No Other Choice Review: Park Chan-wook's Unemployment Nightmare
★★★★½ 4.5/5
Dark, daring, and darkly funny.
Is No Other Choice good?
Yes — a 97 Critic Score, 86 Metascore, and 90 Audience Score all point to one of Park Chan-wook’s most accessible and audacious films in years. The director turns the anxiety of unemployment into pitch-black comedy, and Lee Byung-hun gleefully unravels as a company man who will stop at nothing to stay employed — a premise that sounds like satire and plays like a thriller with musical numbers. Son Ye-jin, Park Hee-soon, and Lee Sung-min round out a cast that clearly understands Park’s tonal tightrope: absurdity on the surface, desperation underneath, with the scores across every measure landing in rare agreement.
What is No Other Choice about?
A loyal company man is abruptly laid off after years at a paper company, and his desperation curdles into an escalating campaign to claw his way back into employment at any cost. As the stability he took for granted disintegrates, he starts treating the job hunt less like a search and more like a war, targeting rivals and cutting corners in ways that grow steadily more alarming. Park frames this unraveling through musical interludes that don’t function as escapist fantasy so much as glimpses into a mind coming apart under economic pressure.
Should you watch No Other Choice?
Absolutely — especially for viewers who already love Park Chan-wook’s genre-bending instincts or Lee Byung-hun’s ability to make menace look effortless. With a 90 Audience Score sitting alongside a 97 Critic Score and an 86 Metascore, the reception here is unusually consistent for a film this tonally strange, and Letterboxd (4.0) and IMDb (7.6) ratings back up that the enthusiasm extends well beyond critics into everyday audiences.
How does No Other Choice compare to Parasite?
No Other Choice shares Parasite’s fixation on class precarity and the quiet violence of economic humiliation, but trades that film’s slow-building dread for something more openly theatrical. Where Bong Joon-ho let the class satire simmer beneath a thriller’s surface, Park pushes the anxiety into full musical numbers, using song and spectacle to externalize what Parasite kept coiled and unspoken. Both films ultimately argue that the system leaves decent people with, as the title suggests, no other choice — but Park’s version is louder, stranger, and considerably more willing to make you laugh before it tightens the screws.