Korean Film-Maker Invents New Vampire Genre
A Fil Review
Reviewed by:
JILL LAWLESS Associated Press Writer
Posted: June 04, 2009
CANNES, France (AP) - Director Park Chan-wook may have invented
a new genre with "Thirst," his film about a priest turned
bloodsucker who doesn't like to kill.
The movie combines horror, suspense, social satire and humor in
the story of a man of faith transformed into a vampire by a medical
experiment gone wrong.
If pushed, Park calls the film "a vampire romance." But he
doesn't like labels.
"I didn't set out to make a vampire film that would infuse
fresh new blood into the genre," Park said through an interpreter.
"I didn't want to make a completely new vampire film. I wanted to
make a completely new film with priests in it."
Park is one of South Korea's most respected directors, with a
resume that includes the gory "Oldboy," which won Cannes' second
prize in 2004.
"Thirst," co-produced by Universal Pictures, is the first
Korean film made with Hollywood backing.
The central character's faith in God makes "Thirst" the story
of a spiritual struggle. Priest Sang-hyung (Song Kang-ho),
experiences a crisis of faith and morality when he discovers he
must drink human blood to survive.
"This is a man who believes in God, who turns into something
more akin to a devil or a monster," Park said. "This downfall
causes him to question why this has happened to him."
At the same time, "he struggles to take responsibility for what
has happened."
The film mines humor from the hero's attempt to avoid killing
anyone to slake his bloodlust -- he takes to drinking from the IV
tube of a comatose hospital patient. It's also a serious portrait
of a man questioning the God he has always believed in.
"This is a character who is acutely aware of the unethical
aspects of drinking someone else's blood," Park said. "He
recognizes this as bad behavior."
Newly awakened to carnal desires, Sang-hyung falls in love with
unhappy housewife Tae-ju (Kim Ok-vin), and the pair embark on a
passionate romance that leaves her, too, with a taste for blood.
While Sang-hyung struggles, Tae-ju embraces her new identity,
dispatching victims with gusto.
"She says 'This is not what I wanted, to become a vampire, but
since I am one, I am going to enjoy it.' She almost feels a sense
of liberation," Park said.
"Thirst" moves away from the revenge theme of Park's
best-known films, the trilogy that included "Lady Vengeance" and
"Oldboy." His last feature, "I Am a Cyborg, But That's OK," was
a romantic comedy set in a mental institution.
Park says "Thirst" is "a culmination of all my previous
work."
"All contained aspects of religion, aspects of a desire for
redemption," he said. "This is a film where finally they are at
the fore."
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