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Hot-Blooded Horror
Director Park Chan-wook's new vampire-meets-priest thriller,
'Thirst,' wowed audiences at Cannes and has just hit the States
by Nick Antosca The Daily Beast
"Am I a pervert?" wonders an unhappily married young woman exploring graphic
and sanguinary sexual territory with her new lover, a Catholic priest who also
happens to be a vampire. "Are other women like this?"
This strange, flavorful sex scene in director Park Chan-wook's terrific new film, "Thirst" — which won the Jury Prize at Cannes this year—is
characteristic of Park's ability to paint character nuance into even the most
lurid crevice of his pictures.
MSN's Dave McCoy moderates "Thirst" panel at
Comic-Con
"You could say that the metaphor of vampirism being a... release is probably
true."
"This is a moment when, as a priest, the main character steps over that line
that could not be crossed," Park told The Daily Beast last week. "It is the
moment when he makes that moral downfall. And also for the woman, it is a moment
of liberation... from this marriage, which to her, felt like hell."
"So for these two characters, this is such an important moment that I just
could not say, 'And so, they had sex!' Every facial expression and every
position and every noise they make, everything that they say—it was very
important that you were able to see these details and think about what these
moments mean."
As he said this, the 45-year-old Park was hunched over a table at New York's
Le Parker Meridien hotel, accompanied by a valiant and perspiring translator who
looked barely out of college. Scattered around the room were medical-looking
"blood bags" of gushy red syrup that Sony Pictures had given out to promote the
film.
The director held himself very still as he answered questions, his expression
stoic, his voice a patient murmur. It was a surprisingly reserved presence for a
man whose work is generally known not for nuanced love scenes but for squishy,
arterial violence.
"Thirst" honors that tradition. The love affair between the guilt-wracked
priest, Sang-hyun, and the sex-starved wife, Tae-ju, is punctuated with moments
of voluptuous mayhem—sudden splashes of blood on stark white walls, a hand
lovingly tucked into a chest cavity, footless bodies draining into the bathtub.
But the film is also poignant, funny, gorgeous, and even quirky, a tragic
love story for adventurous dates (that's right, don't go see "(500) Days of Summer" — see "Thirst" instead). Oh, and it's
all based on Thérèse Raquin, Émile Zola's 1867 novel about an ambitious young
Frenchman who kills his lover's husband but cannot escape his own guilt. Park
recalls being so "immediately drawn to" the novel that he grafted his
pre-existing idea for a vampire priest movie onto it. Considering that Thérèse
Raquin contains neither priests nor vampires, Thirst is remarkably faithful
- I'd venture to say that even Zola himself might be pleased.
In 2003, I came across some near-orgasmic postings on film websites about a
South Korean movie called "Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance." The movie hadn't been
released in the United States, and I'd never heard of its director, Park
Chan-wook, but was interested enough to track down a Region 0 DVD on eBay.
About thirty minutes into "Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance" — a gnomic thriller
about organ theft, kidnapping, and brutal revenge—the plot seemed arbitrary and
potentially incoherent. But by the time it was over, I was astounded by its
tragic arc and meticulous complexity.
Then came Park's follow-up film, "Oldboy," about a man imprisoned in an eerie hotel room for
fifteen years by anonymous kidnappers, then released and given five days to find
out who has tormented him and why. "Oldboy" is mesmerizing, formally ingenious,
and emotionally devastating—not just Park's best movie but one of the best
movies of the decade.
"Oldboy," which was a massive critical and commercial hit in South Korea and
won the Grand Prix at Cannes, eventually did get a U.S. release, and Park's
reputation began to blossom here as well. At the 2005 New York Film Festival
premiere of "Sympathy for Lady Vengeance," the third film in Park's
so-called Vengeance Trilogy, the director got a five-minute standing ovation.
Just about every movie in Park's filmography concerns a sympathetic
protagonist driven to acts of operatic cruelty or violence. He seems to regard
this as reflective of the human condition, using his films to explore both the
catharsis of bloodshed and its spiritual toll. Thirst literalizes this
distinction, with the priest, Sang-hyun, tortured by self-loathing as he
survives on blood, while Tae-ju becomes a vampire and exults in her new powers.
"When it comes to Tae-ju's character, you could say that the metaphor of
vampirism being a... release is probably true," Park said. "To her, becoming a
vampire, it's not a curse. She accepts this new identity and seems to even enjoy
it... She revels in the fact that she doesn't have to control all her desires
and all her instincts." (It's worth noting that the young actress Kim Ok-vin
gives an extraordinary performance as the initially mousy, ultimately
bloodthirsty Tae-ju.)
Park said that he wanted Tae-ju's homicidal joy to stand "in stark contrast
with Sang-hyun, who finds himself in a serious moral dilemma, and it's a source
of suffering."
That suffering was the seed of "Thirst." In the late 1990s, Park recalled, he
"was interested in telling a story about a Catholic priest. When would be those
moments when a Catholic priest might doubt his own faith? Or if he was ever
tempted to commit a sin, what would he do to overcome that temptation?" But he
wasn't sure how he wanted to tell the story, so it languished. And then, one
day, an idea came to him.
"What if he was a vampire?"
Park's otherwise sphinx-like face broke into a smile.
Nick Antosca is the author of the novels Midnight Picnic (Word Riot
Press, 2009) and Fires (Impetus Press, 2006). His writing has appeared in Nerve,
Hustler, The New York Sun, Identity Theory, The Barcelona Review, The Huffington
Post, and others. He was born in New Orleans and lives in New York, and his blog
is Brothercyst.
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