Review: ‘Hijacked’ (2025), starring Thái Hòa, Kaity Nguyễn, Thanh Sơn, Ma Ran Đô, Trâm Anh, Võ Điền Gia Huy, Lợi Trần, Ray Nguyễn, Bảo Định, Xuân Phúc and Trần Ngọc Vàng

December 6, 2025

by Carla Hay

Thanh Sơn and Thái Hòa in “Hijacked” (Photo courtesy of Galaxy Studio)

“Hijacked” (2025)

Directed by Ham Tran

Vietnamese with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Vietnam and in a flying airplane, in 1978 (and briefly in 1977), the action film “Hijacked” (inspired by true events) features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A Vietnamese plane is taken over by hijackers, whose only apparent goal is to get out of Vietnam.  

Culture Audience: “Hijacked” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and disaster action movies that have more hysteria than a coherent plot.

Xuân Phúc and Trần Ngọc Vàng in “Hijacked” (Photo courtesy of Galaxy Studio)

“Hijacked” is inspired by true events about the increase in Vietnamese plane hijackings in the late 1970s. However, almost nothing about this tacky action flick looks realistic. Expect to see a lot of shouting, bloody fights, and horrible acting. A nonsensical plot twist that’s thrown into the movie makes everything look even more idiotic.

Directed by Ham Tram, “Hijacked” was co-written by Ham, Nguyễn Hoàng Dương and Nguyễn Mai Nhật Ánh. The movie takes place in Vietnam and mostly in the air during a hijacked plane that’s in flight. The movie was filmed on location in Vietnam. “Hijacked” is also titled “Death Battle on the Air,” depending on where the movie was released.

“Hijacked” begins with a caption explaining that in 1977, U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed an immigration act allowing approved Vietnamese people to immigrate to the United States as refugees of the Vietnam War. This immigration act led to hijackings of Vietnamese planes by people who wanted to go the United States “by any means necessary.” The airline company in “Hijacked” is called Vietnam Airlines. What the movie doesn’t mention is in real life, the airline company that experienced these late 1970s hijackings was Vietnam Civil Aviation, which didn’t change its name to Vietnam Airlines until 1993.

The movie shows one of these hijackings that took place in 1977. Vietnam Airlines Flight 137 is a Douglas DC-3 plane going from Ho Chi Minh City to Phu Quoc Island. This flight is based on the real-life Vietnam Civil Aviation Flight 509, which had 32 passengers and was hijacked on October 28, 1977. The hijackers wanted the plane to take a detour to Singapore. In the “Hijacked” movie, this hijacking is depicted only in the first 15 minutes.

Just like in real life, the movie shows that were four hijackers for this hijacking and two members of the crew were killed. However, the movie fabricates something that didn’t happen for this particular hijacking. In real life, two of the six crew members and no passengers were killed. In the movie, one of the passengers is killed when he apprehends a hijacker.

While the passenger has the hijacker in his grip, he jokingly says to a flight attendant: “Do I deserve a scarf now?” (Who says that during this type of crisis? Only people in a stupid movie like this one.) No sooner does he ask this moronic question, another hijacker sneaks up behind the passenger and slits the passenger’s throat with a knife.

The movie then abruptly segues to show Binh (played by played by Thanh Sơn,) an air marshal of the People’s Public Security of Vietnam), leading a training session to improve the fight and safety skills of airplane crew and security staffers. An air marshal named Minh (played by Hồ Thái Thiên Minh), who was killed on Vietnam Airlines Flight 137 just happened to be the brother of an air marshal named Son (played by Ma Ran Đô), who is on the next hijacked flight that’s depicted in the movie.

The movie’s second hijacked flight takes place in 1978. It’s Vietnam Airlines Flight 602, a Douglas DC-4 plane. This flight is based on the real-life Vietnam Civil Aviation Flight 501 that was hijacked on June 28, 1978, while going from departing from Da Nang International Airport to Phung Duc Airport. What happens on Vietnam Airlines Flight 602 takes up the majority of the movie.

