Tuesday, March 3, 2020

2019 Winner, Parasite

Parasite



Director: Bong Joon-ho

Distributed by: CJ Entertainment

Released: May 2019

Country: South Korea

Parasite is a tale of two families, and of two (at least) genres: The families are the Kims and the Parks. The Kims—father, mother, brother, sister—are intelligent, resourceful, and seem to genuinely love each other. The Parks are a bit more of a mixed bag: A father who is a bit self-indulgent and doesn’t really respect his wife; an attractive mother who is a bit ditzy and superficial; a teenage sister who seems like a bit of a brat; and a young brother who apparently sees ghosts. The main difference, though, is that the Parks have Bill Gates money and live in a beautiful home with servants on call to do everything for them, while the Kims live in a basement, making money folding pizza boxes, and trying to steal wi-fi from their neighbors and free pest control by opening their windows when the exterminator sprays the streets.

The Kims
The thing is, though, the Kims are crooked, dishonest, and ruthless. The story begins when a friend of the brother tells him he is going abroad to study. He asks the brother to take over with the tutoring of the 14-year old Park girl, since the friend thinks the brother wouldn’t be able to successfully put the moves on the cute but underage Park girl.  See, he plans to do just that in the near future, once she's old enough. Brother Kim gets the help of his artistic sister, who is handy at creating false documents, to get his credentials and scam his way into a job. After that, one by one, the others in the Kim family scheme their way into positions as well: the sister as the therapist for the little Park boy; Dad becomes the chauffeur; and for Mama Kim, the housekeeper job. One night, while the Parks are away on a camping overnight, the Kims have a little drink-fest to celebrate their new situation, working as a family in a dream home.  It's all been too easy.

The film’s first third is mostly comic—you’ll root for the Kims as anti-heroes, enjoying the ride of how they get where they get. But things turn glum when rain forces the Parks to cut their camping trip short, calling home to say they’ll be home in a few. From here on, the movie is more dramatic thriller, starting with the Kims hustling to clean the place like a teenager getting rid of the empties and assorted smells before Mom and Dad get back from their vacation. Here we find the plot thicken, with twists you don’t see coming and aspects of the characters that may change your perceptions of them.

The Park house
Parasite takes its time in letting the plot develop and allows you to get a good look at each member of the Kim family in its own time. The Parks, on the other hand, tend to be on the verge of stereotype, rich people who either lack empathy or brains. Walking out of the film, I got to thinking—are we supposed to favor the Kims over the Parks? The Parks really do seem to be decent people who just don’t appreciate what poverty is. The Kims are struggling and obviously have the resourcefulness that rich people like the Parks don’t have. Yet they don’t seem to care who they hurt to get what they want. In the end, I think the filmmaker isn’t aiming for you to dislike the Parks or the Kims, but the economic system that predestines where they are. It’s that system, one in which one group has to live off the other (like parasites), that is up for criticism.

The Title: 기생충 Director Bong Joon-ho explains: "Because the story is about the poor family infiltrating and creeping into the rich house, it seems very obvious that Parasite refers to the poor family, and I think that's why the marketing team was a little hesitant," he explained. "But if you look at it the other way, you can say that rich family, they're also parasites in terms of labor. They can't even wash dishes, they can't drive themselves, so they leech off the poor family's labor. So both are parasites." I dunno, sounds a bit Marxian for me, but I see what he's saying.

Parasite family, Magoo-style
Culture: Parasite portrays what Koreans call the Hell Joseon, a term to describe the economic concept of the vast gap between the have and the have-nots, and the have-nots' inability to become part of the haves, despite hard work. The grandeur and the modernity of the house in which the Parks live hearkens to Jacques Tati’s Mon Oncle home (which the French 1958 film mocked), with all the conveniences a modern-day homemaker like Mama Park can enjoy. Despite a torrential downpour, the home seems safe and sound, even for a backyard tent sleepover. Meanwhile, the squalor and uncleanliness of the Kims’ basement home suffers disaster because of weather conditions.

Agenda danger: There’s no pretense that this story is about class conflict and the perceived widening gap between rich and poor in South Korea. Of course as bad as things may be, South Korea only need to look north to see how it could be worse. That said, it seems to me the Academy, made up of those firmly in the have rather than have-not camp, bought the message, or at least wanted to reward a film about class conflict.

Best Picture that year:  Well, Parasite. The first Best Foreign Film (officially, now the Best International Feature Film) to win the overall Best Picture Oscar.

Rating:  I liked the comedy part of this film more than the suspense and social commentary, and I enjoyed all the performances. It’s an entertaining film with an great storyline, even if disbelief has to be firmly suspended at the door. 1917 was a better overall film, but this one ranks high on the list of foreign language films.