I've been a fan of Korean cinema since I was introduced to it around a decade ago. I think that a lot of the world has probably had their eyes opened a bit about how good this country's films are since Parasite ended up sweeping the Academy Awards this past year. Hopefully this encouraged a lot of those people to check out the treasure-trove of films that this country has produced over the years.
I was digging through the Netflix library of all Korean films and ran into this one. I watched all of it expecting something amazing to happen but unfortunately it's actually pretty typical and dare i say, a bit lame.
[source](https://i.pinimg.com/474x/af/76/92/af7692074a03ae456a8e1e20ede876a6.jpg)One of the most popular actors in recent times from Korea, Song Kang-ho, who was the star of Parasite plays the lead role in this monster horror film. It also features Park Hae-il from Memories of Murder, and Bae Doona from Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance. So it is easy enough to say that this cast certainly had the acting "chops" to get the job done.
[source](https://photos.hancinema.net/photos/photo19703.jpg)
Recognize these faces? You see them a lot in the famous films from SK Released in 2006, this film actually achieved widespread praise for being excellent and even "groundbreaking" and I have no idea where this is coming from. A lot of the film is CGI and the entire film was made for under $11 million, and this is exactly where I think the major problems arise: The CGI does not look good. In fact, I would say it looks downright bad. While this is just my opinion I feel as though Korean movies tend to shy away from CGI-heavy films because of financial limitations.
Perhaps the praise this film was receiving is the result of critics being impressed that the CGI looks as good as it does considering the relatively small budget. It should be noted, that especially in 2006, $11 million is NOT a small budget for a South Korean film. Consider that Parasite, made 13 years later had almost exactly the same budget and Oldboy had a budget of a mere $3 million.
While they do try in a bit to throw some of that Korean emotion that you might not be expecting (think of Train to Busan) that is so iconic of their movies, for the most part this movie is neither thrilling nor scary and only briefly touches base on societal issues.
The monster also just doesn't provide the necessary fear factor for most people - maybe it's just me because this movie has a very high rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
from the [Shudder](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcCCIrXmIJOYamxWqeJzI2Q) channelNow I fully expect to catch some flak for my opinion on this but the film, despite a great cast, just doesn't do it for me and while there are a few good scenes, mostly the movie just kind of drags on until we end up at the very predictable ending.