The crew members on this flight include Binh, Son, flight captain Phong (played by Xuân Phúc), flight co-pilot Khanh (played by Trần Ngọc Vàng), flight attendant Tu Trinh (played by Kaity Nguyễn), and flight attendant Nhan (played by Tram Anh), who are all as generic as generic can be. This four male hijackers of this flight are group leader Long (played by Thái Hòa); Long’s son Suu (played by Bảo Định); and two brothers named Dan (played by Ray Nguyễn) and Ti (played by Võ Điền Gia Huy). Dan is the older brother.

To increase the drama and the tension, the movie has three of the crew members as expectant parents. Binh was on the plane so that he could visit his wife, who is due to give birth at any moment (and you know that the movie will show her going into labor during the hijacking. Khanh and Nhan, who are married to each other, are expecting their first child. Nhan is in the first trimester of her pregnancy. That’s about all you’ll find out about these main characters, who are all underdeveloped.

There are about 60 passengers on the plane, including the hijackers. Most of the passengers are just extras in the movie, which puts most of the passenger focus on a family of three people: a middle-aged man named Hai (played by Lợi Trần), his wife Phuong (played by Xuân Văn), and their son Dau (played by Bâo Di), who’s about 5 or 6 years old. Dau is carrying the ashes of Hai’s father in an urn. (And you can easily predict what will happen to those ashes during the chaos of this hijacking.)

Most of what’s seen in “Hijacked” takes place on the plane, with fleeting glimpses at some of what’s happening on the ground when the word gets out that the plane has been hijacked. Chief hijacker Long is a tyrant who physically and verbally abuses his son Suu, who is desperate to please Long. Flight attendant Nhan gets tortured by the hijackers. The hijackers have a gun, a knife and grenades. By the end of the movie, it’s still not clear what the hijackers’ motives are.

“Hijacked” has very choppy editing that takes unearned shortcuts and leaves many questions unanswered. One of the worst editing segues in the movie is when a fight breaks out between certain crew members and the hijackers. One of the hijackers gets knocked out. And then, the next thing you know, all the hijackers are tied up in a back storage room with red lighting, with the movie never explaining how the hijackers were tied up.

And the movie has too many ridiculous fights and explosions that would crash any plane that’s in flight, but this plane just keeps going during all the phony-looking mayhem. The movie’s dialogue is awful and is made even worse by the subpar performances. “Hijacked” is the type of movie that wants to pretend that people yelling, fake-looking fights, obnoxiously loud sound, and jerky editing can equal suspense. There is no real suspense in this annoying mess of a movie except wondering when it’s finally going to be over.

Galaxy Studio released “Hijacked” in select U.S. cinemas on December 5, 2025. The movie was released in Vietnam on September 19, 2025.

Review: ‘Detective Kien: The Headless Horror,’ starring Quốc Huy, Dinh Ngọc Diệp, Đoàn Minh Anh, Quốc Anh, Anh Phạm, Mỹ Uyên, Xuân Trang and Quốc Tân

May 31, 2025

by Carla Hay

Quốc Huy in “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” (Photo courtesy of 3388 Films)

“Detective Kien: The Headless Horror”

Directed by Victor Vu

Vietnamese with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in 19th century Vietnam, the horror film “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: A detective is summoned to investigate the mysterious disappearance of a woman in a community where decapitated bodies have been showing up on the river banks, and many people think an evil ghost is responsible.

Culture Audience: “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and are interested in watching an absorbing movie that is both horror movie and a crime thriller.

Dinh Ngọc Diệp in “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” (Photo courtesy of 3388 Films)

“Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” seamlessly blends a murder mystery with supernatural horror, a love triangle, and suspenseful action. There are many intriguing twists and turns in this story that takes place in 19th century Vietnam. The movie skillfully brings forth dilemmas for beliefs that are based on facts versus faith.

