Svaha: The Sixth Finger

Svaha: The Sixth Finger
Theatrical release poster
Hangul
사바하
Hanja
娑婆訶
RRSabaha
MRSabaha
Directed byJang Jae-hyun
Written byJang Jae-hyun
Produced byKang Hye-jung
Ryoo Seung-wan
StarringLee Jung-jae
Park Jeong-min
Lee Jae-in
Jung Jin-young
Jin Seon-kyu
Lee David
CinematographyKim Tae-soo
Edited byJeong Byeong-jin
Music byKim Tae-seong
Production
companies
Distributed byCJ Entertainment
Netflix
Release date
  • February 20, 2019 (2019-02-20)
Running time
122 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean
Box officeUS$17.7 million[1]

Svaha: The Sixth Finger (Korean: 사바하; RR: Sabaha) is a 2019 South Korean mystery thriller film directed by Jang Jae-hyun, starring Lee Jung-jae, Park Jeong-min, Lee Jae-in, Jung Jin-young, Jin Seon-kyu and Lee David.[2][3][4] The film was number one at the box office in its opening week, with a strong 840,000 sales and collected 1.18 million viewers in its first five days. It depicts a mystery involving a Buddhist sect while posing questions about faith in general.

Plot

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Lee Geum-hwa and her twin sister are born in 1999. Geum-hwa's sister fed on her leg in utero and Geum-hwa is born with a deformed leg. The sister, who is severely deformed and referred to as "the thing", was not expected to survive, and her birth is not registered. Their mother dies shortly after and their father commits suicide soon after that. In the present day, Geum-hwa now lives in a remote village with her grandparents, who had recently moved there and raise dogs for a living. The sister, who has survived, is kept hidden from the public eye, locked up in a shed in the backyard. Some of the locals with the help of a mudang investigate the farm because the local livestock had been acting up. When they investigate the shed at night, snakes crawl out of it and bite them.

Meanwhile, Pastor Park Woong-jae, a Protestant minister whose work involves the investigation and sensationalized exposure of cults and frauds (in order to generate publicity and donations) rather than leading a congregation, has been hired to investigate a mysterious group called Dongbanggyo or "Deer Mountain Sect" that has been operating in Gangwon-do. He has already sent his assistant Joseph to infiltrate the group, but Joseph has been unable to find anything useful; they meet up at a convenience store near a Dongbanggyo branch in Taebaek that Joseph has infiltrated to discuss what Joseph has found. Joseph hasn't noticed anything unusual about the group, which to him appears to be an esoteric Buddhist sect with no apparent funding difficulties, but instead of worshipping the Buddha or a Buddhist saint as might be expected, practitioners at both locations (Taebaek and Jeongseon) Joseph has visited worship generals. Elsewhere in Gangwon-do, the police investigate the body of a girl found entombed in concrete. A police investigator, Chief Hwang, assesses that the girl was recently murdered and that she was young, probably a middle-schooler at best.

Pastor Park meets with several high-ranking Buddhist monks to discuss his investigation of the Dongbanggyo sect. While the monks are initially skeptical of Pastor Park's suspicion of the sect Monk Hae-an, a hubae of Pastor Park, suggests that being proactive is not a bad policy; after the meeting, Hae-an asks Park for his dossier on Dongbanggyo, in particular a copy of their scripture. If it is determined that Dongbanggyo is using an unapproved/non-canon Buddhist scripture or interpretation thereof, then Buddhist leadership have a justification to take action.

At night, an individual called Gwangmok visits his friend Kim Cheol-jin, a construction truck driver who admits to him that he has failed "Father." He tells Gwangmok that the dead children come to visit him at night, and he expresses concerns that something has gone wrong. Calling him Dhṛtarāṣṭra, Gwangmok reassures him that they are fighting evil, and that he must die before he is captured; Gwangmok assures him that he will continue their work.

The following day, Joseph, wearing a wire so Pastor Park can listen in on a discussion on Dongbanggyo's scriptures from his car outside, sneaks into the administrative offices of the Taebaek Dongbanggyo branch. The police arrive to investigate due to the discovery of talismans during the dead girl's autopsy. Expecting to find nothing, they send the practitioners home but do not discover Joseph. When informed that the dead girl has been traced to Kim Cheol-jin via the construction company that employs him, the police leave to intercept him. The police set up an ambush in the evening at the apartment Kim Cheol-jin shares with his mother. Kim Cheol-jin arrives at his building, but instead of going to his apartment he heads to the roof and calls his mother, telling her goodbye and that he is doing the work of heaven. He then jumps off the roof, killing himself before the police can stop him.

