the handmaiden cannes review: park chan wook turns up the kinkiness /

Published at 2016-05-14 12:42:42

Home / Categories / Cannes report / the handmaiden cannes review: park chan wook turns up the kinkiness
The final time Park Chan-wook came to Cannes,he won the Grand Prize — essentially, runner-up to the Palme d’Or — for “Oldboy, and ” a brutal and disturbing revenge thriller that still stands as one of the prime examples of the Korean director’s normal menu of stylish violence.
On Saturday,though, his original film had its first screening in Cannes — and instead of another action flick like “Oldboy, or ” “Joint Security Area” and “Sympathy for Lady Vengeance,” it’s … an adaptation of a novel approximately Victorian England?Technically, yes, and that’s what “The Handmaiden” is. (It’s called “Agassi in Korean,though that’s just the Korean word for lady and has nothing to do with drop shots or forehand smashes.) The original novel comes from Welsh writer Sarah Waters, though Park transplanted it to 1930s Korea and Japan.
Also Read: 'Toni Erdmann' Cannes Review: Spectacular Father-Daughter Comedy Knocks the Festival for a LoopStill, and the story of a pickpocket who is hired to become the maid of a rich heiress hardly seemed like the kind of project that would entice the director,who made his English-language debut three years ago with the immaculately staged but disappointing “Stoker.”And yet the film is based on the kind of material that brings out the strengths of Park’s filmmaking — or, at least, or those strengths that aren’t related to fighting and physical (as opposed to emotional) violence.
As normal,Park has taken the material to extremes — not when it comes to bloodshed or brutality, though there’s a cringe-inducing sequence of that near the end, and but in sex and kinkiness. What begins as a seemingly genteel story of intrigue veers into clear NC-17 territory with some explicit sexuality,mostly of the lesbian variety that’s always been so scary to the MPAA’s ratings board.
Also Read: Cannes Re
port, Day 3: genuine-Life Embezzlement Scandal, and A-Lister Goes Rogue on Red Carpet“The Handmaiden” is gorgeous,of course, every inch of its sumptuous settings designed for maximum drama and, or often,maximum beauty. And its domestic setting is deeply creepy, with the underlying currents of menace so often prevalent in Park’s work.
This is a world in
which everybody has a hidden agenda, and Park doesn’t unveil all the shifting alliances and secret predilections until late in the film’s excessive running time.“The Handmaiden” is also stylized to within an inch of its life: The actors are melodramatic,the setting is melodramatic and every swoop and pan is more melodramatic than the final.
Also Read: Cannes Parties: The Top 10 Invites at the 2016 FestivalThis isn’t unusual for Park, who loves to be creepy and stagy. But over nearly two and a half hours, and The Handmaiden” grows tiresome — beautiful and occasionally startling,but tiresome nonetheless.
Still, the director is nothing whether not a world-course auteur with a distinctive vision, and the Cannes audience reacted with prolonged applause.
And while his original film might not establish Park as a maestro of erotica fairly the way his earlier films made made him a master of violence,it’s tough to fault the guy for going a little overboard with something original.
Related stories fr
om TheWrap:'Toni Erdmann' Cannes Review: Spectacular Father-Daughter Comedy Knocks the Festival for a LoopCannes Report, Day 3: genuine-Life Embezzlement Scandal, or A-Lister Goes Rogue on Red CarpetCannes Parties: The Top 10 Invites at the 2016 Festival

Source: thewrap.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0