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The Housemaid

Original title: Hanyeo
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
6.4K
YOUR RATING
Kim Jin-kyu, Jeung-nyeo Ju, and Eun-shim Lee in The Housemaid (1960)
CrimeDramaHorrorThriller

A composer and his wife are thrown into turmoil when a housemaid becomes more than they bargained for.A composer and his wife are thrown into turmoil when a housemaid becomes more than they bargained for.A composer and his wife are thrown into turmoil when a housemaid becomes more than they bargained for.

  • Director
    • Kim Ki-young
  • Writer
    • Kim Ki-young
  • Stars
    • Kim Jin-kyu
    • Jeung-nyeo Ju
    • Eun-shim Lee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    6.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kim Ki-young
    • Writer
      • Kim Ki-young
    • Stars
      • Kim Jin-kyu
      • Jeung-nyeo Ju
      • Eun-shim Lee
    • 41User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos59

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    Top cast16

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    Kim Jin-kyu
    • Dong-sik Kim
    • (as Jin Kyu Kim)
    Jeung-nyeo Ju
    • Mrs. Kim
    Eun-shim Lee
    • Myung-sook
    Aeng-ran Eom
    • Kyung-hee Cho
    Seon-ae Ko
    • Seon-young Kwak
    Sook-Rang Wang
    Seok-je Kang
    Jeong-ok Na
    Ahn Sung-ki
    Ahn Sung-ki
    • Chang-soon Kim
    • (as Sung-kee Ahn)
    Yoo-ri Lee
    • Ae-soon Kim
    Jeong-hee Ok
    Ok-joo Le
    Nam-hyeon Choi
    Bang-Choon Nam
    Seok-geun Jo
      Man Kim
      • Director
        • Kim Ki-young
      • Writer
        • Kim Ki-young
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews41

      7.26.3K
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      Featured reviews

      7gbill-74877

      A wild ride

      An interesting mix of film noir, melodrama, and morality tale, which also does a good job of keeping the audience off-balance. There may also be some social commentary in here relative to class and making us wonder to what lengths someone will go to preserve their reputation and upward mobility, but I think these were in a minor key, even if the film does bring Parasite to mind. There is something mythical about how this woman manages to invert the whole order of this house, and yet it's also got moments that are intensely dramatic and real, and that was interesting. The threat always seems clear and present to us, because the housemaid (Lee Eun-shim) seems a little off, there are constant trips to the cupboard with rat poison, and the family has a couple of kids. The character actions never quite seem to make sense which worked against it for me, but that's a part of what works the audience up into a frenzy, and keeps it a wild ride.

      The acting in the film is unfortunately not one of its highlights, but Lee Eun-shim certainly is striking in the shots of her glaring through the window, and sultry when she's getting intimate with her boss (Kim Jin-kyu). I liked the shot of her bare feet stepping up onto his shoes, followed by the one of his back as her arms circled around him, and in a later scene when her calf sinuously winding around his - they capture the seduction well. Less successful were the cliché, heavy-handed moments, like the lightning hitting a tree after the first infidelity (it made me think of the cliché opening to a novel, It was a dark and stormy night....). The cinematography is pretty nice, though I wish it hadn't been as confined and given a little more freedom.

      At its bottom though, this is a conservative film about the importance of family and avoiding the female temptress, which is an age old and tired theme. And even if the man can't manage that, well, his wife should shoulder some blame, and in this case, she does, for having wanted a bigger house (ugh). It was for this reason and for the unevenness in the character motivations that I didn't rate the film higher, but it was certainly entertaining, and definitely had camp appeal.

      Quote: "Where are you going?" "Your daddy is going to sleep with me tonight."
      mlovmo-2

      A very shocking movie, considering it was made in Korea in 1960(!)

      I bought this film on NTSC-VHS format from an online Korean business called koreapop.com. The copy evidently had been put together from two or three diffrent copies of the film, since some parts of the film looked like they were in better shape than others, and also there were English subtitles in some parts, but not most others. (Note that I bought this film knowing that it would be in Korean, with no subtitles).

      This movie features what is probably the first scene in cinematic history where a woman rapes a man- a whole 25 years before Isabella Rosellini raped Kyle McCallahan in "Blue Velvet"! As a Korean movie, it's story challenges traditional Korean propriety. The housemaid character is a castrating hose-beast: Not exactly the kind of Korean woman portrayed in most Korean movies made then or now. Director Kim Kiyoung tends to turn the conventional Korean-movie plotline on its head in this movie, since there is no real "happy-ending", in fact, things just seem to get worse and worse. The only other Korean movie similar to it in this sense, is the recently released "Kilimanjaro" (also an EXCELLENT film). This movie is indeed a Korean-movie classic. It's just too bad that the remaining copies of such classic Korean films are not given the best of care, since many, like this one, are in fairly rough shape. I hope that the Koreans will take more pride in their cinematic history and prepare for better archival storage and restoration of their nation's film legacy.
      8athanasiosze

      8.1/10. Recommended

      When it ended, i was shook. I couldn't believe how insane this movie is. Insane in a good way. I couldn't believe this is a 1960 movie. Even by today standards, this is insane and mindblowing. During the first 20-30 minutes, i thought i knew where it goes and the same will everyone think. But make no mistake, you don't have a clue where it goes. It's not just cheap twists that made this unpredictable but organically flowing turns of the story. I mean, this is coherent and it doesn't shock you just for the shake of shock, with dumb twists that come out of nowhere. The person who wrote this knew exactly what he was doing. Because this is not just insane but brilliant too.

