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The Housemaid (1960 film)

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Director
  
Film series
  
Housemaid Trilogy

Duration
  

Country
  
South Korea

7.4/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Drama, Horror

Music director
  
Han Sang-Gi

Writer
  
Ki-young Kim

Language
  
Korean

The Housemaid (1960 film) movie poster

Release date
  
November 3, 1960 (1960-11-03)

Initial release
  
November 3, 1960 (South Korea)

Cast
  
Eun-shim Lee
,
Jeung-nyeo Ju
,
Jin Kyu Kim
, ,
Ahn Sung-Ki

Similar movies
  
Mary Reilly
,
A Handful of Love
,
Private Lessons
,
I've Never Had an Hilda
,
What Did You Tell God?
,
Kristin kommenderar

The Housemaid (하녀, Hanyeo) is a 1960 black-and-white South Korean film. It was directed by Kim Ki-young and starred Lee Eun-shim, Ju Jeung-nyeo and Kim Jin-kyu. It has been described in Koreanfilm.org as a "consensus pick as one of the top three Korean films of all time". This was the first film in Kim's Housemaid trilogy followed by Woman of Fire. The film was remade in 2010 by director Im Sang-soo.

Contents

The Housemaid (1960 film) movie scenes

Plot

The Housemaid (1960 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters179029p1790

The film is a domestic horror thriller telling of a family's destruction by the introduction of a sexually predatory femme fatale into the household. A composer, Dong-sik Kim has just moved into a two-story house with his wife and two children. When his pregnant wife becomes exhausted from working at a sewing machine to support the family, the composer hires a housemaid, Myung-sook to help with the work around the house. The new housemaid behaves strangely, catching rats with her hands, spying on the composer, seducing him and eventually becoming pregnant by him.

The Housemaid (1960 film) The Housemaid 1960 The Criterion Collection

The composer's wife convinces the housemaid to induce a miscarriage by falling down a flight of stairs. After this incident, the housemaid's behavior becomes increasingly more erratic. She tricks the composer's son Chang-soon into believing that he has ingested poisoned water and in a panic he falls to his death down a flight of stairs. She threatens to kill the composer's newborn son, and actually does kill the composer's crippled daughter Ae-soon by force-feeding her poisoned rice. Myung-sook persuades the composer to commit suicide with her by swallowing rat poison.

The Housemaid (1960 film) The Housemaid 1960 Film TV Tropes

The film ends with the composer reading the story from a newspaper with his wife. The narrative of the film has apparently been told by the composer, who then all smiles warns the film audience that this is just the sort of thing could happen to anyone.

Cast

The Housemaid (1960 film) 15 Essential Films for an Introduction to Classic South Korean

  • Kim Jin-kyu as Dong-sik Kim (the husband/father)
  • Ju Jeung-ryu as Mrs. Kim (the wife/mother)
  • Lee Eun-shim as Myung-sook (the housemaid)
  • Um Aing-ran as Kyung-hee Cho (the factory worker who takes piano lessons)
  • Ko Seon-ae as Seon-young Kwak (the factory worker who commits suicide)
  • Ahn Sung-ki as Chang-soon Kim (the son)
  • Lee Yoo-ri as Ae-soon Kim (the daughter)
  • Kang Seok-je
  • Na Jeong-ok
  • Critical appraisal

    The Housemaid (1960 film) Lindseys Film Odyssey Hanyo The Housemaid 1960

    In 2003, Jean-Michel Frodon, editor-in-chief of Cahiers du cinéma, wrote that the discovery of The Housemaid by the West, over forty years after the film's debut, was a "marvelous feeling—marvelous not just because one finds in writer-director Kim Ki-young a truly extraordinary image maker, but in his film such an utterly unpredictable work".

    The Housemaid (1960 film) The housemaid 1960 Kim Kiyoung Subttulos en espaol YouTube

    Comparing the director to Luis Buñuel, Frodon wrote Kim is "capable of probing deep into the human mind, its desires and impulses, while paying sarcastic attention to the details". He called The Housemaid "shocking", noting that "the shocking nature of the film is both disturbing and pleasurable". Frodon pointed out that The Housemaid was only one early major film in the director's career, and that Kim Ki-young would continue "running wild through obsessions and rebellion" with his films for decades to come.

    References

    The Housemaid (1960 film) Wikipedia
    The Housemaid (1960 film) IMDb The Housemaid (1960 film) themoviedb.org