Showing posts with label Wailing (The). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wailing (The). Show all posts
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Some great things in The Wailing but it's ultimately crushed by its heavy ambitions
If you can imagine is mash-up of Night of the Living Dead and The Exorcist set in contemporary, rural Korea, you've got the essence of The Wailing, a really weird horror film that plays on our deepest cultural fears and anxieties: particularly possession of children - the horror that a child can be transformed into a demonic creature beyond morality, completely evil and deranged. Add to this a remote community where people attacked by zombies become infected and turn into ghouls that gorge on flood (and on fish, it seems), and add to that a few other themes: the irrational phobia against outsiders and foreigners (build a wall!) the torment of sin and expiation - a lot going on in this movie. It differs from many other horror films in that it's structured as a police procedural: a local police officer is called out on a rainy morning (torrential rain is a feature and a torment throughout the film) to investigate a murder, which turns out to be the first in a sequence of ghastly, unexplained death - gradually we see that each is carried out by a crazed zombie bloodthirsty screaming demonic person - but who or what is infecting these people? The police officer has a good relationship w/ his young daughter, but in a strange sequence the daughter spies him having sex in the back seat of his patrol car with the family maid. He later takes the daughter for a walk in a park, and she blithely indicates she's caught him in the act before - but she says "Don't worry, I won't tell." On a psychological level, it's this repression - his, and hers - that leads to her infection and possession: She doesn't "tell" but she becomes a monster, screaming obscenities at her father and others. The cinematography in this film is extraordinary - with a great range of palette, from beautiful mountain landscapes to the run-down remote town with its grim main street and modern but threadbare hospital and police precinct to some haunting scenes of possession and attempted exorcism. All told, though - I wish I could like this movie more. It held my attention, and had a lot of working themes, but in the end I couldn't help but think: what was that all about? Sure, you need to have a willing suspension of disbelief to engage in any horror film, but this one seems weighted down by its own ambition: to many themes, too many ideas, and an ending so convoluted as to defy any normal attempt at comprehension.
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