Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe kisaeng (korean geisha) Wol-ha marries Kim Han-su, but soon dies because of a false accusation made up by her husbands mother and her servant. Now the ghost of Wol-ha wants revenge!The kisaeng (korean geisha) Wol-ha marries Kim Han-su, but soon dies because of a false accusation made up by her husbands mother and her servant. Now the ghost of Wol-ha wants revenge!The kisaeng (korean geisha) Wol-ha marries Kim Han-su, but soon dies because of a false accusation made up by her husbands mother and her servant. Now the ghost of Wol-ha wants revenge!
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THE PUBLIC CEMETERY UNDER THE MOON is a Korean horror from the 1960s which takes place entirely in a domestic setting. It begins with a laboured wraparound section in which the story is being narrated by an old ghost (!) before moving to the present and then delivering much of the story in flashback. A woman is driven apart from her husband by her own servant (shades of THE HOUSEMAID) but comes back from beyond the grave to seek revenge. It sounds good on paper and when it involves the ghostly stuff it's pretty decent: some graphic scenes of acid-throwing and the like make this stand out. However, much of the middle part is slower than molasses, and although it's not a long film it just seems to take forever to get anywhere, which is a shame.
A former geisha girl returns from the grave to take revenge on the servant who drove her to suicide, married her husband, and is trying to kill her son...
It starts out like an episode of the old TV series THE NAKED CITY with a deformed narrator telling us there's a million stories in a public cemetery and this in one of them. He says he used to narrate silent films (an old Korean custom?) and his tale plays like one too, laying old-time melodrama on with a trowel. There's murder, revenge, adultery, drug addiction, a girl driven to become an "entertainer", a prison break, eye-gouging, acid to the face, and a vengeful ghost whose grave splits in two so she can ascend to heaven when she's done. I don't know what was going on politically at the time but the ghost's husband was tortured by the police and sent to prison for protesting the Japanese government. It's lunatic sh!t on a low budget with lots of Mario Bava-style colored lights trying to cover a multitude of juvenile sins.
It starts out like an episode of the old TV series THE NAKED CITY with a deformed narrator telling us there's a million stories in a public cemetery and this in one of them. He says he used to narrate silent films (an old Korean custom?) and his tale plays like one too, laying old-time melodrama on with a trowel. There's murder, revenge, adultery, drug addiction, a girl driven to become an "entertainer", a prison break, eye-gouging, acid to the face, and a vengeful ghost whose grave splits in two so she can ascend to heaven when she's done. I don't know what was going on politically at the time but the ghost's husband was tortured by the police and sent to prison for protesting the Japanese government. It's lunatic sh!t on a low budget with lots of Mario Bava-style colored lights trying to cover a multitude of juvenile sins.
Attempting to get a better life, a geisha takes a job working for a rich businessman after he's let out of prison, but when her actions and eventually just her presence aggravates his mother and her servant they eventually plot to kill her but soon face her vengeful ghost on a torrented path of revenge.
Generally, this one has quite a lot to like about it. One of the strongest elements here is the story that weaves together a slew of impressive strands together which eventually all come to form the reason for her ghostly rampage. Being built as a down-on-her-luck person with a genuinely earnest streak about her, she is simply a person of bad circumstance forced into a position against her will. Becoming a geisha as a last resort until her lover is freed so they can start their relationship, that there's a ton of unwarranted animosity present in the household brings about a great deal of sympathy for her. With the life she thought she wanted but getting it ruined by others upset over her profession, the eventual poisoning and murder of both her and her infant son at their hands becomes a major focal point of the film that makes the ghostly revenge come off genuinely earned and cathartic. The other enjoyable factor in this one is the eventual catharsis found in the final half when her ghostly form arrives and sets out on a path of cruel and vicious revenge on those who wronged her. As their plan takes shape and they successfully poison her, the brief bits here focusing on how they get away with it by keeping the brother hostage and torturing him provides a brutal sequence in the middle of everything to be quite effective overall. When that eventually gives way to the ghost showing up and setting about tormenting each of them individually, this has all the hallmarks of grand Gothic horror showcase pieces utilizing eerie lighting, quick cuts, and zooms to perfect effect. The courtyard encounter and the scene out in the woods where she takes revenge on those in the household provide some chilling moments here, and with the finale setting up a fine resolution that brings everything together gives this a lot to like. There are some big issues with the film that brings this one down considerably. The main drawback is the near-total lack of any kind of ghost action that's presented here with the main focus of the first-hour building up the motivation for her to become the ghost. As a result, this whole section of the film is rife with bland melodrama rather than genre elements that would spark more interest. Filled with back-stabbing, double-crosses, illicit affairs being brought to light, and conspirators making plans in the cover of the night all become rather common occurrences in this section of the film which doesn't have the best track record to retain interest. Viewers expecting more of a straightforward ghost movie might be turned off at the reveal of the ghost not even dying until over an hour in so this dramatic approach might be a turn-off just as much as an intriguing aspect. As well, the film is bookended with unnecessary narration that doesn't need to be there and offers no new insight, leaving its inclusion pointless while also dragging this one down.
Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and Language.
Generally, this one has quite a lot to like about it. One of the strongest elements here is the story that weaves together a slew of impressive strands together which eventually all come to form the reason for her ghostly rampage. Being built as a down-on-her-luck person with a genuinely earnest streak about her, she is simply a person of bad circumstance forced into a position against her will. Becoming a geisha as a last resort until her lover is freed so they can start their relationship, that there's a ton of unwarranted animosity present in the household brings about a great deal of sympathy for her. With the life she thought she wanted but getting it ruined by others upset over her profession, the eventual poisoning and murder of both her and her infant son at their hands becomes a major focal point of the film that makes the ghostly revenge come off genuinely earned and cathartic. The other enjoyable factor in this one is the eventual catharsis found in the final half when her ghostly form arrives and sets out on a path of cruel and vicious revenge on those who wronged her. As their plan takes shape and they successfully poison her, the brief bits here focusing on how they get away with it by keeping the brother hostage and torturing him provides a brutal sequence in the middle of everything to be quite effective overall. When that eventually gives way to the ghost showing up and setting about tormenting each of them individually, this has all the hallmarks of grand Gothic horror showcase pieces utilizing eerie lighting, quick cuts, and zooms to perfect effect. The courtyard encounter and the scene out in the woods where she takes revenge on those in the household provide some chilling moments here, and with the finale setting up a fine resolution that brings everything together gives this a lot to like. There are some big issues with the film that brings this one down considerably. The main drawback is the near-total lack of any kind of ghost action that's presented here with the main focus of the first-hour building up the motivation for her to become the ghost. As a result, this whole section of the film is rife with bland melodrama rather than genre elements that would spark more interest. Filled with back-stabbing, double-crosses, illicit affairs being brought to light, and conspirators making plans in the cover of the night all become rather common occurrences in this section of the film which doesn't have the best track record to retain interest. Viewers expecting more of a straightforward ghost movie might be turned off at the reveal of the ghost not even dying until over an hour in so this dramatic approach might be a turn-off just as much as an intriguing aspect. As well, the film is bookended with unnecessary narration that doesn't need to be there and offers no new insight, leaving its inclusion pointless while also dragging this one down.
Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and Language.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Public Cemetery Under the Moon
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- KRW 11,000,000 (estimado)
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