— Written by: Stephe Thornton, media blog Managing Editor, Cloud USA Co-Founder

Firstly, I’d like to give heartfelt thanks to CJ Entertainment America for inviting Cloud USA to the special preview press screening of R2B: Return to Base at the CGV Cinemas in Los Angeles, back on August 22.
Receiving the invitation and being represented there was an honor for us. CJ’s diligence in promoting R2B to North American movie-goers has been and continues to be a pleasant surprise that we’ll always appreciate and never forget.
Back in the summer, while R2B fan promotions in Asia were going like gangbusters, all fans could do on this side of the ocean was watch the festivities from afar, and wish, until lo and behold, CJE America came to the rescue with news, social media, and communication about the movie. North American fans even participated in contests and won prizes. What a magical time. Thank you, CJ.

Secondly, I’d like to thank our AMC Theater in the suburb of Lawrenceville for being a venue not only for R2B, but for all of the Korean movies that CJ produces and sends to the States. General manager Kjel Nore and staff are always helpful and gracious, and it’s really nice having a set place to marinate in the many facets of Korean culture in film.
As a novelist and longtime fiction focus group member, I’m led to critique movies just as I would any manuscript or screenplay. So let’s get started.

Opening Setup
Excellent. Talk about getting right into the action and the meat of the problem—talented pilot TaeHoon’s (Jung JiHoon, a.k.a. Rain) dangerous, cocky ways in the cockpit of a fighter jet. You weren’t even five minutes into the story when he was unceremoniously dumped from the prestigious Black Eagles aerobatic team and shipped off to a combat squad. His crime: performing (gleefully) a banned maneuver that could very well have killed him or someone attending the air show.
The aerial sequences here and throughout the film were breathtaking, and reminded me a lot of how Director Shin SangOk’s original Red Muffler/Red Scarf (1964) opened up as well, with a batch of rookie jet fighter pilots winging their way to their new squadron, and rebellious pilot TaeBong getting his butt scorched by the boss for dangerously breaking the rules before fifteen minutes had passed. R2B’s opening did exactly what it was supposed to do – establish the main character’s extraordinary flying skill, his defining flaw, what he responded to, and how he related to the team mates around him.
Characterization
Houston, we have a problem. As an ensemble film like Red Muffler before it, R2B has a cast of actors who are all well established in the industry and more than capable of making their characters stand out. As far as I’m concerned, they did just that with the limited airtime they each had. In addition to our rebellious maverick captain, I had a beloved single dad, a proactive pilot with her heart on her sleeve, an officer who carried tragic guilt into every flight, a mechanic denied her heart’s desire by fate, and an orphaned rookie searching for somewhere meaningful to belong. We knew why these soldiers acted the way they did, and I cared for them. Unfortunately, they also made the one problem I had with this movie quite glaring.
Low-altitude expert Captain TaeHoon (Rain) is a caring individual who looks out for those who can’t look out for themselves, but he also has an off-switch that makes him incredibly dangerous, the loosest of loose cannons, an impulsive “child” who stares death in the face as if it were ham and cheese and he was making a sandwich. And yet we never find out what made him that way.


Pilots naturally are thrill seekers, but TaeHoon is a special breed of daredevil whose actions speak volumes about a deep-seeded issue we’re never introduced to. The picture in his room of him and his grandmother at his graduation, and their one phone call, tells us he is her pride and joy and that he loves her dearly. And that she doesn’t care for jet fighters. That is all we get. Something is driving him to be the best, to be the troublemaker, to take risks that other pilots don’t. Or, he simply could have been born that way, but darned if we’re told one way or the other.
To Rain’s credit, he has the acting chops to make you care about TaeHoon regardless. He made his character change and grow beautifully during his story arc, and the transformation endeared TaeHoon that much more to you. How much more powerful would it have been, knowing where the guy was mentally coming from?
Because of the many scenes that we saw in released clips and production stills but that didn’t make it into the movie, I’ve a sneaking suspicion that TaeHoon’s past characterization might have ended up on the cutting room floor. I could be wrong. I sincerely hope I’m not.
Plot
Fun and exciting. Take a talented but unpredictable pilot and his team, stir in how his presence affects the lives of the soldiers around him, add what happens when he finds someone who changes his perspective, throw in a dash of comedy, a pinch of tragedy, a dollop of danger and suspense from a dangerous rogue regime, cover it all with a seven-minute mission to save his country and the world from all-out war, and bake for just under two hours. There you go.
I attended several showings to gauge movie-goers reactions, and because I enjoyed the movie and wanted to see it again. The audience always laughed at the comedic parts, seemed properly somber during the tragic parts, stayed on the ride until the very end and had good things to say afterwards.

