Genre: Thriller
Director: Shin Jung-won
Cast: Kim Kang-su, Eum Tae-woong, Byun Soo-ryun, Jung Yu-mi, Chun II-man, Chang Han-sun, Baek Man-bae, Yoon Je-mun
RunTime: 2 hrs 2 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films & InnoForm Media
Rating: PG
Official Website:
Opening Day: 24 December 2009
Synopsis:
The frightening cannibal boar, Chaw comes out in the mountain village Sameri, where there's been no crime for more than 10 years!
In a calm and peaceful mountain village Sameri where has been no crime for years, a community headman dreams about bringing an economic success to the town with a weekend-farm business. One day, a terrible damaged dead body is discovered in the grove by the village, and the whole town sinks in the chaos by this shocking tumult it never experienced before. The dead body turns out to be the granddaughter of CHUN Il-man, a former gunner who runs an old gun shop. After investigation police says she was murdered, but CHUN digs into the case by himself and claims she was attacked to death by the cannibal boar Chaw. Voices are being raised that the weekend-farm must be shut down, but the town leaders, blind with the greed for money, keep pushing the business ahead. In a few days Chaw appears again to attack tourist as CHUN predicted and Sameri turns to the most dreadful and dangerous village in the whole country from the once heavenly place on earth.
Movie
Review:
Bong Joon-ho's The Host had everyone sit up and take note
that Korean Cinema can churn out its own monster movies to
great aplomb, even though from time to time you'll come across
lacklustre offerings such as D-Wars which featured giant snakes.
With Chaw, a humongous wild boar said to weigh more than 400kg
and with a palate for human organs, wreck havoc in a village
which is trying to boost its fortunes through eco-tourism,
given that it already boasts being a crime-free village.
One cannot deny the underlying message with regards to nature
and the lack of human care toward Mother Nature, where rampant
poaching eats into the wild boar's prey, and that it needed
to come closer to human habitats to get its food source. And
our nonchalant behaviour toward the environment has caused
the boars to mutate and change their diet, that they now source
for human dead bodies buried six feet under, and developed
a taste for human meat. Or so the story goes. This mutation
and genetic evolution means they're looking for that unsuspecting
human left alone in the thick of the woods, thereby becoming
easy prey as the boars launch their attack, which filmmaker
Shin Jeong-won adopts the first person, erm, animal POV for.
Once you're bought into that premise, the narrative takes
quite a while though to assemble a few good men and women
to go on a hunting spree. It's not until the second act that
the humans decide to form a fellowship to tap on one another's
expertise, and the first half was dedicated to character introduction
and the politicking between the police and the village chiefs,
one group fearing for the safety of their residents and guests,
while the latter concerned with economic survival should their
tourism bid be shut off even for a temporal duration.
It's not too much about the quest to destroy the boar, but
rather an examination of the myriad of characters in the quaint
little town whose lifestyle got disrupted by a man-eating
boar. In what would seem like a leaf taken out of Hot Fuzz
too, with hot-shot city cop Kim Kang-soo (Eom Tae-woong) being
posted to a village (just because he put down “anything” in
his transfer form!), and encounters a band of village cops
who are both fumbling and lazy, led by an inept police chief
Captain Yoo, with everyone lacking crime solving experience
because, well, nothing actually happened!
Then there's the aged Mr Chun whose grandchild was devoured
by the wild boar, hence having a personal vendetta against
the beast, a kleptomaniac in shades-wearing Detective Shin
(Park Hyeok-kwon) sent to investigate what could be a serial
killing, famous Hunter Baek (Yoon Jae-moon) being roped in
to take the beast down, and researcher Su-ryeon (Jeong Yu-mi)
who's seeking to document her pet research subject. Granted
though that some characters prove to be there for comedic
or horrific effect, or a combination of both, such as the
strange hag who cradles a doll and yearns to be called Mum,
or Kang-soo's senile mom, there are some quieter, poignant
moments that they share where we get to feel a little more
for them (especially when danger becomes imminent!), or just
plain sleight of hand scenes which the director subtly inserts,
for laughter.
When it came to action, Chaw has some nice build up of tension
and anticipation, and a dash of thrills thrown in when the
boar comes charging toward the screen. Some CG portions do
come across as a little raw though, and its size could be
a bit inconsistent, but the set action pieces such as the
one in an enclosed town hall celebration, ranks one of the
best with its mix of humour and gore.
Filled with plenty of black comedy moments, you'll find yourself
laughing more than squirming at the sheer horror of being
chomped alive by the animal, no thanks to the bone crunching
sounds that reverberate through the cinema hall in the aftermath
of an attack. If you're sick of the turkey and ham this Christmas
and not want to have a saccharine time with a sextet of chipmunks,
then perhaps you'll want to spend some time with this boar
instead, in a story which is anything but boar-ing.
Movie
Rating:
(Boar hunting was never so much fun)
Review by Stefan Shih
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