The Wailing (2016) Review: Na Hong-jin’s Korean Horror

The Wailing (2016) Review: Na Hong-jin's Korean Horror

《The Wailing》 dir. Na Hong-jin | South Korea | 2016 | 156 min. Starring: Kwak Do-won, Hwang Jung-min, Jun Kunimura, Chun Woo-hee, Kim Hwan-hee Ten years after its premiere at Cannes, Na Hong-jin’s The Wailing still hasn’t been settled. Not for lack of trying. The film has been subjected to more forensic interpretation than almost … Read more

If Wishes Could Kill (2026) — Review, Ending Explained & Season 2: Everything You Need to Know

If Wishes Could Kill

《If Wishes Could Kill》 Platform Netflix (Global) Episodes 8 (complete) Premiere April 24, 2026 Genre Korean Supernatural Horror Director Co-directed by Park Yoon-seo (박윤서) Language Korean Cast Jeon So-young, Baek Sunho, Kang Mina, Hyun Woo-seok, Lee Hyo-je, Jeon So-nee, Roh Jae-won, Lee Sang-hee, Kim Sia, Choi Ju-eun Rating ★★★★☆ 8.2 / 10 First, the Honest … Read more

Sentimental Value Review — The House That Remembers

Sentimental Value

Still from Sentimental Value (2025). Courtesy of Mer Film. On Inheritance, Obsession, and the Ethics of Art There is a distinction, rarely articulated but immediately felt, between films that use art as a subject and films that interrogate it. The first category is comfortable, even celebratory: art as redemption, as self-discovery, as the thing that … Read more

Against the Sublime: Intimacy, Language, and the Alien Ethics of Project Hail Mary

Project Hail Mary

Source: SONY PICTURES Project Hail Mary (2026) How Phil Lord and Christopher Miller transform Andy Weir’s science fiction epic into a film about translation, companionship, and the fragile ethics of understanding another consciousness. The most surprising thing about Project Hail Mary, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s adaptation of Andy Weir’s novel, is not its scale. … Read more

The King’s Warden: Danjong, Witness, and the Cost of Loyalty

the-kings-warden

Source: SHOWBOX The King’s Warden (2026) How Jang Hang-jun reframes a Joseon tragedy through an ordinary man’s moral choice There is a moment near the beginning of Jang Hang-jun’s The King’s Warden when a village official named Eom Heung-do realizes that the exiled figure newly installed in his community is, in fact, a king — … Read more

Hamnet Explained: Grief, Birth, and Art in Chloé Zhao’s Film

Hamnet

Source: Universal Pictures Hamnet (2025) A close reading of Hamnet, exploring grief, memory, and how personal loss becomes Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The opening image gives the film away, if you know how to read it. The camera descends through a forest canopy — branches layered over branches, light coming through in fragments — and finds a … Read more

Chloé Zhao and the Cinema Before Story

chloe-zhao-cinema

Chloé Zhao How Nomadland, The Rider, and Eternals reshape time, existence, and the space between human and world When wind passes over a desolate plain, it leaves no trace. Yet the camera catches the absence of that wind — not sand, but a surface on which the grain of time is made visible. A figure … Read more