Houston Chronicle

AN ATHEIST BECOMES AN EXORCIST IN ‘DIVINE FURY’

SUNG-KI AHN, LEFT, AND SEO-JOON PARK CO-STAR.

- cary.darling@chron.com twitter.com/carydar BY CARY DARLING STAFF WRITER

Exorcism movies make up a genre of horror that has its own set of clichés and expectatio­ns. That’s what makes “The Divine Fury,” a South Korean entry into this field, such a pleasant and yet often disturbing surprise. How many other exorcism films feature an exorcist who’s a leather-jacketed MMA fighter who doesn’t believe in God?

Yong-hu (Park Seo-jun) is that fighter, but his success in the cage can’t tame his demons — both metaphoric­al and literal. His cop father was brutally murdered by a man possessed by evil spirits when Yong-hu was young. As his father lay dying in a hospital, the then-devout Yong-hu asked a Catholic priest to pray for his father and save him. When prayer failed, Yong-hu turned violently against the priest and turned his back on the church.

As an adult, his life seems assured. After all, he drives a Maserati and lives in a swanky apartment. But it’s hard to grip that sporty steering wheel or appreciate interior design when bleeding stigmata begin appearing on the palms of your hands, a phenomenon neither common sense nor the local hospital can explain.

He’s finally referred to an older priest and exorcist, Father Ahn (Ahn Sung-ki), who recognizes that what’s happening may not be a curse but a gift. He enlists Yonghu to help him with his busy schedule of exorcisms, and it turns out Yong-hu is as good at exorcising as knocking heads in the MMA cage. Their relationsh­ip doesn’t exactly turn “The Divine Fury” into a buddy movie, but they do develop a respect for each other.

All of this ultimately sets Yonghu up for a showdown with “the Dark Bishop,” Ji-sin (Woo Dohwan), the man responsibl­e for the rash of local possession­s and the operator of what appears to be the town’s sleekest nightclub.

Director/writer Kim Joo-hwan (“Midnight Runners”) builds tension deliberate­ly and slowly over the 129-minute running time, delivering some undeniably chilling and visually unsettling images along the way. “The Divine Fury” doesn’t revolution­ize the exorcism movie, but it does manage to shake it up a bit.

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