The Host

Director:
Bong Joon-Ho
Plot:
Gang-Du is a middle aged father who spends his days sleeping in his
food stall by the Han River, the stall is owned by his father. Despite
his flaws his father believes that Gang-Du is a good son/father. Their
lives are suddenly turned upside down when a giant mutated amphibian
(It looks like a mixture of a Toad and cat fish and acrobatic skills
of Tarzan rolled into one) emerges from the river.
The
rampaging mutant runs a riot through the area killing everyone in it’s
path, Gang-Du and his daughter Hyun-seo attempt to out run the monster,
but Gang mistakenly grabs the arm of another school girl rather than
his daughter causing her to be captured by the two ton sea mutant. The
monster returns to the river with Hyun-seo and disappears…
Gang-du’s
brother and sister both return home to morn the loss of their niece
along side their brother and father. Gang-Du receives a mysterious phone
call from Hyun-seo, she's alive and trapped in a giant sewer, somewhere
near the Han river.
There's
only one problem though, the family are in quarentine. It seems that
anyone who came in contact with the monster could be victims of a contagous
virus which is putting the town to threat. But virus or no virus Gang-Du
and his family escape from the hospital. All they need to do now is
save Hyen-Seo!
Review:
Now I found this to be a fresh genre for Asian Cinema, we hardly see
much monster movies outside of the Japanese Godzilla franchise. Many
people have said this movie is a mixture of Alien, Godzilla, Jurassic
Park & Um... Little Miss Sunshine.
I
have to say I enjoyed the movie, the opening sequences are a thrill
to watch, the middle half of the movie fades in and out of interest
and of course the finally is also a pleasure to watch.
Again
Song Kang-Ho proves that he's possibly the most talented Korean actor
there is in South Korea! He's given 100% in all of his movies fine examples
include: Memories of Murder, JSA, Sympathy of Vengeance, Shiri, heck
even his camoe in Lady Vengeance was rather amusing.
Final
thoughts, fun film, great cast and probably alot
better than those retro Godzilla flicks! Enjoy!
Rating: 8.0 out
of 10.0
By
Stewart Sutherland
The
Host

Director:
Bong Joon -ho
Starring:
Song Kang-ho, Hie-bong Byeon, Hae-il Park,
Plot:
Six years after several containers of toxic chemicals are secretly dumped
into the Han River by an American scientist and his Korean partner,
a giant carnivorous sea mutant rises out of the water, and starts feeding
on the helpless population of Seoul. A careless father Kang(Bong Joon-ho)
accidently loses his daughter to the giant sea beast, and is later quarantined
after its revealed that the monster may have been carrying a deadly
contagious virus. Thinking his daughter is dead, Kang receives a frantic
cell phone call for help from his still alive daughter. When nobody
believes him that she is still alive out there, he breaks out of the
quarantine. Together with his father, alcoholic brother, and Olympic
gold medalist sister, they set out to find and save their little girl
before she becomes the monsters late night snack.
Review:
As of the past few years, Korean cinema has exploded with worldwide
success, we have been treated with many phenomenal films from many wonderful
directors. Bong Joon-ho has delivered us with yet another. However,
something about this gem stands out from the rest. It could be the tight
story which primarily focus’ on one small family working together
to retrieve their lost little girl, or maybe it’s the total absence
of gang warfare, or stylized shootouts that seem so common among Korean
films. But something tells me it’s the giant carnivorous sea monster!
The
Host is a groundbreaking film for Korea. In fact it happens to be the
most successful to date, and it’s a monster movie! Simply said,
The Host is awesome! This is coming from someone who is not exactly
a huge fan of monster movies. There is just something very unique about
this film. Even though it is in fact a monster movie, it lacks all the
common cliches that come along with them. It’s actually is telling
a half decent story. A story which really does not take much time to
take off. The film doesn’t even clock in a full 15 minutes before
we first get introduced to the monster itself, and what an introduction!
The way we are introduced to the beats is so well done, so casual. As
Kang is delivering some food to a blanket(The restaurant has picnic
style blankets instead of tables) he notices everyone starring out at
something hanging from a bridge. So he slowly walks over and joins them.
Suddenly the giant object descends into the water, where people begin
throwing items in to watch it snatch them like a fish. But the fun and
games quickly end when it decides to join everyone on the shore.
The
monster itself is pretty well done. Bong Joon-ho put a lot of work,
and worldwide searching into finding the right company to do create
the CGI beast. He ended up using a company based out of San Francisco
California called ‘Ultimate’. Their resume includes CGI
work on such American films as Hellboy, one of the Harry Potter films,
and Superman Returns. They did a great job. The monster looks fantastic,
most of the time. There is a few moments in the film when he(she? It?)doesn’t
quite looks as seamless as previous scenes. Its not clear what exactly
the monster is a mutation of. It looks like a fish, but walks like a
T-Rex(it is obvious it has no T-Rex in it). But it also has a long tail
that is uses to swing from high places, or grab some unlucky snacks.
However what it is not as important as what it does, and what it does
is very cool!
With
a strong cast, and a decent story, The Host has much more to offer then
most monster movies. In the monster itself is the only indication that
this is in fact such a film. There is no campy overacting, or half naked
collage girls running through the woods, and most importantly there
is no American teenage pop “sensation” making their unfortunate
“acting” debut! What we get is another steller film out
of South Korea, except this one has a giant freakin monster!!
Highlights
- A
monster movie of this caliber to come out of South Korea is a very
pleasant surprise.
- Song
Kang-ho’s performance!
- The
monster is just plain cool!
- The
introduction of the monster
Letdowns
- The
quality of the GCI on the monster is somewhat inconsistent.
- The
ending might not be what most viewers hoped to see.
- I
really hope the success of The Host does not spawn endless crappy
rip-offs, or the inevitable Hollywood remake...
Rating:
9.5 out of 10.0
By
Jeff Wildman