Pastor Park meets up with Monk Hae-an at Hae-an's office at Geumgang University. Hae-an explains to him that he has deduced from the pictures Park sent him that there are four Dongbanggyo branches - two more than Park knew about - centered around a central temple. Hae-an explains that the "generals" portrayed in images at the various Dongbanggyo branches are actually the Four Heavenly Kings, guarding the four cardinal directions (north, south, east, west), with each Dongbanggyo branch represented by one of the kings. Pastor Park and Joseph return to the Taebaek Dongbanggyo branch at night and do their own investigation. They discover a hidden room that appears to have been recently occupied and take a copy of the Dongbanggyo scripture from the room.

The following day, Gwangmok is given a dossier on Geum-hwa by one of the Dongbanggyo members from Taebaek. Elsewhere, Pastor Park learns from a friend in the police force that Kim Cheol-jin was a juvenile convicted murderer. Gwangmok begins to stake out Geum-hwa. Like Kim Cheol-jin, Gwangmok also has nightmares about dead girls, but they end with a woman consoling him with a lullaby.

Having reviewed the Dongbanggyo scripture Park sent to him, Hae-an explains to Pastor Park and Joseph that while the Dongbanggyo scripture from the Jiguk site in Taebaek is mostly canon, containing edits of early sutras and tantra, it contains a section that he has never seen before. He describes this as being written in very symbolic language and discussing demons fighting gods in something like prophecy. Pastor Park learns that this non-canon/unapproved section, titled the "Hangma" sutra, was written by a Master (Pung-sa) Kim; he finds an old article about a Tibetan Buddhist master Nechung Tenpa wanting to meet this Master Kim Je-seok, the founder of Dongbanggyo. During a meeting with the head monk "the Octopus," Park learns that Kim Je-seok, born in 1899, made a significant donation to a youth detention centre about 20 years ago, but that after 1985 he disappeared to write the Hangma sutra and was almost never seen except by his closest disciples. He also learns from that detention center's records that Kim Je-seok adopted four juvenile delinquents who killed their fathers; one of the boys was Kim Cheol-jin. Park reasons that three of the boys are dead based on drawings showing them as deities with halos. The remaining deity is called Gwangmok.

Gwangmok is at Geum-hwa's place and plans to strangle her. However, birds begin to fly through the window which confuses Gwangmok. He then goes to the shed where the sister is. The sister grabs his leg from under the door and Gwangmok is frightened off. Gwangmok goes to the Dongbanggyo Residence and speaks with a youthful Henchman tending the grounds, who tells Gwangmok that the girl in the shed is the snake. Gwangmok meets with his "Father," who is dying. He recalls the Father giving him the moniker Gwangmok and saying that he is one of the stars who will protect the light.

Pastor Park speaks with Nechung Tenpa, who recounts an encounter he had in 1985 with the Master or Maitreya. He tells Park that the man has attained immortality. He saw the Master's twelve fingers. He says the Master is still alive despite being born in 1899. Park asks about the Donggonggyo scriptures which speak of a "snake" who will kill "the light." Tenpa says that the snake is the natural enemy of the Master. Tenpa said he delivered an oracle to the Master that his natural enemy will be born in the place where the Master was born in one hundred years and will turn out the light. Park asks Tenpa about the numbers in the scriptures but he was not able to assist. Park deduces that the cult founder Kim Je-seok is "the light," and the four "guardians" have been killing all the young girls born in 1999 at Yeongwul, Kim Je-seok's hometown. He realizes the numbers in the scripture were actually birth registration numbers for all the girls.

Meanwhile, Gwangmok has kidnapped Geum-hwa and is preparing to kill her. She asks why she has to die. He says she is born evil but death is not the end. Geum-hwa tells Gwangmok about her sister and asks him to kill her also so she can be reborn as a human in the next life. Gwongmok finds the sister and prepares to strangle her. She has shed her hideous appearance and has taken on the pose of a Buddha. She tells him that she has been waiting for him and that she is the one who consoles him in his nightmares after he sheds blood. She sings the same song to him as in his nightmares. She tells him to look for the mark (six fingers) on the person he calls Father and to kill him.

Gwangmok returns to the Residence and tells the Henchman what happened. He goes to check his dying Father's hand but he only has five fingers. The Henchman lures Gwangmok to a barn and shoots him. Park also attend the residence and is confused why the old man is dying. He hides and learns that the Henchman is actually Kim Je-seok and that the old man was just a disciple.

While driving the Henchman (now revealed as the cult founder Kim Je-seok) tells Gwangmok that he will soon die. He tells him the man he called Father was actually his disciple. He tells him he is the light and that Gwangmok is one of the stars that protect him. He tells him not be sad about the acts they committed. He tells him he has won the race against time and that there are things he must do for the world and offers for him to continue to serve. Gwangmok goes to strangle him and tells Kim that he is a predator who is desperate to live. The car eventually crashes. Both are pinned with fuel dripping onto them. Kim Je-seok is able to escape and starts to walk away. Gwangmok retrieves an object that the sister had given him. It turns out to be a lighter and he sets Kim Je-seok on fire killing him.

