New York

Film Review: ‘Stoker’ finds ‘Oldboy’ director in America

Mia Wasikowska plays a deranged teenager in Park Chan-wook's "Stoker" Credit: Macall Polay
Mia Wasikowska plays a deranged teenager in Park Chan-wook’s “Stoker”
Credit: Macall Polay

South Korean director Park Chan-wook isn’t terribly known outside of fanboy circles, but his reputation is secure, thanks mostly to the hammer-wielding, octopus-slurping genre grinder “Oldboy.” Traditionally a cult hit from a foreign filmmaker leads to a dispiriting American stint, but Park is too much a stylist to get ground up by the Hollywood machine. His English-language debut, “Stoker” finds him in the United States but working on its margins. It’s a serial killer pic, but a Park Chan-wook serial killer pic, which is to say it’s obsessed not with plot or even grisly murders but with visual design, outré ideas and a hothouse atmosphere, no doubt gleaned from watching too many American movies.

It’s a good thing the filmmaker doesn’t care about plot, because it’s not “Stoker”’s strongest point. Park decided his first American film should be the first produced script cowritten by Wentworth Miller, the star of “Prison Break.” A teenager with the loaded name of India Stoker (Mia Wasikowska) loses her father in a car accident (allegedly!). The funeral brings forth mysterious uncle Charles (Matthew Goode), who intrigues her first with his handsomeness and sex appeal, and then by revealing that he likes to snap necks with his belt.

Of course, there are twists, but Miller’s script also goes to some weird places: India has the hots for her uncle, as does her widowed mom (Nicole Kidman, underused but reliably wild-eyed), and she soon finds herself turned on by his blasé treatment of other people’s lives, leading to a genuinely out there shower scene.

Park grasps onto these elements as tight as he can, doing his best to obscure the silly story with an array of fetishistic phantasmagoria. Park’s images, as ever, are fussy and borderline (and often actually) OCD. It’s not just him showing off (although it’s that, too): the power of surfaces is an idea that tends to be built into his narratives. “Sympathy for Lady Vengeance” finds a woman with hot crimson eye shadow whose aggressively stylized revenge masks deeper trauma. Still, despite amplifying its transgressive bits, Park proves unable to get deeper into the script, and frankly seems bored by its machinations. Park works best when astride unbelievable tragedy, as in his best work (thus far), “Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance.” “Stoker” seems like a placeholder, an excuse to work out his pet themes and talents before a project captures his complete attention. (3 out of 5 Globes)


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
Local

Legislative staffer: I was threatened by Sheldon Silver

A legislative staffer says she received threats from Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver's office after she reported being raped by a legislative lawyer.

Local

Anthony Weiner pens first op-ed of mayoral candidacy

In his first opinion piece of his mayoral candidacy, Anthony Weiner proposed taxing "foreign oligarchs" and expressed concern for yeshiva students.

Local

Man captured on photo taken with stolen phone…

A 25-year-old man used an app on his phone to take a photo remotely of the person who may have stolen it.

National

Survey: 70 million tourists will use U.S. public…

A new survey finds that 70 million tourists will use public transportation when visiting U.S. cities like Miami, San Francisco and Chicago this summer.

The Word

VIDEO: 'Star Trek Into Darkness' cut Benedict Cumberbatch…

J.J. Abrams was on "Conan" last night, where he revealed that he actually filmed a scene of Benedict Cumberbatch, who plays the villain, in the shower.

Entertainment

'Frances Ha''s Greta Gerwig talks about the death…

Greta Gerwig, who stars in and co-wrote "Frances Ha," an indie comedy directed by Noah Baumbach, explains why she's obsessed with passing out of youth.

The Word

The Word: Watch Jennifer Aniston spoof her squeaky-clean…

Jennifer Aniston plays a loving wife to Jason Sudeikis and mom to two adorable kids in the red band trailer for "We're the Millers." Sounds about right for America's Sweetheart.…

Books

How to survive your children during the summer

Jane Roper, the author of the memoir  "Double Time: How I Survived — and Mostly Thrived — Through the First Three Years of Mothering Twins," knows…

NHL

Rangers face uphill battle starting with Game 4

The Rangers have trailed 0-3 in a best-of-seven series nine times in their history. Six times they have been swept.

NFL

Mornhinweg rebuilding Mark Sanchez's floundering career

If Mark Sanchez is a better quarterback this year, it might be because he doesn’t have Tony Sparano to kick around any longer.

NFL

Hakeem Nicks suprising no-show at first day of…

Conspicuous by their absences, however, was the Giants’ starting pair of wideouts, Victor Cruz and Hakeem Nicks.

NFL

Playing the Field: ESPN layoffs and Sergio Garcia…

ESPN layoffs and Sergio Garcia racism towards Tiger Woods

Style

Packing for Memorial Day Weekend

The essentials to pack for your Memorial Day weekend away.

Food

Get your ball fix with Metro's guide to…

Who has the biggest and the best balls in New York? We went balls to the wall in our search for the city’s most coveted ballers

Lifestyle

Dating: How to get laid and get paid

How to get laid and get paid and be happy.

Style

Banana Republic and Milly head to the Hamptons

Banana Republic and Milly teamed up for a limited-edition collection inspired by the Hamptons.