Movie Review: Cello
Published January 22, 2007
I feel quite lucky to have had the chance to review Cello. Nah, that sounds too stuffy. Let's say it another way: Cello scared the heck out of me. This rather shocked me. I mean, give me a break - a story about a possessed cello? Images of Buddy Sorrell started jumping into my mind. Nevertheless, as it turned out, this is now one of my favorite films of the last couple of years.
A young girl named Mi-ju (Hyeon-a Seong) has had a lousy day. She is teaching cello at a small school. One of her students is out to get her for a grade she does not think she deserved. Her sister-in-law starts to get really into her fiancée and the new maid is scarring her. To top it all off, her daughter's cello seems to be haunted.
Turns out that part of Mi-ju's problems stem from a car accident she was involved in a while back that led her to give up a career in music. Finally, an invitation from a friend to attend a concert brings the car crash to memory. When there is a near-miss accident on her drive home, she is naturally rattled. However, it is when she gets home that things start to go weird on her.
She is visited by a spirit and discovers that everyone around her, from her husband and children to her sisters and even her pets, are in danger. It is over the course of a few days that Mi-ju finds the past is not always dead, and just because something is buried, does not mean it will stay there.
Hyeon-a Seong is excellent as the emotionally fragile young woman who is forced to watch as her life begins to unravel around her. Written and directed almost like a classic Twilight Zone episode, Cello hits all the marks as a work of horror art.
Yes, it has a great body count, and most of those are done in suitably modern gory manners. The plot is excellent and the script is simply beautiful. Moreover, the ending would have had Rod Serling sitting up and applauding.
The special effects and CGI are well done, with the CGI being subtle in most places, which is what it should be in a film like this. Yes, it is bloody. Accept that and keep watching for an ending that is almost perfect.
Sure, there were some things that didn't always fit to me - like just what was the story with the maid? Moreover, it drug a bit at the very beginning. Maybe that was just me.
The music is excellent. The soundtrack provides a brooding, almost surreal background to the images on the screen. My television is not 'souped-up' with a big stereo receiver and sound system, but the sound I got coming from my lone speakers was still enough in some spots to send chills down my spine.
For many people, music can become a life-consuming passion and drive that would make them do just about anything to achieve their goal. Suffice it to say that Mi-ju discovers the drive that consumed her is not always the equal of someone else.
- Movie Review: Cello
- Published: January 22, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Review, Video: Foreign Language, Video: Horror
- Writer: Larry Stanley
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Comments
I keep looking at this one at the local rental place, but have so far skipped it. With this review, I think I'll have to pick it up soon.




Anyone who's taken a music class knows how scary a musical instrument can be. Okay, maybe it's just me. Anyway, I am looking forward to seeing this one after your review. Korean horror is always interesting, with a little more plotline and usually a what's-that? style ending not seen in typical American horror.