      I can't rate it higher because i was not that excited during the first 40-50 minutes. This movie takes its time. I repeat, you think it is just an ordinary story, like a drama romance film noir of this era, with lovers thinking the same old schemes etc. No, it's not. This is way too original and creative. Of course way better than the mediocre 2010 version. The 2010 HANYO is not good. But this is.

      Icing on the cake: The last minute. I couldn't believe my own eyes, i watched it three times, that indicates how much i loved it.
      9Rodrigo_Amaro

      Wonderful!

      "Hanyo" ("The Housemaid") works like a very good piece of classical music: It has a slow beginning that seems to go forever, then it adds some crescendos here and there to makes us alarmed, creating a thrilling suspense and a dramatic situation that leads to a powerful and killer ending. You might applause after all that, both the music and the film because when you see the whole picture you realize what a wonderful and memorable works of art they are.

      The housemaid of the title is a dangerous female student who enters in the life of a married piano teacher trying to get love from him, no matter if the teacher's wife and kids will suffer so that they can be together. The teacher is controlled by both housemaid and the wife, and he needs to make a decision fast before things get worse for everyone. Here's a story about the value of family in the middle of betrayals, delusions, obsession, tradition, real love versus psychotic forms of love, and plenty of more keywords you may think.

      At times "Fatal Attraction" appeared in my mind since there's a significant similarity between both films, and if the story sounds like cliché it is but you must see how it works and who is working with. We're talking about a Korean film and as some of us know, Asian females in older films didn't have the kind of roles the women had in here, powerful and energetic characters that almost boss around with the only men in the story like he was a puppy dog. And the villain? Oh boy! She was one of the most dramatic and perfectly well written villains of all time. Frightening, desperate to the point of threatening the teacher's kids who gets suspicious of everything she serves to them thinking they might get poisoned, this woman knows how to find a answer to everything in order to ruin people's lives, from false rumors to murder.

      Don't be let down by the slowness of the first half hour (the characters introduction), try to stay focused all the time and you'll be totally surprised until the very last minute. This is a great film! 9/10
      8AlsExGal

      I'm always looking for a film that scares me...

      ... and this one truly did besides being as intense a psychological study as Joseph Losey's "The Servant". I am generally unscareable and though I appreciate the talent in films like "The Exorcist" which can frighten others, for me it always falls flat as I must have been born repeating the advertising line from "Last House on the Left" stating "Remember...it is only a movie, it is only a movie." So the fact that this was both fascinating as a character study and scary enough to make one bejeeberless was impressive.

      I actually jumped in my seat at one point in "The Housemaid" and will never look at packages of rat poison the same or even filled glasses of water or some simple rice in a bowl. This psychological masterpiece can cause heart palpitations and I can't even imagine it could be improved in a remake. I kept thinking that the "housemaid" and her unfathomable facial expressions were reminiscent of the maid to Francisco Rabal in Bunuel's "Viridiana" and it was fun to hear the post film comments saying Ki-Young was sometimes compared to Luis.

      All in all, I'm so glad I stayed up and watched it in the middle of the night. Sure I could have watched it at a different time, but there's something right about watching a film like that in total darkness and my only complaint regarded the end, but I won't quibble since I also dig films like "The Woman in the Window".

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      Related interests

      James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
      Crime
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror
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      Thriller

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        This was the first and the last film Eun-shim Lee (Myung-sook) starred in. The public hated immoral Myung-sook so much that no director hired her after this film. [She may not have had a starring role, but she was hired for two films after this movie and also appeared in one movie previously.]
      • Goofs
        (at around 1h 29 mins) The girl, Ae-soon, gets out of bed surprisingly quickly and effortlessly for a young woman needing crutches.
      • Quotes

        Dong-sik Kim: What does the law state about a man who cheats on his wife?

        Lyu: [laughs] Sometimes he can get a lighter sentence than for a traffic violation. Once his wife forgives him, he's acquitted. Just as you wouldn't tell your son you're a murderer of a thief, even between couples some things should be kept secret.

      • Connections
        Featured in The Taste of Money (2012)

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      FAQ18

      • How long is The Housemaid?Powered by Alexa
      • What does the "two men eat" comment mean?
      • Does HANYO's reputation guarantee its preservation?
      • How can I see the complete HANYO?

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • November 3, 1960 (South Korea)
      • Country of origin
        • South Korea
      • Language
        • Korean
      • Also known as
        • Hizmetçi
      • Filming locations
        • Seoul, South Korea
      • Production companies
        • Kim Ki-Young Production
        • Korean Literature Film
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 49m(109 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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