Latest Trends

The Great Flood review – Korean apocalypse film strays into sinister sci-fi territory | Movie

KIm Byung-woo’s quixotic but not unpleasant sixth feature begins like a normal apocalypse film, with a flood flooding Seoul. Then it flirts with the baggage of social stratification as a beleaguered mother attempts to climb her 30-story apartment building to escape rising floodwaters. But once it’s revealed that An-na (Kim Da-mi) is a second-rank science officer tasked with a much-needed research project, the film becomes a completely different beast — perhaps something quite insidious.

As the film begins, An-na’s six-year-old swimming-obsessed son Ja-in (Kwon Eun-seong) sees his dreams come true when water begins to flood their apartment. Along with everyone else, they start pounding the stairs – before company security guard Hee-jo (Park Hae-soo) catches up with them and explains that an asteroid impact in Antarctica is causing catastrophic rains that will end civilization. But a helicopter is on its way to evacuate her and Ja-in, because she is one of the pioneering minds who worked in a secret UN laboratory that holds the key to humanity’s future.

Hitting the roof – then continuing higher – changes how we look at everything, as the exact pattern of his work is revealed and the film goes down a virtual rabbit hole. Deviating from science fiction, Kim has clearly imbibed heavily from Edge of Tomorrow, Charlie Kaufman’s mental mazes and perhaps also – with mega-tsunamis gathering on the horizon and the presiding maudlin-apocalyptic tone – Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar.

But Kim’s recursive narrative doesn’t so much prepare us for the future of humanity as it does for — per her Netflix Original identity — the future of entertainment. As An-Na “corrects” her initially selfish reactions to the people she encounters – a girl stuck in an elevator, a woman in labor – the suggestion is that the emotional responses to this looping drama can be somehow calibrated. It seems like an apologia, complete with copy-and-pasted disaster footage, for algorithmic entertainment. The often shaky storytelling, particularly the inability to point to a useful antagonist, suggests, however, that human fallibility is alive and well. Or maybe this reluctance to condemn our optimized future means Kim is already complicit to the nth degree.

The Great Flood is on Netflix from December 19.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button