Ma Dong-seok's Detective Ma may not pack a .44 Magnum or have a sleek Italian firearm holstered under his armpit but he does enjoy instant access to something equally as potent: his enormous, frying pan mitts. Previously, when reviewing his underwhelming Netflix vehicle Badland Hunters, comparisons were drawn between Ma Dong-seok and a heavyweight boxer. Really though, especially when compared to the much slighter, even weaselly criminals roaming the mean streets of Seoul, Ma's atypical bulk (presumably cultivated when the star was an amateur arm wrestler) is closer to that of a pro-wrestler, specifically an 80s All-Japan superstar. Like, say, a Toshiaki Kawada, Ma may have a round, pleasant babyface but his expertise when transmitting pain is studied and adept. In some of the film's most crucial moments we can see Detective Ma weighing up just how hard he needs to go when restraining his quarry. Is it enough to have control of a criminal's arm while he thrashes around on the floor? Or does Ma need to snap a wrist then drag that squealing man around to make him submit? Director Kang Yun-seong's The Outlaws is the first in the pulled-from-the-headlines Roundup series, an opening instalment quickly followed by (to date) three further entries. Outlaws is a lightly xenophobic (not to mention overwhelmingly pro-cop) tale of invading Chinese criminals who upset the balance of a working class neighbourhood with their boundless enthusiasm for knife crime and extortion. Really though Ma's swaggering detective is the main attraction: a brawny friend-to-children who scams superiors and local lawbreakers alike for the snack money that has enabled him to build a body so massive that, and this is repeatedly stressed, he simply cannot reach around the complete circumference of his bicep.
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