Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
While Italian crowd films The worlds, such as the “godfather”, do not have South Korean exhibitions or K-drames, is one series that brings these different cultures together. The 2021 Korean series “Vincenzo” follows Park Jo-Hyung (Song Joong-Ki), an adoption raised by the Italian Mafia crowd by the name Vincenzo Cassano. A crime drama with dark humor downstream, “Vincenzo”, is a standout with many of the many mob-inspired thrillers on television. However, the series is more than just distinguishing itself in an intercultural starting point, it is a firmly designed story that appeals to both K-drama and mob fans.
As the adopted son of a strong Italian mafioso, Vincenzo Cassano gets the envy of his adoptive brother Paolo (Salvatore Alfana). The series begins with Paolo taking a crowd after his father’s death and urged Vincenzo to flee to Seoul before Paolo killed him. When Vincenzo has adapted to life in Korea, it states that the local pharmaceutical company, Babel Group, is as malicious as his organized criminal outfits he encountered in Italy. Over time, when he wanted to restore the golden bull’s hidden warehouse from Babel’s now owned property, Vincenzo’s illegal past begins to catch him.
And certainly, at first glance, this installation looks pretty open and bond, but where “Vincenzo” Excels is in doing it.
Although Vincenzo is a man of a clear Korean heritage, he approaches the challenges he faces with the established mentality of the crowd in Seoul. This is reflected in how he analyzes a particular situation and strategies he uses to take his opponents both inside and outside the Babel group. While it gives a lot of charm to the series, things are not as clear as they look like, “vincenzo” contains some Best K-drama plot twists In recent memory. Without the detrimental thing, even the hardest buffs of crime movies do not see some of these curved balls, keeping them on their toes.
At a broader level, “Vincenzo” seamlessly mixes a lot of familiar tropes of Mafia movies with K-Drama to do something that is proud alone. The opposing presence of unscrupulous companies is common in K-drama, which weanes surprisingly naturally to the typical MOB film antagonists. That organic network makes an exhibition easily K-drama for newcomers to access Fantastic gate to Korean television. And, of course, all the familiar features of Crime-K dramas and mob stories are virtually the entire screen.
Contagious blend of crime types with unique Italian crowd, “Vincenzo” is a streaming as part of Netflix’s growing K-drama library.