The Architecture of Geum-ja's Revenge Plan
The setup connecting Baek Han-sang's criminal motive to the material desire of 'buying a luxury yacht' gives this pleasure killer villain not emotional depth but a deflating, ironic reason instead. This blocks the audience from sympathizing with or fearing Baek Han-sang, degrading all his atrocities to the result of 'a supremely trivial desire' and maximizing the work's narrative irony.
The Motive of a Pleasure Killer: The Narrative Irony of the Yacht
In Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, Baek Han-sang is depicted not merely as a villain but as a monster who breaks social taboos. The kidnapping and murder he committed contains in itself extreme terror and cruelty. Yet his criminal motive — as added through the novel's setup — lies in the supremely trivial and material desire of 'buying a luxury yacht.' This setup does not simply confine Baek Han-sang's crimes within the realm of 'evil'; it drags them down into the realm of 'deflating desire,' adding to the work's narrative depth.
1. Functional Analysis of the Motive: Blocking Emotional Connection
A typical pleasure killer character ties the motive of crime to grand and abstract concepts like 'pleasure' or 'existential emptiness,' leading the audience to feel catharsis alongside fear. But by setting Baek Han-sang's motive as the purchase of a yacht, the writer intentionally cuts off this emotional connection.
- Downgrading the Villain: His cruelty is less the 'instinctive evil of human nature' than simply a desire aimed at 'luxury goods that can be bought with money.' This degrades Baek Han-sang from a being symbolizing a mythological demon or vast social malaise to a human being utterly captivated by the most mundane and materialistic desire.
- Maximizing Irony: The audience witnesses the horrifying process of Baek Han-sang kidnapping and murdering children, only to confront the fact that all of it was ultimately a means toward a luxury item called a 'yacht' — experiencing extreme deflation and irony. This leads the audience to pose questions about the nature of 'evil.'
2. Narrative Effect: The Weight of the Question 'Why?'
Baek Han-sang's crimes are most terrifying when the answer to 'why?' is not clear. But as the specific and trivial goal of a yacht is presented, this question transforms into one tinged with scorn: 'why did he have to go that far?'
This causes Geum-ja's revenge drama to expand not merely to 'retribution' but to the philosophical dimension of 'uncovering truth' and 'exploring the meaning of human existence.' If the pain and thirst for revenge Geum-ja experiences concerns the realization of great justice, Baek Han-sang's motive serves as a device showing how profoundly that justice can be polluted by trivial and absurd desire.
3. Contrast with the Geum-ja Character
This absurd motive of Baek Han-sang gives an even more powerful contrasting effect to protagonist Lee Geum-ja. Geum-ja, through 13 years of suffering and atonement and meticulous planning, tries to rebuild the great value of 'justice.' Her revenge is a desperate struggle that goes beyond personal grudge to recover lost truth and justice. Baek Han-sang's motive, by contrast, is a 'worldly' and 'lightweight' desire that renders all that effort meaningless. This contrast emphasizes that Geum-ja's revenge is not a simple revenge drama but a fight staking the human soul and morality itself.
Why It Matters
Baek Han-sang's yacht-buying motive plays a decisive role in redefining the essence of 'revenge' — the film's core theme. If the villain's motive had been a grand and philosophical evil, Geum-ja's revenge would also feel like the realization of great justice. But by setting the motive as the trivial material desire of a 'yacht,' the audience is confronted with the question: what is true evil? This suggests that the origin of wrongdoing lies not in grand ideology or structural social problems, but ultimately in the roots of uncontrolled trivial human desire and greed. This irony wields the power to make Geum-ja's act of revenge appear all the more desperate — and simultaneously all the more tragic — as a 'process of atonement.'
Other 떡밥 dives4
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Prison Life and Her Nickname
The Dhammapada is not a simple Buddhist scripture — it is a central symbolic prop in the process of Lee Geum-ja preparing her revenge tools. The word 'Dhammapada' (법구경) itself is a meticulously designed setup device, carrying a double meaning that connects to the firearm term 'caliber' (구경) in Korean. This visually shows that Geum-ja is concealing her thirst for revenge behind the dual mask of religious atonement and a model image, and emphasizes that her very existence is a disguised performance.
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The Border Between Revenge and Atonement
The 'kindness' of Sympathy for Lady Vengeance is not a simple character trait, but a survival strategy meticulously calculated through 13 years of prison life — the central tool of her revenge drama. This piece analyzes in depth how every kindness Geum-ja showed her fellow inmates was a performance for flawless intelligence gathering and the execution of her revenge plan, examining its psychological mechanism and cinematic significance.
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Production Background and Acting Transformation
As the final installment in Park Chan-wook's 'Vengeance Trilogy,' Sympathy for Lady Vengeance philosophically probes human violence and the ambiguity of justice, going beyond simple retribution. The film expands the emotion of revenge from the realm of physical violence into the domain of psychological atonement and guilt, showing that every process the protagonist Lee Geum-ja undergoes is a journey not toward 'perfect revenge' but toward 'a life that knows the weight of sin' — the thematic culmination of the trilogy.

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Sympathy for Lady Vengeance
15 deep dives in total