The increasingly creepy plot is counter balanced by a genuinely tender romance, which makes the film impossible to categorise, and will no doubt limit it to obscure arthouses and cinephiles who have very strong stomachs. They won't be disappointed.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
South Korean melodrama uses a unique location, dominated by fishermen's floating huts, as the background for an overheated story that grows steadily more grotesque and unpleasant as it proceeds.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
Eerie, opaque and unblinkingly sadomasochistic.
Notorious on the festival circuit for its excruciating scenes of self-mutilation.
The film nevertheless exerts a strange sort of power that makes for compelling viewing, even as its images force one to repeatedly look away.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Kim's movie rocks -- I saw it cold a year ago, and I don't think I've been as entranced and appalled by an Asian film since Shinya Tsukamoto's "Iron Man."
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
This is the most gruesome and quease-inducing film you are likely to have seen. You may not even want to read the descriptions in this review. Yet it is also beautiful, angry and sad, with a curious sick poetry, as if the Marquis de Sade had gone in for pastel landscapes.
At once predatory and vulnerable, Jung has a primitive intensity that speaks louder than words, carrying an enigmatic and often maddeningly elusive film that's short on dialogue, rational behavior, and narrative logic.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
A movie of extremes, and that goes for its aesthetics. As gory as the scenes of torture and self-mutilation may be, they are pitted against shimmering cinematography that lends the setting the ethereal beauty of an Asian landscape painting.
Daring, mesmerizing and exceedingly hard to forget.