Tension
Good and plenty. The general tension, of course, came from the North Korean threat. The local tension came anytime TaeHoon took his F-15 up in the air. You wanted to watch him because he was so good, but you were afraid to watch him because there was no telling what mayhem he might cause. Supplemental tension came from the everyday life – will YuJin accept DaeSeo’s proposal? Would SeokHyun pass out during another practice run? When are TaeHoon and the Major finally going to come to blows? Which will come first – TaeHoon finally getting a date, or being thrown in the brig on charges?

The confrontation in the skies over Seoul, with the MiG chasing the Major and Rain’s character chasing the MiG in a wounded plane, was insane goodness. The final mission, from start to finish, had me on the edge of my seat because in Korean film, it is my experience that you seldom get the ending you expect or want. It is a total crap shoot where, a lot of the time, main characters go the way of Redshirts on classic Star Trek – they do not make it.
Point of View
Great. Everyone did and said what you would expect them to, without wandering out of character. The scenes got straight to the point with nothing extraneous in them and then moved on, unlike most Hollywood fare that, in my opinion, contains scads of filler. If scenes felt abrupt to some, it’s simply what I call nice, tight writing without anything unnecessary bogging it down – normal Korean fare. They get in, and they get out. (Hollywood could learn a thing or two about that.) The few times I felt an odd transition was, as I said before, probably from something being left on the cutting room floor, I’ll bet.
A really nice touch: Picture this if you will… At the beginning of the film, TaeHoon lights a cigarette and takes a drag as SeYoung flies through the sky in her glider. He then immediately tosses the cigarette to the ground and goes after her on his motorcycle. Further into the film, the rogue regime leader lights a cigar and takes a drag as a missile flies through the sky and assassinates his boss in a helicopter. He then immediately tosses the cigar to the ground and walks into his HQ to continue his coup. It was like the point in both characters’ lives when they began, in a similar way, to walk the path that would not be reversed. Well done, Director Kim.

Another nice touch was how a theme of mechanical birds and real birds came together and overlapped occasionally. For instance, two comedic characters were being disciplined while two F-15s circled lazily in the air some distance away – a very cool shot. And the Flying V that kept SeYoung’s glider company on her date with TaeHoon. It reminded me that though the planes weren’t flesh-and-blood alive, the people inside them certainly were.
Random Points
Kisses on the cutting room floor. When Shin SeKyung revealed in an interview that her two kissing scenes with Rain would most likely be taken out of the film, a collective sigh of frustration was heard from Rain’s fans around the world. (Yes, that would be me as well. Terri too, but she won’t admit it.) I must say, however, that this one…

…did indeed need to be cut out, as enjoyable as it would have been to watch. “SeYoung” definitely was not ready for that at that point in the relationship. No way. It would have felt gratuitous and unnatural. The director’s final cut actually advanced their characterization, was perfectly cute and funny, and gave me and the audience a great laugh.
When it comes to this one…

…it should have stayed in the movie. Several scenes earlier, it was obvious that they were both ready for that one and deserved it.
Necessary time off the tarmac. What we did see of the pilots’ personal lives was needed. These people knew they were living on borrowed time and it was necessary to know what was most important to them, the things that kept the pilots going. Without that, you can’t identify, celebrate, or mourn with them and the movie turns into a documentary.

Rebel pilot TaeBong and the object of his affection, JeeSun, in 1964.
Red Muffler wasn’t only about the missions, but about the pilots’ lives, loves, and deaths, and so R2B tried to do the same. I really wish the R2B bar scenes hadn’t ended up cut out, because that’s where everybody congregated in Red Muffler, and some of the best character-building came straight from there – in the bar.
Not much face time. Film Red Muffler was made during a dangerous time, early in the armistice after the Korean War, and during his career, the outspoken Director Shin had his share of tangles with the authorities in the North and the South. Just as he kept the Northern enemy nebulous for the most part (very little face time, running figures seen from afar), Director Kim seems to follow the same tact with R2B, and that’s probably a good thing. In real life, the North and South are still technically at war, and the North isn’t exactly spreading the love right now. A documentary is one thing, but I know I wouldn’t want to release a film for entertainment and end up responsible for renewed aggressions.
Something like that sounds glorious on paper and in the annals of history, but in reality… not.
Bottom Line
R2B: Return to Base, a glimpse into the lives of fictional R.O.K. Air Force pilots, was worth my money. Wherever you are in the world, when it comes to your town, go see it. When the DVD hits, go buy it. The to-die-for aerials and dogfights are must-see, and the drama on the ground flavors the soup. It’s a big ball of entertainment that should not be being compared to Hollywood’s Top Gun (just as fifty years ago Red Muffler couldn’t escape being compared to U.S.-made The Bridges at Toko-Ri).
This Korean-made nod to Red Muffler, in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Korean War, was simply to give Korean movie-goers something they didn’t have – a contemporary fighter pilot movie of their own. That’s it. That’s ALL. Its purpose was to entertain, and unless you’re unbelievably jaded or expecting something the movie never claimed to be, it does.
— Stephe @cloudusa.wordpress.com ^@@^ / CloudUSA.org

