A Delicious Flight: -2015- -uncut-

A Delicious Flight: -2015- -uncut-

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A Delicious Flight: -2015- -uncut-

The film’s setting—a budget airline’s inaugural "sexy flight" contest—is a stroke of dystopian genius. In the theatrical cut, this feels like quirky set dressing. In the Uncut version, the extended scenes of passenger selection, crew briefings, and backroom negotiations transform the aircraft into a microcosm of neoliberal hell.

The flight attendants are not just workers; they are commodities. The pilots are not just captains; they are gatekeepers of a fragile masculine hierarchy. The passengers are not travelers; they are consumers of a packaged fantasy of rebellion. The "uncut" footage emphasizes the mundane terror of this arrangement: the lingering shot of a flight attendant recalculating her monthly rent during a layover, the pilot’s bitter, extended monologue about his failing marriage, the raw, unedited sound of bodies hitting the cramped crew quarters. These moments strip away the glossy veneer, revealing that the "delicious flight" is, in fact, a flying cage of economic precarity. Sex becomes the only currency the powerless believe they have left.

The film is part of a wave of Korean "romantic comedy + soft erotic" films from the mid-2010s, often targeting adult audiences. It uses a familiar premise—a low-budget airline—to explore modern relationships, career pressures, and sexual liberation.


A Delicious Flight is an intimate, slow-burn film that trades big plot mechanics for atmosphere, character nuance, and sensory detail. The uncut 2015 version preserves the filmmaker’s intended pacing and small moments, which will reward patient viewers. A Delicious Flight -2015- -Uncut-

What works

What may not work for everyone

Who will like it

Who might not

Verdict A richly textured, quietly affecting film for viewers who savor mood, craftsmanship, and the ritual of shared meals; the uncut 2015 edition is the definitive way to experience it. If you enjoy contemplative cinema and excellent sensory filmmaking, this is worth seeing; otherwise, it may feel too slow.

Would you like a short one-line review or a rating out of 5? A Delicious Flight is an intimate, slow-burn film

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At first glance, A Delicious Flight (original Korean title: Mashitneun Bihaeng) looks like a standard "sex comedy" set in the confined space of an airplane. The premise is simple: Two couples board a flight to Jeju Island—Korea's romantic getaway. What should be a short, pleasant trip turns into a tangled web of mistaken identities, past relationships, and unexpected flirtations.

But the film, particularly in its uncut form, is more than its provocative posters suggest. It examines the boredom that creeps into long-term relationships and the electric danger of "the one that got away" sitting two rows behind you. The protagonist, a food critic (played with charming awkwardness by Kim Seung-wook), finds himself seated near his ex-girlfriend (the luminous Lee Ha-nui, aka Honey Lee), now a successful flight attendant. Meanwhile, a younger couple’s petty arguments mirror the older pair's unresolved tension. What may not work for everyone

The "delicious" in the title is a double entendre—referring both to the airline meals served (a running gag about gourmet food on budget airlines) and the "forbidden fruit" of rekindled romance.