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Film Review: Korean Erotic Thriller ‘The Housemaid’ Offers Twisted Ride

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HollywoodChicago.com Oscarman rating: 3.5/5.0
Rating: 3.5/5.0

CHICAGO – Movies don’t get much weirder than “The Housemaid.” And I mean that in a good way. Mostly. The extreme Gothic elements of this twisted thriller work even if the ludicrous finale somewhat falls apart on recollection. “The Housemaid” opens this week at the Music Box Theater in Chicago after playing the International Film Festival in October 2010.

South Korea has one of the most vibrant cinematic outputs going right now with filmmakers like Park Chan-wook (“Thirst”), Bong Joon-ho (“Mother”), and Kim Ji-woon (“The Good The Bad The Weird”) delivering some of my favorite films of the last several years. Now we can add Im Sang-soo to the list of filmmakers to watch. While his “The Housemaid” doesn’t live up to the other Korean offerings mentioned in this paragraph, it does display a talented director with a unique voice who will be worth watching in the future. It’s promising without being quite as brilliant as it sometimes threatens to be.

StarRead Brian Tallerico’s full review of “The Housemaid” in our reviews section.

“The Housemaid” is a totally wacko erotic thriller that forces one to wonder if it would be playing anywhere but pay cable if it were in English. But it’s in Korean, so it’s an art movie! In all seriousness, this is well-done lunacy. Just because “The Housemaid” is filled with ridiculously overheated sexual dialogue, a mother out of “Mommie Dearest,” and an ending that should produce a cross-section of laughter and gasps at its sheer audacity, doesn’t mean the directorial talent on display should be dismissed. This is certainly not a movie for everyone and it’s far from flawless, but it’s unlike anything else you could see in a Chicago movie theater this weekend. Or most other ones this year.

The plot of “The Housemaid,” a remake of a 1960 film of the same name, is simple enough. A rich patriarch named Hoon (Lee Jung-jae) hires a new housemaid/au pair named Eun-yi (Jeon Do-yeon) to watch his daughter Nami while his wife Hae Ra (Seo Woo) is pregnant with twins. It’s not long before Hoon is sleeping with the nanny and not long after that before the poor girl gets pregnant. Another live-in maid (Yoon Yeo-jeong) and Hoon’s Lady Macbeth-esque mother (Park Ji-young) conspire to essentially ruin the housemaid’s life and drive her crazy.

StarContinue reading for Brian Tallerico’s full “The Housemaid” review.

“The Housemaid” stars Jeon Do-yeon, Lee Jung-jae, Seo Woo, Yoon Yeo-jeong, Ahn Seo-hyeon, and Park Ji-young. It was written and directed by Im Sang-soo. It is unrated and runs 107 minutes. It will be released at the Music Box Theater in Chicago, tomorrow, February 4th, 2011.

The Housemaid
The Housemaid
Photo credit: IFC Films

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