Directed by Victor Vu, “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” takes place in a rural village in Vietnam during the Nguyễn dynasty, which ruled Vietnam for most of the 1800s. The movie’s title character Detective Kien (played by Quốc Huy) first appeared in Vu’s 2023 film “The Last Wife.” Detective Kien is skilled in martial arts

In the beginning of “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror,” a woman named Hai Man, also known as Miss Moon (played by Dinh Ngọc Diệp, also known as Ngọc Diệp) can be heard reading a letter that she has written to Detective Kien. Hai Man pleads Detective Kien to come to her village to help her find her missing young-adult niece Nga (played by Đoàn Minh Anh) because the local police have not been helpful. Detective Liem Quan (played by Xuan Trang) is the village’s chief investigator, who has a callous personality

The village (which is not named in the movie) has also been plagued by a series of murders, which began five years ago. Decapitated bodies are found on the banks of a river. Many of the villagers believe an evil spirit they call the Drowning Ghost has been kidnapping people, drowning them, and then beheading them. Some people in the village also claim to have seen this ghost.

Nga is a bachelorette who works as a seamstress and lives a modest home. Even though Nga is an young adult, Hai Man still feel responsible for Nga because she took care of Nga as a child after both of Nga’s parents abandoned her. Nga’s mother is Hai Man’s older sister.

Before she disappeared, Nga and a local man named Thac (played by Quốc Anh) were having a passionate romance. Thac wanted to marry Nga, but he couldn’t because he was in an arranged engagement with Tuyet (played by Anh Phạm), which was a marriage that was planned ever since Thac and Tuyet were children. Tuyet is the spoiled daughter of Detective Liem Quan and his strong-willed wife Lady Vuong (played by Mỹ Uyên), who has a close relationship with Tuyet.

Another decapitated body is found on the river bank after Nga has disappeared. A village shaman named Thầy Tinh (played by Quốc Tân) sees something moving in the corpse stomach. He slices open the stomach in front of other villagers and finds snakes inside. The villages trust Thầy Tinh because he provides spiritual guidance to people who say they’ve seen the ghost.

Hai Man tells Detective Kien that she doesn’t think the Drowning Ghost has taken Nga because Nga’s decapitated body would’ve been found by now. Hai Ma says that one of Nga’s slippers was left behind at the place in the woods where Nga was last seen. Hai Mai believes that it’s a clue that Nga was abducted a human because all the people who were later found decapitated did not have any items of clothing left behind where they were believed to have been abducted.

Detective Kien is skeptical about the ghost theory too because he wants to solve the case based on evidence, not superstitions. Other people who affect what happens in the story include Lady Vuong’s shy maid Mui (played by Tín Nguyễn), a local thief named Dong (played by Sỹ Toàn), a villager named Mr. Vinh (played by Quốc Cường) and Detective Kien’s investigative sidekick Đinh (played by Võ Điền Gia Huy), who considers Detective Kien to be his mentor.

Most of the horror in “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” has to do with the gruesome imagery of the decapitated corpses and the ghost sightings. The investigation is not a typical procedural because Detective Kien constantly has people telling him to give up the investigation because he can’t win against the ghost. Many people in the village already assume that Nga is dead.

“Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” uses flashbacks to tell more about the personal backgrounds of all the main characters. These flashbacks reveal that Hai Man wasn’t always the loving and devoted aunt that she appears to be. Other characters also have secrets that are eventually revealed.

Although some of the movie occasionally resembles a soap opera, “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” has above-average acting and cinematography. And the story is well-written and absorbing, with only a few parts of the movie with pacing that drags. Detective Kien is intuitive, ethical and compassionate. He’s the type of detective protagonist who would be endearing to fans of Agatha Christie novels.

“Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” has a little bit of comedy when Hai Man develops a crush on him and flirts with him, while Detective Kien tries to remain professional. “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” is the best type of murder mystery: Even if you think you can guess the outcome, there still are more surprises up until the very end, which essentially shows that the story is continuing in a sequel.

3388 Films released “Detective Kien: The Headless Horror” in U.S. cinemas on May 29, 2025. The movie was released in Vietnam on April 30, 2025.

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