Welcome to Gokseong: Population — Mostly Cursed
Na Hong-jin’s The Wailing is the kind of movie that grabs you by the throat, whispers an ancient curse in your ear, and then politely offers you a bowl of rice while you contemplate the end of humanity. Released in 2016, this South Korean Lovecraftian fever dream blends demonic possession, small-town paranoia, religious hysteria, and a father’s worst nightmare into one gorgeously deranged cinematic stew.
Imagine The Exorcist met True Detective, went hiking in rural Korea, and accidentally stepped into Twin Peaks. That’s The Wailing. It’s funny, it’s horrifying, it’s devastating — and it might be the most haunting “parenting gone wrong” film since Bambi.
Meet Jong-goo: The World’s Least Competent Policeman
Our protagonist, Officer Jong-goo (Kwak Do-won), is not what you’d call “sharp.” He’s the kind of small-town cop who would lose a staring contest with a potato. But that’s part of the charm — because when Gokseong starts descending into madness, Jong-goo reacts exactly how any of us would: by sweating profusely, making bad decisions, and yelling “What the hell is happening?” every five minutes.
When villagers begin killing their families in violent, foaming-at-the-mouth rampages, Jong-goo is thrust into a case that’s way above his pay grade. At first, he suspects mushrooms. Yes, mushrooms. Because in rural horror logic, everything weird starts with bad produce.
But when that theory falls apart — along with his composure, his sanity, and several corpses — he’s forced to consider something far darker: that a mysterious Japanese hermit in the woods (Jun Kunimura) might be an actual demon.
The Stranger Danger from Hell
The “Japanese stranger” is one of the most sinister yet ambiguous horror villains of the decade. He lives in the forest, eats deer raw, and apparently moonlights as a collector of cursed family photos. Naturally, everyone blames him for everything, because in small-town horror movies, xenophobia is always the first supernatural symptom.
But here’s where The Wailing gets interesting — because the film never tells you whether he’s the devil or just a really creepy foreigner with bad table manners. For every scene where he looks demonic, there’s another where he seems like the victim of superstition. It’s a brilliant moral tug-of-war — a battle between logic, fear, and the human tendency to point at the weirdest guy in town and scream, “Burn him!”
If nothing else, it’s a cautionary tale: maybe don’t build your house in the middle of a foggy forest surrounded by angry villagers and cursed goats.
The Possession of Little Hyo-jin
Of course, things get personal when Jong-goo’s daughter, Hyo-jin (Kim Hwan-hee), starts acting like a feral raccoon that’s learned English. She’s rude, violent, and suddenly very into knives — basically every parent’s worst teenage nightmare condensed into a demon-child.
Her possession scenes are terrifying because they feel so grounded. She’s not spewing pea soup or floating on the ceiling — she’s just breaking down psychologically, oscillating between heartbreak and horror. One minute she’s screaming insults at her father; the next, she’s sobbing in confusion. It’s disturbing, tragic, and — in true Na Hong-jin fashion — uncomfortably funny at times.
When she growls, “You useless pig,” you can almost feel the entire audience collectively agree, “She’s not wrong.”
Enter the Shaman: Rituals, Drums, and Absolute Chaos
Desperate, Jong-goo calls in a professional — not a priest, not a scientist, but a shaman. Because nothing says “this will definitely help” like a man showing up in a floral jacket, banging drums, and screaming at ghosts for twelve minutes straight.
Il-gwang (Hwang Jung-min), the shaman-for-hire, is a showman in the truest sense. His ritual scene is the film’s centerpiece — a dizzying, rhythmic ballet of fire, animal blood, and divine rage. It’s mesmerizing and ridiculous at the same time, like Cirque du Soleil if it were directed by Satan.
The scene builds to a fever pitch, with Jong-goo and his family watching in terror while the shaman violently flails at invisible spirits — until Jong-goo, in peak bad-decision mode, interrupts the ritual because it “feels wrong.” And just like that, all hell breaks loose.
Moral of the story: if your shaman is doing his job, let the man finish.
Faith, Fear, and One Big Existential Dumpster Fire
At its core, The Wailing isn’t about demons or cults — it’s about confusion. The villagers, the cops, the shamans — everyone’s convinced they know the truth, but every revelation contradicts the last. Is the Japanese man evil? Is the woman in white (Chun Woo-hee) a savior or a seductress? Is the shaman a fraud or just incompetent?
Na Hong-jin weaponizes ambiguity. Every clue feels like a red herring wrapped in divine mystery. By the final act, you’re not sure who to believe — which is exactly the point. Faith and doubt, good and evil, all collapse into the same murky chaos.
It’s cosmic horror, Korean style: the gods don’t just not care — they’re actively messing with you for entertainment.
The Cinematography: Beauty in the Bleak
Visually, The Wailing is a masterpiece. The mountain village of Gokseong is both stunning and oppressive — all misty valleys, rotting barns, and perpetually wet grass. The color palette shifts from lush greens to sickly yellows as the story decays, mirroring the infection spreading through the town.
Every frame feels soaked in dread. Even the daylight scenes look haunted, like the sun itself is too scared to shine. Na Hong-jin uses long takes and quiet moments not to lull you, but to trap you — to make you feel the weight of the air before it fills with screams.
And yet, somehow, there’s humor in the bleakness. Jong-goo’s bumbling police squad, constantly gossiping and panicking, provides moments of absurd levity. It’s as if Hot Fuzz wandered into a biblical apocalypse.
The Ending: No Answers, Just Pain (and Demons)
By the time the credits roll, everyone’s either dead, possessed, or spiritually bankrupt. Jong-goo returns home too soon, breaking the mysterious woman’s warning to “wait for the third crow.” (Patience is a virtue, but not in horror movies.) His daughter massacres their family, and he dies holding onto fading memories of happier times.
Meanwhile, the Japanese stranger reveals his true demonic form — red-eyed, smirking, and snapping photos of his victims like a tourist in Hell. The shaman? Possibly working for the demon all along. The woman in white? Maybe a fallen angel. Maybe a ghost. Maybe your sleep paralysis demon. Who knows?
Na Hong-jin doesn’t give us closure — just a cruel, haunting reminder that evil doesn’t need to explain itself.
Why It Works: Madness, Mastery, and Morbid Humor
The Wailing shouldn’t work. It’s overlong, absurdly complex, and refuses to make sense — but that’s exactly what makes it brilliant. It’s the cinematic equivalent of waking up from a nightmare and realizing you might still be dreaming.
It’s also unexpectedly funny. Between the hysterical villagers, Jong-goo’s clumsy policing, and the world’s most extra exorcism, the film finds humor in human panic. Because sometimes the only thing you can do in the face of ancient evil is laugh — and then immediately regret laughing.
Final Thoughts: Apocalypse, But Make It Existential
The Wailing is a masterpiece of dread — a 156-minute panic attack that somehow leaves you grateful for the experience. It’s not just horror; it’s a meditation on belief, guilt, and the futility of trying to understand a universe that clearly hates you.
It’s the rare film that scares you, breaks your heart, and then makes you laugh at your own confusion. And like the best horror, it doesn’t end when the lights come on — it lingers, whispering that maybe the real curse isn’t in Gokseong. Maybe it’s the human need to find meaning in madness.
Final Rating: ★★★★★
Mood: Existential dread marinated in goat’s blood
Best Watched With: Strong soju, weak faith, and absolutely no plans to sleep tonight.