Posted in Bi Rain, Bi Rain movie, Bi Rain News, Bi Rain R2B: 리턴투베이스, Bi Rain R2B: Return To Base, Cloud USA, 비상 [飛上]: 태양가까이 (Soar: Into The Sun), Jung Ji Hoon, Korean Entertainment, Korean Entertainment in the USA, Rain Topics, Red Muffler/비상 [飛上]: 태양가까이
Tags: actor Rain, Bi Rain movie, Bi Rain R2B: 리턴투베이스, Bi Rain the reel deal, Cloud USA, Cloud USA original article, Jung Ji Hoon, Movie Review: R2B: Return to Base, Movie Review: Soar Into The Sun, R2B: Return To Base, rain bi, Red Muffler/비상 [飛上]: 태양가까이
[#10] From Stephe’s desk: My fantasy Rain playlist for the U.S. continued.
•December 12, 2012 • 22 CommentsNope, still not done yet. No no no.
When I’m rolling in my Infinity Hyundai and listening to my very favorite songs, these are the sounds from my playlist—whether he were to do an occasional cover or match the vibe—that I think would have Rain lighting up our airwaves like a Christmas tree. (JiHoon, are you listening?)
What’s on your fantasy Rain playlist, dear fans? Why?
» Numbers 42 through 47 on my fantasy Rain playlist are HERE.
— Stephe @CloudUSA.org ^@@^
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#48. Earth Song – Michael Jackson. Courtesy of michaeljacksonVEVO@YT) Let me explain. You need a strong visual platform now, especially for those folks who have yet to notice how dedicated a philanthropist you are and always have been. You’ve already thrown your hat into several arenas—human trafficking, water conservation, child welfare, and disaster relief, just to name a few, so it’s not that you need to find a cause, just be more vocal about the ones you have. Know what I mean?
#49. You Are My Life – Michael Jackson. (Courtesy of prettyliberiangirl @YT) Don’t have to explain this one, I’ll bet. Mmmm.
#50. Smile – Nat King Cole (Courtesy of lvcatable @YT) Get your croon-on, son. Here are two of your favorites together—singer Nat King Cole and actor Charlie Chaplin.
#51. The Christmas Song – Nat King Cole. (Courtesy of deenclassic @YT) Ho, ho, ho. Oooooh, yes.
#52. Baby, It’s Cold Outside – Vanessa Williams and Bobby Caldwell. (Courtesy of GregWn @YT) Grab the female artist of your choice (or heck, get Vanessa!), and let it “do what it do”, JiHoon! 🙂
#53. Please Come Home For Christmas – Eagles. (Courtesy of cornbreadobrien @YT) If not for Christmas, by New Year’s night…
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The proof, as they say, is in the pudding: Rain singing a small sample of “White Christmas” on Music Bank in 2003. I know there was a medley going on, but they should have let him sing the whole song. I do not know what they were thinking! (courtesy of manloverain8)
Not to mention, if the man can sound like THIS live on the radio with a head cold, you know doggone well he can croon you into a stupor. Bet! (from July 2012, courtesy of ratoka)
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Posted in Bi Rain, Cloud USA, Jung Ji Hoon, Rain Topics
Tags: bi rain fan cams, bi rain fan vids, Bi Rain military radio DJ, Bi Rain R&B, Bi Rain song, Bi Rain Speeding Instinct, Christmas holiday songs, Cloud commentary, fantasy Bi Rain playlist, Jung Ji Hoon, Korean pop, rain bi, Rain Christmas, The BEST Rain 2011 Asia Tour