s been assigned to kill a Korean-born Japanese gangster. How will Boksoon match up to a yakuza? Admirably at first, but then using her wits. Turns out, she has a supermarket run to make.
The scene immediately transfers to the shopping aisles of a grocery store in a transition smooth as butter. And the plot just keeps building. There’s some level of story about Gil Boksoon being part of a company of gangsters with strict rules, and that a renewal of her work contract is coming up. She has to contend with both professional rivalry and the eyerolls and smart-alecky answers from her sassy daughter Gil Jae-yeong (Kim Si-a).
If this isn’t enough to complicate Boksoon’s life, there’s also the mom group to contend with—mothers of Jae-yeong’s classmates at a private school. Making small talk over a high tea set up, she describes her job as event planning when fielding questions about her personal life.