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The Ghost

By: Tim Janson
Review Date: Sunday, June 17, 2007

The Ghost or “Ryeong” is a new Korean horror film, part of the Tartan Asia Extreme line. The film is shackled with the tag line “The Grudge meets Dark Water” and that does a real disservice to the film for a number or reasons. The Ghost doesn’t have nearly the scare factor of The Grudge but it has vastly superior characterization and a more complex plot. While the Grudge was a straight horror film, The Ghost is more of a mystery with horror elements. 
 
Min Ji-Won is a student suffering from amnesia. She experienced a traumatic event a year ago and has lost all memories of her past. Something terrible happened but everyone around her avoids revealing the details. Min plans to leave her home and go to school far away to try and get her life back together. This results in an angry conflict with her mother who doesn’t want to be left alone and assails Min with a guilt trip. Meanwhile her sometimes boyfriend, Park, does his best to get Min to carry on with life, but he’s also unwilling to tell her about her past. 
 
Min has become something of a pariah at school, avoided by her former friends. When those friends end up dying, one by one, apparently of drowning, Min begins experiencing visions and flashbacks.   She visits one of her friends who has been hospitalized in a psych ward and she learns about Su-in, who was bullied and humiliated because her family was poor. A shaken Min realizes that she was the ring-leader of her school clique that tormented Su-in, often pretending to be her friend just so they could embarrass her later. A desperate Min tries to unravel the events that led to the tragedy and her loss of memory but Min may not like what she finally uncovers.
 
The Ghost also gets compared quite a bit to The Ring and yes, we do have that ubiquitous long, dark haired female ghost out for revenge but that’s where the comparison ends. There’s a distinctly different feel to The Ghost than The Ring and other Asian films. The Ghost really go doesn’t go for the quick scares that make you jump out of your seat, preferring a more cerebral approach. You quickly find yourself caught up in wanting to know what happened to Min a year a go that caused her to loser her memories. The ghost became secondary to Min’s situation. 
 
Ha-Neul Kim as Min draws upon our sympathies for her dilemma and then promptly turns things upside down when we find out that Min wasn’t such a nice girl to begin with. Just when you think things have been resolved, an unexpected twist near the end will change your whole view of the film. 
 
I thoroughly enjoyed all of the performances in The Ghost, especially Ha-Neul Kim’s and Ran Choi’s, who played Min’s rather twisted mother. The soundtrack reminded me of old school horror films that had that pulse-pounding quality to it. I suppose The Ghost could be criticized for being a bit slow in spots and it’s a valid point. On the other hand I appreciated Director Tae-kyeong Kim’s clever plot and character development. Certainly this is a different film than other Asian horror films but give it a chance, I think you will be surprised.



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