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Review | Netflix movie review: My Name is Loh Kiwan – Song Joong-ki plays a North Korean defector in Belgium-set drama that is more a schmaltzy romance

  • The movie follows a North Korean asylum seeker – played by heartthrob Song Joong-ki – fall in with a woman embroiled in Belgium’s criminal underworld
  • Director Kim Hee-jin seems overly keen to sidestep the defector’s legal minefield in favour of a schmaltzy romance, where the forces of attraction are weak

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Korean heartthrob Song Joong-ki in still from Netflix’s My Name is Loh Kiwan, directed by Kim Hee-jin and co-starring Choi Sung-eun. Photo: Jung Jae-gu/Netflix

2/5 stars

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A North Korean defector seeking asylum in Belgium falls in with a wayward young woman who is embroiled in the city’s criminal underworld in My Name is Loh Kiwan, the first feature film from writer-director Kim Hee-jin.

The presence of superstar heartthrob Song Joong-ki in the title role will almost certainly guarantee a strong debut for Kim’s chilly Europe-set drama, where it soon becomes apparent that romance is the order of the day, rather than any meaningful political commentary.

Sidestepping the details of his daring defection entirely, My Name is Loh Kiwan picks up the action as our eponymous protagonist arrives in Brussels on a flight from China, where he finds himself in immigration limbo while his application for refugee status is being processed.

Left to fend for himself on the wintry streets of the Belgian capital, Kiwan falls foul of a number of random ne’er-do-wells, and is eventually mugged.

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Losing the only thing he holds dear – a battered wallet containing some money and his only photograph of his dead mother – Kiwan turns to the police, where CCTV footage reveals the culprit to be another Korean, Marie (Choi Sung-eun), a former Olympic markswoman turned drug addict.

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