I actually thought that the scattered sequences of family drama were probably the most effective in the entire film, which I was quite surprised by. Particularly good is the scene where the father talks to his unconcious son. Extremely moving and great acting.
Absolutely. I also tend to think some of the film's best comedy is in these scenes, such as the the one where the father talks
about his sleeping son to his other two kids, and ends up boring them to sleep as well, or the scene in the funeral home where the standard-issue Korean-style mourning is taken to new heights of hysteria; this dysfunctional family doesn't just cry together, they bawl, flail around on the floor like babies, start fighting, attract media attention and have to be pulled apart by local officials! Eventually, Song Kang-ho falls asleep (a running gag) while scratching his balls. Pristine stuff!
You have to give credit to Bong Joon-ho for keeping the film so Korean-centric in its approach to character relationships and the ubiquitous Korean-style melodrama (which actually takes a good kick in the slats in this film), rather than proceeding down the traditional "monster movie" road with heroic scientists and pretty "experts" uniting to take on the monster, in effect pandering to the inevitable international audience that existed for this film. The fact that the dysfunctional family that is united to fight the beast
remains dysfuntional at the end of the film (witness the final scene with Song and another character in the little noodle shack, with the rest of the family likely scattered again, possibly for good) is almost a stroke of genius in comparison to so many movies where you can suss out the "family dynamic" that will be in place by the end of the film, especially in American monster/disaster movies where the heroes are usually a single man, a single woman, and an orphan child that serve to reestablish the "nuclear family" model by the end of the film, thus reaffirming American traditional "western" values that aren't really that true at all anymore (and in SPITE of Washington always carping about the "bad" influence of the movies on society at large).
I'd also agree about the strangeness of parts of THE HOST. Especially the surgery scene you're talking about, which was just plain bizarre (but did have a good punchline when Song Kang-ho finally breaks out of the truck). I also felt the climax was a bust, too. While I could just barely overlook the unconvincing fire effects on the creature (after all, this IS still relatively new territory for Korean film industry, although I recall those effects being outsourced to the states, which makes their weakness all the more glaring), I couldn't understand how a creature that consistently retreats to the water to evade authorities wouldn't simply retreat to the water during the final battle, since the water is literally a few meters away. That has bugged me since I saw it. The filmmakers really needed to invent a way to at least get the creature a little further inland, so it could logically have no avenue of easy escape during the attack. Placing the climax at the water's edge, and having the creature fight to the bitter end, contradicts the creature's instincts as they're displayed throughout the film.
I thought the scenes with the US military were just odd. I don't care if the US military is portrayed negatively in a film by any means, it just seemed completely arbitrary in this film. Maybe it works better if you live in Korea, I don't know
I'd agree here, too. Some big-name critics world-wide (NOT just in the U.S., either) have taken pains to point out the film's "anti-U.S.-military" stance, or whatever they're calling it this week, but I really can't see how a film set in South Korea, which has a U.S. military presence, couldn't at least include references to that fact. And sure, many Koreans do indeed have a dim view of that military presence in their country, and so the film nods to those feelings, but the treatment here simply isn't harsh enough to be called "anti" anything! Scott Wilson's character at the beginning is just strange, as is Paul Lazar's cross-eyed medical interrogator character. In fact, I'd say the U.S. military is given a WORSE rap in many of the more intelligent atomic monster/alien invasion movies of the 50's, 60's and 70's to which the host owes much of its existence than they are in THE HOST itself. In those films (THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL comes to mind, but there are better examples eluding me at the moment) the military is sometimes the source of the problem, but more often the catalyst for disasters that might not have happened had they not had itchy trigger fingers.
In spite of it all, I loved the movie, and I'm still quite impressed that it gained screen-time outside of it's intended domestic audience without suffering the editorial simplification of its character relationships, the removal of its cultural specificities, or a Big Dumb American Remake™ before being unceremoniously dumped on DVD!