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Deranged
People binge eat and suffer from extreme thirst, which leads them to go crazy for water. They cannot control themselves because they are brainwashed by a parasite.
Release : | 2012 |
Rating : | 6.3 |
Studio : | CJ Entertainment, Ozone Film, |
Crew : | Production Design, Still Photographer, |
Cast : | Kim Myung-min Moon Jeong-hee Kim Dong-wan Lee Ha-nui Uhm Ji-sung |
Genre : | Drama Thriller |
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Reviews
Best movie of this year hands down!
Good movie but grossly overrated
Absolutely brilliant
I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
Director Jeong-woo Park may not have an extensive bio, but he did a styling job with this environmental disaster film. The film provides a very in-depth explanation for the epidemic caused by horsehair worms, making it very believable. It was fast-paced and exciting with literally never a dull moment as the epidemic soon causes complete pandemonium. Towards the end, it is fantastic how everything goes wrong all at once and the characters become desperate, especially when a cure is announced and all hell breaks loose as they try to get their hands on the cure. The film became more intriguing as the truth unfolds as to how and why the epidemic started. This was incredible.
This picture was frustrating to watch. The chasing-around/in-pursuit-of element stretched itself thin as any episode of Looney Tunes. No gore, no frights, nothing eerie or atmospheric. Just the live action equivalent of a cartoon rife with ridiculous anxiety. I gave this a 4 instead of a 1 because of the high production value and solid acting all around.The core story, while outlandish, is interesting, but the execution of this film just left me exhausted. It lacked grace.Avoid until you've run out of contagion films to watch.South Korea has been cranking out some real gems lately. This, however, isn't one of them.
SPOILERS!Deranged is a recent (2012) horror/thriller/monster movie that's decent enough. For comparison's sake to recent similarly themed Korean movies; it's not near on the level of say The Host, but it's quite better than incredibly disappointing Sector 7.Here's your story: A severely dehydrated and decomposed body washes up on shore somewhere in Korea. The medical examiners are a bit baffled at the cause of death, but alert the police that this isn't the first identical case they've seen. Soon enough, more dead bodies start arriving by the handful, then dozens, then hundreds, across the whole of Korea. Widespread panic sets in, and it quickly becomes clear that some type of deadly outbreak is underway. With few clues at all, the authorities fortunately catch a break when they observe some of deaths occurring in real time on video cameras throughout the country. What they see appears to be people desperately trying to drown themselves as if they were possessed or on drugs. Another break in the case soon appears when one of the bodies is recovered before it can make it to a waterway to drown itself. What's inside the body are mutated parasitic worms that have latched on to the human nervous system in order to feed & reproduce.The worms feed on the host, requiring massive amounts of water to stay hydrated, until they are fully grown. Once in the adult stage, they drive the host to the nearest body of water where they can escape in order to reproduce. Surgery is not an option, but at least the doctors and scientists can now study the parasites and try to find a way to kill them. They better find a solution quick though, because the epidemic is spinning out of control. The pacing of the early half of this movie is really nicely done. The outbreak occurs suddenly and without explanation the tension is palpable as thousands of people are soon contaminated, and efforts to contain the problem are not working. Before long, infected people are everywhere, and their zombie like insistence to get to water is entertainingly portrayed. This part of the movie certainly gives you a "we're all screwed" impression that the end of the world is near.Miraculously, there already exists a solution for the problem, in the form of a rather obscure over the counter drug that was recently discontinued. The general public races out to buy up the remaining supply off the shelves, while the government works to restart production as quickly as possible. The lone pharma company that makes the drug can't meet demand alone though, and being a dickish pharma company, they don't want to release the drug's formula because of the profits at stake. The outbreak, the government's efforts in containing it, and the pharma company's involvement are all effectively portrayed. There's also some lingering concerns as to how and why this outbreak started, and why this otherwise unimportant drug is the cure all. It makes for an interesting case study that covers a wide range of the implications of modern medicine & science, corporate power & greed, etc Where this film fails to succeed a bit is on a personal level. While the wider focus is on the overall problem at hand, there's also a separate focal point involving 2 brothers and their families affected by the epidemic. These personal stories are attempted to be interjected in similar manner as in The Host, to give you a family/personal connection to the overall monster story, but it's not very effective. Part of the problem is the actors and actresses here are not nearly as talented as the comparable lead cast in the Host, and worse, their interpersonal stories are not nearly as well written. I simply did not care about the cop and the relationship with his estranged scientist wife because of the cursory nature of it. The other brother's efforts to save his family are undermined by a similar problem these stories are underwritten and seemed forced into the story without much foresight. Either they should have devoted more effort developing these characters before and during the events, or they should have dedicated less time to them altogether. As it stood, it came off as a somewhat half assed attempt to have you invest in some random characters as they reconnect with one another while under duress didn't work!Overall, this film's not bad for what it is it works OK enough to slightly recommend, and it does so on a moderate budget for a horror/monster film.Bottom Line: 6 or 7 stars or so. 6 stars it is.
Thousands of people have died and the company who has the cure is refusing to give it up for free. And the prime minister give them the money that they want because that's capitalism and you cannot give up on capitalism, because where would the world then wind up? Well, it would wind up in decency and those who want to profit from other people's misery deserve very slow and painful torture to death - that's plain for anyone who can think just a little. I guess this film is done a little with tongue in cheek. That those who would not give up the medicine for free are also those who spread the disease comes as no surprise because if you can do one bad thing then you can do the other. There's only one place for capitalists and that is jail together with all other thieves. Incidentally, it's a well known dilemma if you are allowed to steal in order to save lives and the answer is that it is no dilemma - the person who would not give up a cure for free is the person who not only steals from humanity but who also murders. That is why that everything that has to do with medicine has to be state owned and free for all people in society - only brainwashed Americans will not understand this.