3.5 stars out of 5
I’d been trying to see Parasite for a few weeks, but it seemed like the world was trying to prevent me: illness, bad weather, general exhaustion. Finally on December 31 I made a concerted effort, $7 Tuesday not even in effect on account of the holiday (note: popcorn was still bargain price), and Parasite became my final movie of calendar year 2019.
It was good! Perhaps a little overhyped? Perhaps.
The trailer hadn’t given me a strong sense of what to expect, and I guess that would’ve been difficult anyway, as it’s an odd little film. We’re in Korea, and we meet a family straight out of Married With Children. Low-rent, constantly bickering with each other. The tone is light and comedic — and this part goes on for an hour. I started thinking, if this was a Hollywood film, with such unlikable main characters, we’d find it stupid. But I think sometimes we cut foreign films a bit too much slack.
Without giving a lot away — I believe Parasite begins streaming on January 20 — the family subtly “invades” an upper-class family’s home. And the mood slowly gets a lot darker, though still maintaining a satiric edge.
So, the message here is, well, something about the class struggle? Except normally I’d be rooting for the poor… but did I mention they’re incredibly unlikable? (I pictured Jane Lynch watching this movie, nodding in agreement.) I enjoyed that it was weird, and that it was dark, but I just couldn’t get 100% behind Parasite.
Jack Silbert, curator