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[Marxism] A Tale of Two Sisters
Produced in South Korea, "A Tale of Two Sisters" is the latest and most
artistically realized horror film to come out of East Asia in the genre of
"Ringu" and "Ju-On," which were made in Japan. These sorts of films rely
more on mood and psychological insight than on flashy special effects. It
also shares with them a focus on the dysfunctional family and child abuse.
The plot of "A Tale of Two Sisters" evokes classic Grimm fairy tales of
children being victimized by a cruel elder. In this case, we are dealing
with two teenaged sisters who have returned from an extended hospital stay
to the country estate of their wealthy physician father and his sadistic
new wife. Their mother has died under mysterious circumstances. It is also
not clear whether the sisters' ailments were physical or mental.
Under director Kim Jee-Woon's sure hands, the film grows creepier by the
minute. Although the lavish home has beautiful gardens and spacious,
well-furnished rooms, there is something *off* about them from the
start--especially the ornate floral wallpaper that begins to almost pulsate
when the camera hones in on it. The wallpaper evokes toxicity and danger,
not comfort and reassurance. Eventually it becomes along with the house
itself a kind of actor in this Gothic tale, a Korean version of the house
described by Edgar Allen Poe in "Fall of the House of Usher":
"During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the
year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, had been
passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country;
and at length found myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within
view of the melancholy House of Usher. I know not how it was --but, with
the first glimpse of the building, a sense of insufferable gloom pervaded
my spirit. I say insufferable; for the feeling was unrelieved by any of
that half-pleasurable, because poetic, sentiment, with which the mind
usually receives even the sternest natural images of the desolate or terrible."
It would seem that Kim Jee-Woon has a flair for macabre tales set in
country estates. His 1998 "The Quiet Family" is a black comedy about a
family that moves to the country to run a bed and breakfast. When guests
feel inspired one after one to commit suicide in the house, the family
works overtime to conceal the bodies. Besides sharing a creepy house with
"A Tale of Two Sisters," the two films share a father figure who seems
impervious to everything around them. In "Two Sisters," the father is
blissfully unaware of the strange goings on in his house. In "The Quiet
Family," the father rises from the dinner table, walks off screen, and
proceeds to kick the family dog, before returning to the table to resume
eating as nothing has happened. In a voice-over, his daughter explains that
the tension of disposing of all the corpses has gotten to him.
It is not clear whether the director's avoidance of special effects is
driven by a tight budget or by style. Whatever the case, "A Tale of Two
Sisters" is far more expert in the tools that it works with than the
typically bloated Hollywood horror film. This is especially true with
respect to the sound effects, which are unlike any I have encountered in
any other film. The house is alive with bizarre night sounds coming from
within its innards that drive the two sisters over the edge, along with
everything else in this truly haunted house.
"A Tale of Two Sisters" has the same kind of ambiguity as Henry James's
"Turn of the Screw." Even in the final scenes, we are never quite sure
whether the gruesome events taking place are in the children's minds or
actually taking place. In the conventional Hollywood horror movie, from
Psycho to Halloween, there is always a psychiatrist to explain the events
of the film at the conclusion, neatly tying a string around the package. In
"A Tale of Two Sisters," we leave the theater unsure of what happened. The
characters are haunted and so are we.
Kim Jee-Woon was clearly inspired by "Ringu," the Japanese flick that was
remade in the USA as "The Ring." Koji Suzuki, the author of the novel that
the film was based on, is known as the Stephen King of Japan. His novels
and the East Asian horror films he has inspired share King's preoccupation
with the hidden menace of everyday objects. In "Ringu," the telephone and
the VCR become as threatening as a meat cleaver. In "A Tale of Two
Sisters," the wallpaper threatens to detach itself from the wall and attack
the audience crouched in their seats.
All of these works also share a sense that the nuclear family is falling
apart at the seams. For the better part of two decades, Japan and South
Korea were seen as embodying all of the traditional values of middle-class
life. With growing economic insecurity, novelists and film directors are
bound to reflect this anxiety.
In an interview, Kim-Jee Woon answered the question about the relationship
of his movies to reality in the following manner:
"I think a movie is at the borderline between the reality and some other
world. For me, expressing the real world with the real language is not very
fun. But, expressing the real world with fantastic, film language is more
fun. I think that film is a door from the real world to the other world, to
the other side?And ultimately, film is about digging from another world
into what's going on in the reality."
"A Tale of Two Sisters" opens in NYC at Cinema Village on December 17th.
Highly recommended.
--
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