Geum-hwa who is still alive holds her sister while the sister passes away.

Cast

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Production

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Principal photography began on November 19, 2017, and wrapped on April 9, 2018.[5] The title Svaha was decided when a colleague of director Jang Jae-hyun recommended it. It is a term used in Buddhism when memorizing a certain series of events makes them "happen".

90% of the scenes were shot on location, despite the cold reaching 20 degrees below zero in some areas. The production team devoted 90% of shooting to an entire location of Gangwon-do province with a mountainous area in South Korea. Cinematographer Kim Tae-soo[6] also created blue-based water as a base to create a cool-toned cinematic atmosphere while preserving the cold tones for the season of winter. The camera movements and shooting styles also emphasize expressing the tension, which later is increased by more close-ups in the second half of the film.

Background

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Although Buddhism and esotericism are the main focus in the film, there are also elements of Maitreya, Shichuan and references to the Christian Bible as well. For instance, when the twin sisters are born, there's a reference to the biblical brothers Esau and Jacob. Jacob is said to have come out of the womb with his twin brother's heel. In the movie, this is similar to when "It" survived in the womb by eating her twin's leg. There is also the reference to Massacre of the Innocents when, just like King Herod the Great, Kim Je-Seuk who killed all of the infants born in a certain place to get rid of an enemy predicted to defeat him.

Release

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The film released on February 20, 2019, attracted 190,000 viewers on the first day and was number one in the box office. On the second day, it exceeded 2 million viewers, in total bringing in around 2.19 million audience members. This brings in cumulative sales of 20,007,508,194 won which is around 16,481,474.98 U.S dollars.[citation needed] Actor Jeong Dong-hwan, played the role of Kim Je-seok who after gaining enlightenment, his body never grows old. But the film faced some backlash when used a photo of Independence activist Na-Cheo for an earlier photo of the character Kim Je-seok. Na-Cheol was an independence activist known as the godfather of the anti-Japanese independence movement founded in Daejong Gyo, before the National Order of Merit was started. There was also a protest from Sincheonji, a Christian movement, over some scenes from the trailer. They were concerned and said that the trailer for the film could damage the group's reputation.[citation needed]

Awards and nominations

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Awards Category Recipient Result Ref.
55th Baeksang Arts Awards Best Film Svaha: The Sixth Finger Nominated [7]
Best Director Jang Jae-hyun Nominated
Best New Actress Lee Jae-in Won
56th Grand Bell Awards Best Art Direction Seo Seong-kyeong Won [8][9]
Best Lighting Jeon Young-sell Won
Best Director Jang Jae-hyun Nominated
Best Screenplay Jang Jae-hyun Nominated
Best New Actress Lee Jae-in Nominated
Best Film Editing Jeong Byeong-jin Nominated
Best Music Kim Tae-seong Nominated
Technical Award Son Seung-hyeon, Kim Shin-cheol (Visual Effects) Nominated

References

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  1. ^ "SVAHA : THE SIXTH FINGER (2019)". Korean Film Biz Zone.
  2. ^ "[Herald Review] 'Savaha' has clever buildup, relevant message, insufficient payoff". The Korea Herald. 14 February 2019. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  3. ^ "[INTERVIEW] Lee Jung-jae less flamboyant in 'Svaha'". The Korea Times. 18 February 2019. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  4. ^ "[Movie Review] 'Svaha,' horrifying mystery thriller about religious exploitation". The Korea Times. 2019-02-15. Retrieved 2019-04-04.
  5. ^ "KoBiz - Korean Film Biz Zone". www.kobiz.or.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  6. ^ "Tae-soo Kim". IMDb. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  7. ^ Cho, Yeon-gyeong (April 5, 2019). 55회 백상예술대상 영화부문 최종 후보 공개. Is Plus (in Korean). Naver. Retrieved April 5, 2019.
  8. ^ Ha, Soo-jung (January 17, 2020). 제56회 대종상 영화제 2월 25일 개최..'기생충' 11개 부문 최다 후보 [공식] [The 56th Daejongsang Film Festival was held on February 25th.. Most candidates in 11 categories of 'Parasite' [Official]]. The Chosun Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  9. ^ [제56회 대종상]'기생충' 작품상 포함 5관왕 달성…이병헌·정유미 주연상(종합) [[56th Daejong Award] Achievement of 5 crowns including'parasite' work award... Lee Byung-Hun and Yoo-Mi Jeong starring (General)]. Herald Corporation (in Korean). June 3, 2020. Retrieved June 9, 2020 – via Naver.
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