The director of The Wailing steps back into the spotlight. On May 17, Cannes decides.
K-Drama & Film
May 17, 9:30 PM Cannes time. Na Hong-jin’s Hope screens for the first time anywhere in the world.
The director of The Wailing has been silent for nearly ten years. On May 17, that silence ends — in the most watched screening room on earth, in front of the jury led by Park Chan-wook, the first Korean ever to hold that position at Cannes.
In Korea, Na Hong-jin is already in the conversation with Park Chan-wook and Bong Joon-ho. But “in the conversation” isn’t the same as confirmed. Hope — $37 million, Hollywood cast, a decade in the making — is the film that either closes that argument or reopens it entirely.
Korean film fans have been watching this build for months. May 17, they find out.
What We Know Going In
- Date: May 17, Grand Théâtre Lumière, Cannes — Official Competition
- Runtime: 160 minutes
- Budget: Approx. $37 million — the largest in Korean film history
- US Distribution: Neon — the company that brought Parasite to American audiences
- Jury President: Park Chan-wook — the first Korean to hold that position at Cannes
- First Korean film in Cannes Competition since: Decision to Leave (2022)
- Score: Michael Abels — composer of Get Out, Us, and Nope
- First footage: A 91-second official clip, released through the Cannes website
The clip showed enough. A carbine rifle in the hands of a village youth. A cow left dead in the road. Something crossing the sky that moved too fast to be a cloud. Na Hong-jin, characteristically, revealed almost nothing — and somehow told you everything.
The Official Synopsis
A wildfire cuts off communications in Hopo, an isolated coastal village near the DMZ. While police chief Beomsuk (Hwang Jung-min) and rookie officer Seonge (HoYeon) hold the village together and protect its elderly residents, the hunting party that went up into the mountains starts getting hunted.
That’s the setup. With Na Hong-jin, the setup is never the point.
The Cast
Hwang Jung-min as Beomsuk, the village police chief. One of the most trusted actors in Korean cinema — and the man who played the shaman Ilgwang in The Wailing. His presence here carries weight beyond the role.
Jo In-sung as Seonggi, the hunter. A major commercial star stepping into Na Hong-jin’s world for the first time.
HoYeon as Seonge, the rookie officer. Known globally from Squid Game. Na Hong-jin casting her is a signal, not just a choice.
Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander as an alien presence. Real-life partners. Na Hong-jin’s reasoning: a non-human entity requires a non-verbal trust that only a real relationship can produce.
Taylor Russell and Cameron Britton round out the international cast — Bones and All and Mindhunter, respectively. This film spans three continents.
Why Korean Film Fans Are Nervous
It’s not doubt. It’s the specific anxiety that comes from expectations that have grown too large to be entirely safe.
Na Hong-jin is the kind of director who makes a film an event even when it fails. But The Wailing didn’t fail — it became one of the most analyzed Korean films ever made, and it set a standard that has been impossible to match for a decade.
The production scale here is unprecedented for Korean genre cinema. The overseas casting is unprecedented. The combination of SF, folk horror, DMZ geography, and a bilingual structure is unlike anything he’s attempted before. Michael Abels composing the score — the man behind the sonic architecture of Get Out — suggests the film is operating in a register Korean audiences haven’t encountered from a domestic director.
All of that raises the question nobody in Seoul wants to say out loud: what if the expectations themselves have become the problem?
The answer comes on May 17.
The Park Chan-wook Factor
This year, three Korean films were invited to Cannes. Hope in Competition. Yeon Sang-ho’s Gunche in Midnight Screenings. Jeong Ju-ri’s Dora in Directors’ Fortnight. The strongest showing Korean cinema has made at Cannes in years.
And sitting in the jury president’s chair: Park Chan-wook.
He was direct at the press conference — he would not be giving Korean films extra points. Awards, he said, should go to films that last 50 or 100 years. Nationality, genre, political ideology — none of it factors in. Only the work itself.
A Korean director judging. A Korean director being judged. Korean cinema as both the standard-setter and the contender. This kind of moment doesn’t come around often.
Before Hope arrives, the first official clip is already out — and it’s worth watching closely. A Korean insider’s read on what the footage is actually showing: Na Hong-jin’s Hope — First Clip, Full Breakdown, and What Seoul Is Expecting
Before You Watch
Three films. That’s the entire Na Hong-jin filmography. All three are essential.
The Chaser (2008) — His debut. Based on a real serial killer case that shook Korea. Reset the standard for Korean thrillers overnight. Watch on Netflix →
The Yellow Sea (2010) — A Yanbian Korean-Chinese taxi driver crosses into Korea to carry out a contract killing. Two and a half hours with no room to breathe. The most visceral film in his filmography. Watch on Netflix →
The Wailing (2016) — The one that made the world pay attention. Cannes Directors’ Fortnight. One of the most analyzed Korean films ever made. The ending is still being argued about in online communities today. Watch this before Hope — there are threads that connect directly. Streaming info and full breakdown →
First reactions from Cannes drop after the May 17 screening. I’ll be watching.
Korean film and drama carry layers of cultural meaning that don’t translate on their own. If there’s a Korean film you want properly decoded — drop it in the comments. I’ll cover it in an upcoming post.
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