Directed by: Kim Yong-gyun (김용균) Starring: Kim Hye-soo (김혜수), Kim Sung-soo (김성수), Park Yeon-a (박연아) Release Date: June 30th, 2005
After learning of her husband’s affair, the ophthalmologist Sun-jae (Kim Hye-soo) and her young daughter Tae-soo are left penniless after the husband is said to have fled the country with their money. Together, with Sun-jae’s collection of high heel shoes, they move out of their luxurious home and settle into a run-down apartment complex where they plan to begin life anew. While Sun-jae begins renovations on her new eye clinic, a pair of enigmatic pink heels without an owner catch her eye on the subway one day and she decides to take them home. Upon trying them on, she’s taken over by a newfound feeling of empowerment. But when her daughter Tae-soo begins to covet the pink shoes as her own immediately after seeing them, a rift between them begins to grow.
The confidence Sun-jae feels after coming into possession of the pink shoes allow her to invite the man responsible for renovating her eye clinic, In-chul (Kim Sung-woo) over for dinner. Despite Tae-soo’s disapproval of the man, Sun-jae and In-chul begin to date. But when Tae-soo secretly tries on the shoes for herslef one day, something strange begins to brew inside of her too. As the two continue to fight over the shoes, Sun-jae becomes consumed with nightmarish hallucinations and an impending sense of dread.
When Sun-jae and In-chul link together multiple shocking and mysterious deaths to the shoes, they begin to suspect that the pink shoes harbor an evil power that is somehow tied to a Japanese colonial era grudge between two ballerinas. When Tae-soo looks to be the pink shoes next victim, Sun-jae is left with no other option than to solve the years long mystery that will break the curse of the pink shoes once and for all.
The Red Shoes (2005) was released with moderate success in 2005 but mostly found itself drowned in an oversaturated market of horror offerings of the time. The 103 minute cut of the film originally shown in Korean theaters is the same version seen internationally through the DVD by Tartan. But the Korean 2 disc Limited Edition DVD featured a bonus disc of a special 108 minute “DVD Version” of the film that was more extreme and contained major alterations to the film. After viewing both cuts, I found myself having a strong preference for the Korean “DVD Version” and hope someday this particular cut will see the light of day on a broad scale. If there were ever to be a new cut rendered of The Red Shoes (2005) for future DVD/Blu-ray releases, my wish list of inclusions/exclusions are as follows:
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