| Paradise Murdered: Grim, grimy, gory, grotesque... and good! |
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| Film Blog - Reviews | |
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The New York Korean Film Festival 2007, presented by Helio and organized by The Korea Society: Paradise Murdered will be screened on - Tuesday, August 28th 2007, 9:00 PM. At the IFC Center
The tiny but lively community that lives on the remote island nicknamed “ As they decide to investigate the matter, led by the local doctor, Chae Wu-Song, tension and paranoia grow strong and wild and everyone on the premises becomes a potential suspect and a target of the faceless murderer.
The investigation, through a succession of unreliable narratives, leads the viewers to many a dark corner of the human heart, deceiving one expectation after the other. After the first murder takes place, one of the rural residents immediately puts the blame on a fellow village, Deok-Su, who came into his house and dumped a bag of blood-stained money on his floor on that fated night. Or so he claims. Later on, the same “witness” confesses that he is not sure if Deok-Su really came into his house or he just dreamt that he did.
In this respect, Paradise Murdered seems to borrow a variety of elements from heterogeneous source materials that range from classic films and TV shows of various origins like Memories of Murder (with which it shares its lead actor, Park Hae-Il, who pulls off a striking performance once again), Lord of the Flies (because of its reflection – questioning of?- on human nature: inherently good? irreparably bad?), Gilligan’s Island, Battle Royale, The Island Of Dr. Moreau, and even… Lost. Of course, one can only speculate about the actual influences of this film (even though it is tempting to compare it, on many levels, with Memories of Murder), but as it turns out, Paradise Murdered mirrors and alters those familiar elements within a popular/lower-class Korean background and the generic context of a thriller, which it twists in rather odd ways by pulling it in different (and sometimes opposite) directions. |
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