Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Handsome Guys, on Delta

They might not look like it, but Kang Jae-pil and Park Sang-goo have cousins in West Virginia. Their names are Tucker and Dale, who once fought evil. Kang and Park are in for a similar bout of misunderstandings, but they must also battle a genuine demonic force in Nam Dong-hyup’s Handsome Guys, a Korean remake of Eli Craig’s Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, which is currently available on Delta’s in-flight entertainment system.

Kang and Park are shy, luckless losers, who have bought a remote cabin to enjoy the “rustic life.” Unfortunately, their new home was the scene of a half-successful exorcism sixty-six years and six months ago—so, obviously it is getting to be about that time again.

Unbeknownst to hard-working Kim Mi-na, her not-really-friend Bo-ra invited her on a weekend getaway just so her pro-golfer pal Lee Jung-bin could take advantage of her. Naturally, Lee and his entitled friends look upon Kang and Park like the backwoods boys in
Deliverance. Consequently, when the “Handsome Guys” save Kim from drowning, they assume she was kidnapped. Ordinarily, Lee wouldn’t care, but Kim accidentally walked off with his phone, which is loaded with highly incriminating photos and video.

As Bo-ra and the cads try to “rescue” Kim, they meet a series of unlikely but fatal
Final Destination-style mishaps. However, in Nam’s remake, death isn’t the end for them. As sacrifices to Baphomet, they become his demonic vessels.

The supernatural elements are entirely new to
Handsome Guys. Even though they add a dumpster truckload of additional lunacy, the new material really makes the concept work better. Having a hidden hand behind all the fatal misadventures gives a greater degree of “logic,” to use that word extremely loosely. Arguably, there it also invests the film with a greater sense of morality.

Regardless, it is all just as goofy and gory as the original, if not more so. Although Kang is nothing like Lee Sung-min’s typical roles, he has the perfect sad clown expression for the hound dog-like Handsome Guy. Frankly, both Lee Hee-joon and Gong Seung-yeon are also appealingly sweet-natured as both Park and Kim.

Handsome Guys
definitely counts as one of the rare remakes that surpasses the original film. It is funnier (even in translation) and delivers more horror. Affectionately recommended for fans of horror-comedies, Handsome Guys is currently available for in-flight streaming on domestic Delta flights.