The Wailing -

The Wailing is a profoundly Korean film, steeped in the nation’s history of colonial trauma (the Japanese outsider) and religious syncretism (the coexistence of shamanism, Christianity, and Buddhism). But its horror is universal. It is the horror of the intelligence community, the detective, the modern agnostic. In a world of misinformation, fake shamans, and ambiguous omens, we are all Jong-goo. The film’s final, heartbroken image—of a father watching his family be butchered because he could not trust his gut—is not a jump scare. It is an existential scream. The only true evil, it suggests, is the failure to act.

The film begins with a familiar premise. The bumbling, somewhat incompetent police officer Jong-goo is called to a gruesome double murder. The culprit, it seems, is a local farmer who has turned feral, his skin covered in boils. Soon, the violence spreads: families are massacred, and a mysterious, rash-ridden illness turns villagers into rabid killers. The town’s scapegoat is a reclusive Japanese man living in the mountains—a figure of pure xenophobic suspicion. Enter a shaman, dispatched to perform a costly, cathartic gut (ritual) to drive out the evil. The Wailing

This ambiguity culminates in the film’s devastating final act. Jong-goo, paralyzed by a supernatural trap, is forced to make a choice. A mysterious woman in white (a possible guardian spirit) tells him not to return home until he hears the rooster crow three times. Meanwhile, his daughter—now fully possessed—is about to murder his family. The shaman calls and begs him to wait. The Japanese man appears as a demon. The woman in white screams that he is the devil. The Wailing is a profoundly Korean film, steeped

For its first two hours, the film plays like a masterful folk-horror procedural. We suspect the Japanese man is a Tengu or an Onryo . We suspect the plague is a poison. But Na Hong-jin, a director trained in realism ( The Chaser , The Yellow Sea ), refuses the comfort of a clear answer. He systematically dismantles every horror trope. In a world of misinformation, fake shamans, and