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The Housemaid (1960, S. Korea) (aka
Hanyeo)
In writer/director Ki-young Kim's psychological horror
thriller and lurid domestic melodrama set in post-war Korea, it covered
the themes of marital infidelity and predatory sexual obsession of
the title character - the 'housemaid', mixed with a critique of traditional
and materialistic bourgeois values:
- in a pre-credits sequence, a husband was speaking
to his wife while reading a newspaper account about a businessman
who committed adultery with a housemaid and brought terrible consequences
upon his family (Husband: "A man in Gimcheon committed adultery
with his maid" Wife: "Men are hopeless, taking interest
in a maid" Husband:
"I disagree. Look at us. We're almost totally dependent on our
maid. She cooks and washes for us, and is the first person to greet
me when I come home from work. She is fully at our service" Wife: "Such
thoughts should not be said or practiced in our sacred household")
- the scene and its dialogue was a clue to the film's framing device
(with a surprise ending) and a premonition of what would happen
- the opening title credits (with dripping blood in
B/W) were superimposed above the unsettling and long game of cat's
cradle (a metaphoric symbol of web entrapment) played by the couple's
two children
- the main characters, a family of four, who lived in
a claustrophobic, two story western-style, South Korean house included:
handsome pianist, part-time composer and music teacher Mr. Kim Jin
Kyu (Dong Sik), his pregnant seamstress wife Mrs. Kim (Ju Jeung Ryu),
and their two children: crippled older daughter Ae-soon (Yoo-ri Lee)
with crutches, and younger mean, selfish and bratty son Chang-soon
(Sung-kee Ahn)
- the family hired unstable, pig-tailed, chain-smoking, "not
too bright" textile factory worker Myung-sook (Lee Un-shim)
as the family's housemaid, who began behaving unpredictably, erratically,
capriciously and strangely -- almost immediately, she chased and
caught a rodent with her bare hands in the kitchen and had an unusual
smile on her face as she held up its corpse by the tail; she also
developed an obsession with rat poison kept in the kitchen cupboard,
voyeuristically spied on Kim giving piano lessons through a sliding
glass door, taunted the children, and banged on the piano in the
middle of the night
- pivotal events: the seductive Myung-sook forced herself
on Mr. Kim in her bedroom by letting her top drop at her balcony
door; not able to resist her half-nakedness, he grabbed her breast
from behind, and she stood barefooted on his shoes; she locked her
hands around his back before they had sex (off-screen, and symbolically,
a tree was struck outdoors by lightning!) - and afterwards she became
pregnant
- the housemaid used blackmailing techniques to try
to insinuate herself between Mr. Kim and his wife; the scheming Mrs.
Kim learned of her husband's infidelity when he confessed to her,
and she assured him: "I'll beg the girl on my knees...We can't
let our precious lives be destroyed now"; moments later, she
suggested that the housemaid throw herself down the tall stairway
to induce a miscarriage and abort the baby (the incident was heard
off-screen); also at the same time, the housemaid jealously threatened
to kill Mrs. Kim's newborn baby son
- the same stairway caused the death of the younger
son (he had been tricked by the vengeful housemaid into believing
he had drunk from a glass of rat-poisoned water), and as he ran to
tell his parents, he tripped and fell down the stairway and died
at the foot of the stairs; remarkably, the jealous housemaid coerced
them to agree that the husband could sleep in her upstairs bed: ("I
want the father of my child"), so that she could bear him another
son!
- the wife in desperation ("I only wanted to save
my family from this living hell"), attempted to poison the housemaid,
but the intended target had substituted sugar for the rat poison
and became wise to the murder attempt
- the horrifying scene of the housemaid terrifying
the daughter by stuffing her mouth with possibly-tainted rice
- in the film's unforgettable climax (a memorable death
scene), the crazed housemaid urged Mr. Kim to commit a double-suicide
with her by ingesting rat poison dissolved in glasses of water: ("That'll
make the living happy - Die with me! Make me the happiest woman!");
as they were dying from the poison, she gave a deranged speech: ("Don't
worry. I'll be with you for eternity. I'll ask God to perform our
wedding ceremony. The flowers will never wither, while the paths
will glitter with jewels. And nobody will ever take you away from
me" - lightning struck ); Mr. Kim decided to climb down the
stairs to die by his wife's side: ("You can take my body, but
not my soul"), but the housemaid resisted his last request:
("If I lose you now, I'll never find you again in heaven");
she grabbed onto his left leg and ankle and was dragged down each
step - with her head pounding or thumping into each stair-step; she
either died from the poisoning or from a damaging head concussion;
when he crawled into his wife's sewing room and collapsed dead at
her feet - she spoke regretfully: "Oh, if only I hadn't wanted
the new house"
The Housemaid's Death on the Stairs
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- the stunning and jarring plot twist ending (none
of the deaths from the rat poison or the stairs had occurred) --
the camera pulled back to find both husband and wife alive; the
scene returned to the opening pre-credits sequence; the entire
story was a cautionary
"what if" tale between the husband and wife:
Wife: "I don't see how a man of good character could lose his
head over a maid."
Husband:
"That's man's weakness. A high mountain challenges him to climb
it. A deep lake prompts him to throw a rock into it. A beautiful
girl stirs his most primitive desires."
Wife: "Indeed! Men are beasts!"
- suddenly, the sliding door opened, and the housemaid
delivered a tray of tea to the family! and then the husband broke
the fourth wall and addressed the camera and audience, before ending
with a laugh: "Ladies and gentlemen, as men get older, they
spend more time thinking about young women. That's how they get
drawn into women, which could lead to their destruction. This is
true for all men!"
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Pre-Credits: Husband with Wife Reading Newspaper Article
The Children with Cat's Cradle
Rat Trap
Housemaid with Dead Rat
Voyeuristic
The Housemaid's Seduction of Mr. Kim
The Deadly Stairway: The Housemaid's Miscarriage
The Younger Son's Death at Foot of Stairs
The Daughter's Force-Feeding
The Double-Suicide Poisoning
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