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Review By Darren Horne
Score
. 2/5
This highly acclaimed film by debut director Bong Joon-ho
won best new director award at the San Sebastian Film Festival
and was a box office smash in Korea.
It follows the story of rural detective, Park's, (Kang-ho
Song) unprofessional response to the true story of Korea's
first serial killings which took place in 1986.
These murders were complicated and pre-meditated, taking
place on rainy nights after a particular song had played
on the radio, and involving the fetishistic binding and
gagging of the female, red clothed, victims.
The local police response is to plant evidence, beat suspects
for a confession, and consult a Shaman.
Luckily an educated detective, Seo, (Sang-kyung Kim) is
sent in from Seoul, who believes in scientific methods and
logically analysing evidence. This sets up much of the films
tension due to the friction between the two leading detectives
individual approaches, which come down to the battle between
instinct and science.
The film is certainly well constructed with strong performances
from the entire cast, but it is ultimately unfulfilling.
It is aimed firmly at the Korean audience, which may mean
that the cultural differences form a barrier between the
characters and some Western viewers. Whatever the reason
the film remains un-engaging due to the difficulties in
emoting with the protagonists.
The film also covers old ground, with themes that have been
covered a thousand times before in more original ways. Instead
of looking like a film set in 1986, it gives the impression
that it was made in that year.
In typical buddy movie fashion the two detectives begin
to learn from each other, and about the nature of their
profession. The philosopher Nietzsche states that those
who do battle with monsters must take care that they do
not thereby become a monster, which is relevant here as
Seo begins to throw off his logical methods in favour of
beating the suspect he feels is guilty. Meanwhile Park relies
less on instinct and leans more towards the logical and
analytical approaches.
This coupling of opposites had the opportunity to be interesting
viewing. However, perhaps the films biggest downfall is
also the one aspect that gives it any originality. This
is based on a true story, a story in which the killer was
not found. This means that the story can only be told from
the point of view of the police, leaving the audience in
the same frustrating position as the detectives. In thrillers
of this type it is customary to have a non restrictive narrative,
so that the audience can see what the killer is plotting
even if the identity is never revealed. It then becomes
a series of moves and counter moves, a puzzle to be solved,
rather than a frustrating journey of banging your head against
a wall, in which no questions are answered.
There are touches of humour that lighten the heavy mood,
but it is perhaps the scenes that are not supposed to be
funny, such as some of the violent assaults by the detectives,
that become the most comedic due to their slapstick tendencies.
Another well trodden theme is that it is the ordinary person
that commits the most extraordinary acts of violence. Park
is sure that the killer must be a pubic hair shaving psychopath
rather than, as the audience will have already guessed,
an average person.
Parks realisation of this is handled competently in the
films haunting closing scene. Twenty years after the murders
Park has changed careers and is now a salesman that happens
to pass by the first crime scene of the murders. Whilst
he is there a young school girl comments that another man
had been their recently and spoke of how he had done something
at that location long ago and wanted to remember it.
When Park presses for a description she replies "ordinary",
which is the moment of enlightenment for this character,
who then stares, not at the camera lens, but into the audience,
where the killer may well be sitting.
Inspired by the crimes of Koreas first recorded serial
killer, this policier was a huge hit in South Korea. After
the discovery of female corpses in and around a provincial
town in 1986, Park (Song Kang-ho) a brash but often intuitively
correct local detective is joined by Inspector Suh (Kim
Sang-kyung), a more methodical type from Seoul who barely
conceals his contempt for the country cops methods
of interrogation.
After ensuring were hooked by a good, suspenseful
mystery, Bong refuses to play by the generic rules: he emphasises
the human cost of the killings, the despair and confusion
that set in as the investigation drags on and the fact that
the waters are far muddier - in terms of evidence and ethics
- than wed like to believe.
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