
I went into Parasite completely blind. No trailers, no reviews, no plot summaries โ nothing. I wanted to be surprised by every single moment of it. And what a decision that turned out to be.
This film is a rollercoaster in the best possible sense. Every time I thought I'd worked out what kind of movie I was watching, it confidently pulled the rug out from under me and dared me to keep up. That kind of storytelling is rare, and when it's done well โ and this is done exceptionally well โ it's genuinely thrilling.
The part that's stayed with me most is what Parasite is doing thematically. None of the characters in this film are good people. Not really. Everyone โ wealthy or otherwise โ is willing to do whatever it takes and hurt whoever stands in their way to escape their own situation. That isn't a flaw in the writing. That is the entire point.
What Bong Joon-ho is doing here is making a sharp, pointed argument about class. About how the wealthy see the poor as exactly that โ parasites โ and how that perception shapes every interaction and every assumption around it. The brilliance of the film is that it makes that argument without ever feeling preachy or heavy-handed. The themes are baked into the storytelling rather than dropped on top of it.
But you don't need to engage with the deeper meaning to enjoy this. The performances are excellent across the board. The pacing is tight. The build, the tension, the eventual payoff โ it all lands. I felt things watching this that I don't usually feel watching films, and that alone makes it worth your time.
A genuine standout. Go in as blind as you can.
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Reviewed on May 22, 2026
All unemployed, Ki-taek's family takes peculiar interest in the wealthy and glamorous Parks for their livelihood until they get entangled in an unexpected incident.

8/10