The
Isle Movie Review:
Like
the Japanese film Audition a few months back, this atmospheric
Korean drama crosses several gruesome borders as it tells
a simple love story. The film is virtually wordless, with
expressions and actions carrying us through ... even when
we don't want to go any further. Set on a remote river,
a small fishing hotel caters to those who want to get away
from society. The rooms are floating cabins dotted around
the water and tended to by the proprietor Hee-Jin (Suh),
who supplements her income by catering to the more personal
needs of her clientele ... in direct competition with the
local brothel. Soon Hee-Jin is obsessed with the tenant
in the yellow cabin, Hyun Shik (Kim). He's running from
some violent past and is soon interested in her as well.
But their tender romance will not travel down expected pathways
... no, it will involve intrigue, suspicion, jealousy, violence
and even death.
The evocative imagery and gentle, lapping rhythms of this
film are infectious--it gets under our skin and draws us
in long before the plot kicks into gear. It also makes us
think about issues of attraction and isolation, even as
it offends virtually every sense with its continual grisliness
and repetitive imagery of pain and mutilation. There's no
Humane Society logo here; fish, frogs and birds are all
killed on screen, often in brutal ways. The damage to the
human characters is even worse; although at least it isn't
quite as explicit, it's much more horrific. But the increasingly
creepy plot is counter balanced by a genuinely tender romance,
which makes the film impossible to categorise, and will
no doubt limit it to obscure arthouses and cinephiles who
have very strong stomachs. They won't be disappointed.
Rich
Cline
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