Sunday, February 26, 2017

The Handmaiden (Film Review)

One of the highest complements I can give to a story is it left me giggling like an excited school girl.

The latest modern film (from the 2010s) to accomplish such feat is Mad Max: Fury Road…or it was until I watched The Handmaiden.  “Fantastic” is the first word that comes to mind for describing The Handmaiden, but I can also think of a few more: exhilarating, passionate, engrossing, refreshing, comical, erotic.  I must confess, I hold a particular fondness towards well-written erotic stories, emphasis on well-written.  Fifty Shades of Grey is not a well-written erotica, The Handmaiden is—in fact, it’s a great one, because it does what your run-of-the-mill erotica fails to do.

Set sometime during the early 1900s in Japanese-occupied Korea, the story begins with a man and a woman planning a large con operation.  The man, who goes by the false name of Count Fujiwara (Ha Jung-woo), has hired a thief named Sook-Hee (Kim Tae-ri) to pose as a newly hired handmaiden for the mysterious, yet wealthy Japanese heiress Lady Hideko (Kim Min-hee).  The Count plans to woo the heiress into marriage—using Sook-Hee as a means to further sway the heiress’s feelings for him—thereby taking her large inheritance before throwing his new bride into an asylum.  And that’s about all I can tell regarding the plot without revealing the vast wealth of delightful surprises and plot twists contained within the film.

The first—and perhaps most unexpected—aspect to note about The Handmaiden is its really funny.  Not to the point where it doesn’t take itself seriously, but to the point where it doesn’t take itself overly serious.  There’s plenty of dark, disturbing moments in the film, as well as a lot of emotionally touching ones, yet this doesn’t stop The Handmaiden from delivering the laughs: whether it be from witty banter, amusing facial expressions, dark comedy, or just plain goofiness.  There’s a scene where the Count messes with a servant by continuously moving his teacup around so she can’t take it, and another scene where a different servant relays a message at an unusually rapid pace.  The latter servant is never heard from again, making the scene a bizarre, yet humorous one-off joke.

MASSIVE SPOILERS BEGIN: One of The Handmaiden’s most memorable, yet completely unexpected jokes is when Hideko tries to hang herself, yet is saved by Sook-Hee.  Sook-Hee reveals she and the Count have been fooling her this whole time, only for Hideko to reveal it’s actually she and the Count who have fooled Sook-Hee.  Furious at the Count’s double-crossing, Sook-Hee lets go of Hideko to swear and rage, causing Hideko to begin suffocating from the rope constricting her neck; Sook-Hee quickly realizes her mistake and frantically rushes back to support Hideko.  The black comedy comes hilariously out-of-nowhere for such a dramatic moment—making the scene highly entertaining and, of all things, more endearing than if it were pure drama.  The comedy is quite bizarre at times, but, then again, this is a film with bell penetration and suggested octopus sex, so the comedy actually ends up fitting right in. MASSIVE SPOILERS END

Characterization is the second aspect The Handmaiden does remarkably well—an aspect even rarer to find in your average erotica.  The film fleshes out its main characters—developing them while showcasing each one of their perspectives—and not just the protagonists mind you, but the antagonists as well.  I previously wrote in my Kubo and the Two Strings review how the film feels like its exploring a much larger journey for its runtime—The Handmaiden also does this, but with a focus directed more towards characterization than the journey.  The two-and-a-half hour film gives the sensation of binge-watching an entire 12-episode television season.  While there are a few areas where the pacing gets a bit sluggish, the film largely breezes through with an enrapturing presentation.  The Handmaiden delivers three-dimensional characters with fleshed out personalities and backstories—giving them satisfying arcs with minimal lethargic pacing, all while keeping to its erotic roots.

Which leads me to the foundation of The Handmaidenthe sex.  After all, how could the film be a proper erotica without any titillation.  So then, does The Handmaiden titillate?  You bet your ass it does!  Let’s be absolutely clear, The Handmaiden is not a film to watch with your parents, or children, or even friends.  The film is kinky and upfront about it.  There’s nudity, there’s sex, and it is expressly made to turn you on.  Either watch it with a romantic partner (if they’re alright with such explicit material) or watch it alone.

It would be an absolute crime to end this review without applauding The Handmaiden's delicious array of surprise twists and turns throughout the story.  It’s as if somebody took the plot twists to Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, combined them with the erotic mysteries of Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut, and then added their own unique spin to the mix.  The film pulls every form of misdirection to continuously surprise its viewers; every time I thought I had the plot and characters figured out, a new reveal changed my entire outlook.  The Handmaiden’s director Park Chan-wook deserves particular praise for his usage of flashbacks and scene splicing—difficult techniques to effectively utilize, yet done exceptionally well here: creating the film’s wonderful plot twists.  The film keeps surprising until the very end, where all the puzzle pieces come fitting together quite satisfyingly.  The story, the surprises, the characters, the comedy, the romance, the erotica—it’s all a complete delight.  The Handmaiden doesn’t just deliver what it offers, but goes further beyond expected and then some.  The film is a must see...so long as you’re alright with, as well as old enough to handle, its expressive sex and kinkiness.

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