Thirst

2009 · Directed by Park Chan-wook

0

Woke Score

84

Critic Score

79

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 84 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #419 of 833.

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Genres: Drama, Horror, Thriller
Cast: Song Kang-ho, Kim Ok-bin, Kim Hae-sook, Shin Ha-kyun, Park In-hwan

Synopsis

A respected priest volunteers for an experimental procedure that may lead to a cure for a deadly virus. He gets infected and dies, but a blood transfusion of unknown origin brings him back to life. Now, he's torn between faith and bloodlust, and has a newfound desire for the wife of a childhood friend.

Consciousness Assessment

Park Chan-wook's Thirst is a masterwork of moral ambiguity and artistic restraint, which is precisely why it registers as entirely absent from the contemporary progressive consciousness. The film adapts Émile Zola's 1867 novel with the sensibility of a surgeon, transplanting its themes of shame, desire, and religious transgression into modern South Korea without a whisper of social justice rhetoric. Song Kang-ho delivers a performance of quiet devastation as Sang-hyun, the priest whose vampire transformation becomes a vessel for exploring the collision between ascetic faith and carnal appetite. This is serious art about serious matters, yet it remains indifferent to the categories through which modern progressive cinema demands to be understood.

The film's genius lies in its refusal to didactize. We are never lectured about the priest's crisis of conscience. We simply inhabit it, moment by moment, as he navigates the grotesque poetry of his new existence. The female lead, Tae-ju, is neither a victim nor an empowerment narrative, but rather a fully realized agent of her own moral corruption. Their relationship unfolds as Greek tragedy remade in contemporary dress, driven by psychological and spiritual forces rather than social commentary. Park's visual language operates through suggestion and baroque composition rather than explicit messaging about any contemporary cause.

The film won the Jury Prize at Cannes 2009 and accolades for its ensemble cast, recognition that came through pure artistic merit rather than cultural alignment. It stands as a monument to cinema that asks profound questions about human nature without feeling compelled to provide progressive answers to those questions. For contemporary audiences accustomed to art that signals its moral intentions, Thirst's austere refusal to participate in such signaling may prove its most unsettling feature.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

84%from 10 reviews
Salon100

A brilliant and gruesome work of cinematic invention as well as a passionate and painful human love story.

Andrew O'HehirRead Full Review →
Time100

Blending plot elements of "Double Indemnity" and "Natural Born Killers" with the ripe sensuality of Francis Coppola's take on "Dracula," the film should make audiences sit up in startled pleasure, as if they'd just received the most luscious neck-bite.

Richard CorlissRead Full Review →
Entertainment Weekly91

A gaudy, daring, operatic, and bloody funny provocation of a melodrama from Park Chan-wook.

Lisa SchwarzbaumRead Full Review →
Chicago Tribune88

Be warned: Thirst is one of those pictures that tacks on another chapter just when you think it's wrapping up.

Michael PhillipsRead Full Review →
Film Threat80

A terrific film. Loosely based on Emile Zola's novel "Therese Raquin."

Nick AntoscaRead Full Review →
Los Angeles Times80

Are you hungering for that rare vampire movie with serious intellectual heft, ravishing undead, biting passion and a healthy splash of irony as well as iron in all that spilled red blood? Wait no longer, Korean auteur Park Chan-wook's Thirst should satisfy.

Betsy SharkeyRead Full Review →