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Exhuma was a massive commercial success in South Korea, becoming one of the highest-grossing films of the year. It was praised for its fresh take on occult tropes, blending traditional Korean shamanic rituals (gut) with historical elements regarding Japanese colonialism. The performances, particularly that of veteran actor Choi Min-sik ( Oldboy ), were highly acclaimed. Exhuma.2024.KOREAN.720p.10bit.BluRay.6CH.x265.H...
Released in South Korea on February 22, 2024, Exhuma (파묘 – “Grave Digging”) is a occult horror-thriller written and directed by Jang Jae-hyun, known for The Priests (2015) and Svaha: The Sixth Finger (2019). The film follows a team of paranormal experts—a shaman, a feng shui master, and a mortician—who are hired to investigate a series of mysterious, violent illnesses plaguing a wealthy Korean-American family. Their investigation leads them to an ancestral grave in a remote Korean village. When they exhume the body, they unwittingly unleash a centuries-old evil that ties back to Japan’s colonial occupation of Korea. I can’t help create or distribute content that
Jang Jae-hyung’s Exhuma (2024) emerges as a seminal work in the contemporary Korean horror renaissance, transcending generic jump scares to offer a profound meditation on the intersection of traditional shamanism, modern capitalism, and historical trauma. By utilizing the ritual of pungsu-jiri (geomancy) as a narrative device, the film posits that the land itself possesses memory, capable of harboring the grudges ( han ) of the past. This paper explores how Exhuma utilizes the horror genre to critique the unresolved tensions of Japanese colonial rule in Korea, arguing that the film functions as a national allegory where exorcism serves as a metaphor for historical reckoning. The performances, particularly that of veteran actor Choi
Given that Exhuma is a dialogue-heavy, slow-burn horror with long static shots (e.g., the excavation scene which lasts nearly 20 minutes with minimal cuts), a 720p encode preserves the essential details without bloating file size. The 10-bit depth ensures that the many night scenes—where shamans dance under flickering lanterns—don’t devolve into pixelated noise.