Outside of the fact that he makes great movies, my favorite
thing about Bong Joon-ho is that you never know to expect from one project to
the next. The South Korean director has turned out the greatest modern creature
feature with The Host, which is still so much more than just
that. His resume also includes murder mysteries (Mother,
Memories of Murder), post-apocalyptic sci-fi set entirely on
a moving train (Snowpiercer), and even black comedy
(Barking Dogs Never Bite). Bong’s latest,
Okja, fits into his larger body of work by being both
utterly fantastic and unlike anything he’s done before, despite the presence of
a fantastic beast.
Like it or not, Okja may well be
remembered as the poster-child for the old guard and the new clashing over how
we consume film. With only a limited theatrical run scheduled, Netflix plans to
release the movie on its streaming service the same day. (Side note: if
possible, see this in theaters; it’s worth it, I promise.) Earlier this year,
when it premiered at Cannes, it caused controversy at the fest because it won’t
get a French theatrical run, and some Korean cinemas refuse to show the movie
unless Netflix delays the streaming release.
Okja finds itself at the center of a
conflict we haven’t heard the last of—not by a long shot—but hopefully all that
attention doesn’t distract the actual film. An E.T-style
riff on the friendship between a child and a weird creature, it’s sweet and
adventurous, thrilling and heartfelt, and a sharp political satire about the
shallowness of consumer culture, corporate eco promises, and hidden agendas.
When the nefarious Mirando corporation—recently the
recipient of a corporate image makeover—kidnaps her best friend, a young girl
named Mija (Ahn Seo-hyun) risks everything to rescue her. Here’s the kicker:
Mija’s best friend is Okja, a massive genetically modified “super pig”—think a
hippo crossed with Eeyore from Winnie the Pooh. Mija’s quest
takes her from the Korean countryside to the bright lights of Seoul to the
streets of New York City to factory farm slaughterhouses and covert genetics
labs. She encounters members of the Animal Liberation Front (I never in a
million years thought I’d ever see a mainstream movie that portrays the ALF as
good guys) and generally acts way more gallant than most tweens.
Tonally all over the map—Okja leaps back
and forth from warm, wondrous, and goofy to bleak, grim, and heart-rending—it
plays out like an Alice in Wonderland-type fable. Mija takes
the role of heroic innocent. In the course of her quest she encounters twin
witches, the Mirando sisters Lucy and Nancy (both played by Tilda Swinton), one
overtly evil while the other presents a candy-coated smile to the outside
world. Lucy even has a henchman, played by Giancarlo Esposito. Mija enlists the
help of the earnest, but possibly misguided supporters in the ALF (Paul Dano,
Lily Collins, Steven Yeun, Devon Bostick, and Daniel Henshall).
Across the board, the cast turns in fantastic performances.
Swinton is out of her mind once again—also playing twins again. Dano affects a
calm, serene exterior that belies a violent inner streak. But Jake Gyllenhaal
as Doctor Johnny, a Crocodile Hunter-ish nature show host fallen on hard times
and compelled to whore himself out to anyone with an open wallet, absolutely
steals the show playing to the cheapest seats. With a bushy mustache and a
truly unhinged, over-the-top mania, he’s responsible for moments of both slapstick
comedy and stomach-churning brutality—he unleashes the film’s most unsettling,
upsetting incidents, including one that can only be described as a pig rape.
(It may be CGI, but it’s raw, visceral, and wholly horrifying.)
In a packed house like this, it would be easy for a young,
relative newcomer to get lost in the shuffle. But it’s a testament to
13-year-old Ahn Seo-hyun that Mija not only holds her own, but commands every
scene. Not your typical Hollywood movie child, she doesn’t care what any of the
adults have to say—in fact, all any of them do throughout is lie to her—or
appeasing outsiders. All she wants is to save her friend and everyone else,
regardless of alignment and their own interests, can screw.
While Okja’s character design is intentionally cartoonish,
the creature carries a concrete weight—Gyllenhaal plays a human cartoon while
the actual cartoon becomes more human than most of the people. The whole film hangs
on selling that this creature, while outlandish, is very real, and both in
motion and perfectly still, she’s majestic. You practically feel the texture of
her skin as she snuggles Mija; the vibrations of her footsteps as she romps
through the forest, or an underground mall for that matter, rumble in your
chest; and when you look into her eyes, you look into something much deeper.
Like he did with his earlier, though drastically different creature feature,
Bong seamlessly integrates the special effects and uses them to enhance and
escalate the drama.
Debate over Netflix and it’s ilk and the future of movies
will continue to rage. That’s not going away anytime soon. But it’s difficult
to imagine any other way Okja could have happened. Netflix
gave Bong Joon-ho the platform to make a relatively expensive (reportedly
around $50 million) creature feature with access to incredible talent. And
while it’s definitely a sweet tale of friendship and devotion, it’s also challenging
and weird as all hell, a scathing indictment of capitalism and the corporate
meat industry, and a CGI-heavy monster movie where the real monsters walk
upright and wear pants and the true horror is what we do to the natural world
in pursuit of a dollar. This is a movie that includes the line, “Anus, as
American as apple pie,” it doesn’t get made most places.
[Grade B+]
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