
4.5★
Parasite feels like the cinematic equivalent of realizing the floor beneath you has been slowly tilting for the last two hours and only noticing when everything starts sliding.
What impressed me most isn’t the social commentary (which is excellent and about as subtle as a brick through a window), but how absurdly precise every frame feels. Bong Joon-ho directs with the confidence of someone who already knows exactly where you’ll be looking before you do. The house itself becomes a chessboard, every staircase a loaded gun.
The first half is almost mischievous. It’s funny in that “this definitely won’t end well” kind of way. Then somewhere along the line the movie quietly changes genres three separate times without asking permission.
I also love how nobody is reduced to a cartoon. Everyone is exploiting someone, everyone is trapped by something, and everyone is just sympathetic enough to make the inevitable collision hurt. By the end, I wasn’t rooting for a person so much as I was bracing for impact.
My only reason for not giving it the full five stars is that the ending’s emotional aftermath hit me more intellectually than spiritually. I admired it immediately, but it took a while to haunt me.
Still, this is one of those movies that makes most thrillers feel like they’re playing checkers with missing pieces. Every time I think back on it, another detail clicks into place like a lock turning.
The smell motif alone deserves its own film studies course.
7 days ago
By submitting, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy