Gorey Guardian

Jaw-dropping second act in wickedly entertaini­ng satire

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PARASITE (15)

WRITER-DIRECTOR Bong Joon-ho mines a mother lode of deliciousl­y cruel intentions in his wickedly entertaini­ng, genre-bending satire, which is certain to convert some of its six Oscar nomination­s into golden statuettes.

Careening wildly from slapstick and scabrous social commentary to full-blooded horror, Parasite gleefully inhabits the cavernous divide between South Korea’s haves and have-nots.

The script, co-written by Han Jin-won, lulls us into a false sense of security with a gently paced yet engrossing opening hour before Joon-ho tightens the screws on his desperate characters, setting in motion a jaw-dropping second act that leaves our nerves in tatters.

The film-maker dissipates tension with staccato bursts of ghoulish humour but each belly laugh is soaked with bile – primal screams of despair at a world that repeatedly kicks the poor and disenfranc­hised when they are down.

‘Money is an iron’ notes a mother on the wrong side of the class divide, who asserts that wealth smooths out life’s creases and would undoubtedl­y sweeten her malodorous dispositio­n.

With Joon-ho at the helm, any barbs are positioned with surgical precision to draw spurts of blood as the besieged protagonis­ts stagger forlornly towards the brink of self-destructio­n.

Wily patriarch Kim Ki-tek (Song Kangho) presides over a family of con artists, including his sharp-tongued wife Chungsook (Chang Hyae-jin), mild-mannered son Ki-woo (Choi Woo-shik) and daughter Ki-jung (Park So-dam).

They live in a squalid basement apartment in a poor neighbourh­ood of Seoul with a prime view of drunken passers-by urinating in the street.

The resourcefu­l clan exploit free Wi-Fi to secure thankless jobs such as folding cardboard pizza delivery boxes.

It’s an unedifying hand-to-mouth existence.

Good fortune smiles unexpected­ly on Ki-woo when good friend Min-hyuk (Park Seo-joon) recommends him as an English tutor for teenager Park Da-hae (Jeong Ji-so).

Ki-woo falsifies his qualificat­ions to impress Da-hae’s wealthy mother Yonkyo (Cho Yeo-jeong) and father Dong-ik (Lee Sun-kyun).

Once he has earned the couple’s misplaced trust, Ki-woo recommends a college friend called Jessica as an art therapist for Da-hae’s younger brother,

Da-song (Jung Hyeon-jun).

Sister Ki-jung arrives in the guise of Jessica and confidentl­y passes off theories from the internet as her personal philosophy to unlock a child’s potential.

Ki-tek and Chung-sook also seek positions under false pretences.

However, the simmering suspicions of fashionabl­e housekeepe­r Mun-kwang (Lee Jung-eun) threaten to expose the ingenious deception.

Parasite is a lip-smacking delight, which divides our sympathy as moral compasses are wilfully ignored in pursuit of happiness.

The light, airy, modernist splendour of the park family residence becomes increasing­ly claustroph­obic as characters are enslaved to their materialis­tic desires.

Joon-ho retains masterful control over every element including the abrupt changes of tone in a gob-smacking second hour that proves home is where the heartbreak is.

RATING: 9.5/10

 ??  ?? Lee Sun-kyun as Park Dong-ik and Cho Yeo-jeong as Park Yeon-gyo in Parasite.
Lee Sun-kyun as Park Dong-ik and Cho Yeo-jeong as Park Yeon-gyo in Parasite.

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