A Nightmare on Elm Street imagined sleep as a vulnerable and dangerous state of semi-consciousness in which our worst fears come to malevolent life. Sleep, Jason Yu’s chilling genre feature, takes that notion and wields it for inventive terror and comedy. The story of a young couple dealing with nocturnal behavior and phenomenon of a perplexing and petrifying sort, it’s a directorial debut of poised peril that should inspire both laughs and a few sleepless nights following its North American premiere at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.
South Korean director Yu proves himself extremely comfortable behind the camera with Sleep, if not quite as snug as Hyun-su (Parasite’s Lee Sun-kyun) is when lying in bed beside his pregnant wife Soo-jin (Jung Yu-mi). Nonetheless, it’s Soo-jin’s snores that open the film, which are interrupted by the discovery of her husband sitting upright in the dark. “Something’s inside,” he mutters before falling backwards into an unshakable slumber, leaving Soo-jin to investigate the ominous loud noises coming from somewhere in their cozy apartment.
The source of that banging is almost as mysterious as the fact that Hyun-su isn’t disturbed by it. It is, however, plenty bothersome to the couple’s fluffy Pomeranian Pepper as well as the building’s new downstairs tenant and her son, who aren’t shy about complaining about the constant clamor emanating from Hyun-su and Soo-jin’s residence—a problem that also, apparently, bugged their prior neighbor, whose grouchy and creepy conduct is routinely mocked by Hyun-su and Soo-jin.
Unfortunately for the newlyweds, whose wedding portrait boasts Pepper on their laps, peace and quiet is not in their immediate future. “Together we can overcome anything,” reads a plaque adorning their living room wall. Soo-Jin fervently believes it, even once her spouse begins exhibiting unsettling behavior. While in deep sleep, Hyun-su—a somewhat successful actor trying to keep his career afloat—responds to cheek and neck itchiness with excessive violence, thereby costing him his current gig. Hyun-su doesn’t remember any of this somnambulant craziness, but with the evidence literally staring him in the face, he concedes that something must be done. Soo-jin wants him to seek professional treatment (leading to his amusing reply, “Wait, which doctor should I see?”) and quickly takes matters into her own hands by bringing him to a clinic where an expert explains that Hyun-su is suffering from an REM disorder and then hands them a brochure whose illustrations exactly mirror their experiences.
Yu shoots Sleep with silky portent, his camera teasing and concealing monstrous sights and forces just outside the frame, so it’s no surprise when talk about the supernatural materializes, first courtesy of Soo-Jin’s understandably worried mom. Soo-Jin initially wants nothing to do with her mother’s old-world superstitions nor her favorite kooky shaman, and she certainly doesn’t care about the bujeok (i.e., charmed talisman papers) she’s told to hide around the home as a way to ward off evil spirits. Still, with modern medicine—be it pills or the doctor’s advice to avoid booze and safeguard the apartment with doorbells and padlocks—failing to prevent tragedy, Soo-jin grows increasingly distressed. That desperation only mounts once she delivers their child, who instantly becomes the family member most at risk from Hyun-su’s sleepwalking exploits.
Split into three chapters, Sleep drums up tension via Yu’s sinister stewardship and confined setting. Taking place largely in Hyun-su and Soo-jin’s apartment, the action’s claustrophobia builds methodically, with each successive incident providing the wife and new mother with additional logistical dilemmas regarding how to keep Hyun-su from doing the insane and unthinkable once he chooses to get 40 winks. Eyes are a recurring motif throughout, with the director fixating most intently on Soo-jin’s retinas to gauge—and convey—her suspicion, anger and despair. Jung Yu-mi’s performance assuredly straddles the line between serious and jokey, her character’s reasonable alarm offset by her staunch belief that nothing can destroy her marriage so long as she and Hyun-su remain united—and, additionally, that no matter their troubles, “We’re not a dysfunctional family!”
Photo Courtesy of TIFF in thedailybeast.com