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At The Picture Show
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August 2009
Sins of the flesh
Chan-wook Park sinks his fangs into Christian guilt and penance in wry vampire fable 'Thirst'
Thirst
Focus Features
Director: Chan-wook Park
Screenplay: Chan-wook Park and Seo-Gyeong Jeong
Starring: Kang-ho Song, Ok-vin Kim, Hae-sook Kim, In-hwan Park, Ha-kyun
Shin and Dal-su Oh
Rated R / 2 hours, 13 minutes
Now playing in limited release
(out of four)
Of all the symbols in Christian theology - and often beyond - the most potent is
blood. It is sacred. It is an oath, a sacrifice, a bond. A priest would know this best
of all. And so, when that priest finds himself unwittingly transformed into a
bloodthirsty vampire, how is his soul to react?
Only Chan-wook Park would turn a brutally violent vampire tale into a gleefully
macabre, tongue-in-cheek bastardization of Christian symbolism. Thirst is his kind
of tragicomic fable - the kind in which characters are truly put through the moral
ringer.
Consider poor Sang-hyun (Kang-ho Song). All he
ever wanted was to help people. If that meant volunteering to infect himself with a
terrible virus in order to help find a cure, so be it. Little did he know the
experiment would turn him into a vampire - his body healing itself with every drop
of blood he consumes.
This is Sang-hyun's agonizing trial, a testing ground for his own personal
threshold for suffering. But of course, that suffering is two-pronged - precious
bodily fluids of all kinds are out of bounds. As a priest, he has already pledged a
life of celibacy. Now he has to resist the temptation to drink blood as well,
depriving himself of the pseudo-sexual sensation it provides?
Complicating matters is a young woman he meets at the hospital at which he
volunteers - Tae-ju (Ok-vin Kim), a frustrated and put-upon girl with a devilish
curiosity for the new priest. The attraction is mutual, of course - but he's not just
after . . .well, you know, that. When you're a vampire, you have a secondary
means of penetration. (And I'm not even arguing which is which.)
The film is driven by this uneasy coupling, which deliberately borders on farcical
as Park skirts all the taboos the characters have between them. There's a great
scene early on when the two are deep in the throws of guilty passion - the first
such moment of Sang-hyun's life, it seems. And then they're cruelly interrupted,
forced to stop halfway through. The film continually prolongs the space between
suffering and ecstasy - especially since Sang-hyun continues to try to be a moral
man. Tae-ju makes those attempts rather difficult.
And you can only guess what her reaction is when
she finds out what he is.
Park has an obscene amount of rather obscene fun with his playful analogies about
lust, sexual repression and, yes, even sacrament. You've heard the term, "Eat of
my flesh, drink of my blood"? Well, this film makes that as literal as you could
possibly make it. And, when necessary, as disgusting.
And it's not just the good priest's own insatiable appetites. When others discover
his gift, they want to eat of his flesh, and drink of his blood - doing so, as it turns
out, will give them his same powers. The irony is certainly not lost on Sang-hyun
- or us - that he originally set out to heal people and now has to withhold that gift.
Thirst is a thrillingly violent romantic fantasy glorified by Park's customarily
strong feel for atmosphere and clever experiments with visual language.
Pay close attention when Sang-hyun begins playing the flute in one early scene.
Or consider the way Park shows us Tae-ju's reaction to seeing something horrific
for the first time - by keeping the camera on her in a close-up. We know what
she's just seen simply by looking at her face; no need for Park to let us see it for
ourselves. And as always in his films, there are blood-drenched moments of
absolute beauty.
Thirst doesn't waste its efforts on cheap thrills, either.
There's such a delightful wit to Park's films that sometimes it's easy to look the
other way when he can't quite seem to contain himself. I'd take a filmmaker with
this much energy and visual panache over a million more disciplined directors any
day. His masterwork, 2003's Oldboy - the second entry in his so-called
"Vengeance Trilogy" - was flooded with morbid humor that wonderfully elevated
its Greek tragedy-like narrative.
With Thirst, he uses his vampire/human love story as a shoehorn into comically
illuminating explorations of guilt, sin and penance - all of which become of
increasingly grave importance to Sang-hyun, since who he is is now akin to mortal
sin.
The film has its rocky moments, rushing a bit clumsily into the introduction of the
plot and moving awkwardly at times between particular segments. However, it hits
its greatest notes over the final 45 minutes - just after a key development with one
character. This circumstance, which we've been anticipating for some time,
marvelously brings to the forefront the moral torments that have been lurking the
whole time. It is during Thirst's extended final act that we see Park at his darkest,
his funniest and his most entertaining.
Read more by Chris Bellamy