5.4.25

A Film a Week - Revelations / Gyesirok

 previously published on Asian Movie Pulse


Yeon Sang-ho first established himself as, potentially, the next big thing in animation with his debut- and sophomore features “The Fake” (2013) and “Seoul Station” (2016). With the latter’s live-action sequel, “Train to Busan” (2016), he nominated himself for the title of the new Korean master of genre filmmaking. However, the trilogy’s ending, “Peninsula” (2020) was underwhelming, to put it mildly, even for the COVID-era standards, while two more two more of his flicks, the superhero action comedy “Psychokinesis” (2018) and the Netflix-produced SF-action movie “Jung-E” (2023) were mere passable efforts.

The energetic filmmaker then turned to work on a couple of TV series, but now he is back to the big screens, conditionally, with “Revelations”, an adaptation of his own web comic. Conditionally because “Revelations” is a Netflix piece with no theatre- or festival screening intended, despite the backing from the powerhouse genre auteur Alfonso Cuarron who assumed the role of the executive producer here. Also, this is a step away from Yeon’s general habitat of genre spectacles and towards the psychological realism within the framework of a grim thriller revolving around a child molester / serial killer and a pastor and a police detective who try to catch him.

First we meet the pastor Min-chan (Ryu Jun-yeol, glimpsed in Hun Jang’s “A Taxi Driver”), a devout man of faith who has to face a double trouble in his earthly life. He has to deal with his wife’s infidelity, and also with a threat of a mega-church being built in his area of work by his former mentor’s son. When his encounter with a recently released sex offender Kwon (Shin Min-jae, re-uniting with Yeon after “Jung-E”) coincides with his son going missing for a while, he sets on catching and punishing him. Even when the son reappears, Min-chan is sure that Kwon is guilty of something and has religious visions as a “proof”.

On the other hand, Kwon is also pursued by the police detective Yeon-hee (Shin Hyeon-bin, lately mostly active on television) who also has a score to settle with him. Namely, he abducted and murdered her sister in the past, so the detective wants to bring him to justice. It might go against the idea that a police officer must not be personally involved with the case in order to close it efficiently and justly, but here it is taken as a “booster” for Yeon-hee’s motivation, which is further enhanced with wobbly flashbacks and visions of her sister.

If “Revelations” were more toned-down, psychologically dense drama about the characters’ motivations and convictions, it would probably be a better movie of a character study sort. The actors’ efforts go into that direction and Ryu Jun-yeol is the particularly good and convincing here. The actor’s ability to switch his presence from well-meaning to menacing perfectly matches the traits of the character he plays.

However, Yeon aims for a classical thriller here, so he puts an accent on the “race against time” trope. Unfortunately, it never gets a firm grip on the viewers and the reasons for that are several. Firstly, he does not vary his visual style enough, so Yeon-hee’s flashbacks are the only step away from the quasi-matter-of-factly realism that dominates the film’s atmosphere. Not even Min-chan’s visions get a special treatment. Secondly, it is obvious that the film was constructed for small screens, so the absence of the “movie magic” is felt, sometimes painfully. And finally, the only flourish present throughout the movie is the choral score by Kim Dong-wook and Alan Tyler that quickly becomes repetitive and tiresome in promising something Yeon does not want or does not how to deliver: an examination of the characters’ convictions, religious or otherwise.

Therefore, “Revelations” becomes and stays a generic “Netflix-and-chill” experience: watchable, but forgetable. It is so low-engaging that it will depart the viewers’ thoughts and memory way quicker than it entered them.


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