Only God Forgives is essentially the anti- Drive : it takes the same stylistic tools and uses them to interrogate the very idea of a heroic, coolly violent protagonist. Only God Forgives is not a film for all audiences, nor does it wish to be. It is a challenging, abrasive, and beautiful meditation on sin, punishment, and the failure of masculinity. Its deliberate pacing and opaque symbolism reject conventional storytelling in favor of a pure sensory and emotional experience. While it was a commercial and critical failure upon release, its reputation has grown among cinephiles who appreciate its audacious visual language and its unflinching look into the heart of darkness. It stands as Nicolas Winding Refn’s most personal and extreme work—a film that asks not to be liked, but to be endured.
After Julian’s older, more aggressive brother, Billy (Tom Burke), brutally rapes and murders a prostitute, the Bangkok police—under the tacit control of a mysterious, enigmatic retired police lieutenant, Chang (Vithaya Pansringarm)—allow the victim’s father to kill Billy in retribution. Chang, who is known as "The Angel of Vengeance," executes the father for taking the law into his own hands, but leaves Julian and his brother’s death unavenged. Only God Forgives
A minority of critics (including Jonathan Romney of Film Comment and Ignatiy Vishnevetsky of The A.V. Club ) defended it as a masterpiece of pure cinema—a tone poem about evil. They argued that its perceived flaws (slow pace, lack of dialogue, moral ambiguity) were intentional aesthetic choices. Only God Forgives is essentially the anti- Drive