The Sacred and the Profane: Transgression, Guilt, and the Bodily Abject in Park Chan-wook’s Thirst
Tae-ju begins the film as a passive, sickly woman trapped in a miserable marriage. Her transformation into a vampire is a liberation. Unlike Sang-hyun, who tries to maintain decorum, Tae-ju embraces her new body’s power. The famous “blood-sucking as sex” scene—where Sang-hyun drinks pus from Tae-ju’s wound and they then share blood—is a masterclass in the abject. The scene is not romantic but viscerally unclean, mixing bodily fluids (blood, pus, sweat) to break down boundaries between disgust and desire. As Tae-ju becomes more violent, killing indiscriminately, she subverts the passive female victim archetype. Her final act of forcing Sang-hyun to face the sun with her is not defeat but a shared, perverse consummation of their bond. Watch Thirst 2009
Sang-hyun is a devoted priest who volunteers for a secret, deadly viral experiment (the Emmanuel Virus) to prove his faith. When he is the sole survivor after receiving a fatal blood transfusion, he is hailed as a miracle worker by his congregation. However, the transfusion has turned him into a vampire. He initially feeds only on comatose patients in the hospital, maintaining his moral code. His life changes when he reconnects with Tae-ju, the abused wife of his childhood friend, Kang-woo. Sang-hyun begins an affair with Tae-ju, eventually turning her into a vampire as well. Their relationship devolves into a spiral of murder, guilt, and mutual destruction, culminating in a haunting conclusion where the two vampires face the sunrise together. The Sacred and the Profane: Transgression, Guilt, and
The film’s most provocative thesis is that vampirism is a more honest state than priesthood. Sang-hyun’s human life was defined by denial. As a vampire, he confronts the problem of evil directly. When he kills a man in a fit of hunger, he immediately feels remorse, but that remorse does not bring the man back. Park stages a brutal, darkly comic sequence where Sang-hyun and Tae-ju attempt to dispose of a corpse, only to be constantly interrupted—a metaphor for the futility of hiding sin. The film suggests that in a universe without absolute divine justice (the priest’s prayers go unanswered), morality becomes an aesthetic choice. Sang-hyun chooses to destroy himself and Tae-ju not because God commands it, but because their shared monstrosity has exhausted all other options. Her final act of forcing Sang-hyun to face
Traditional vampire narratives often position the vampire as the purely evil antagonist and the priest as the agent of good. Thirst inverts this. Sang-hyun remains a priest after his transformation, hearing confession and offering communion. However, he soon realizes that his new nature makes him a hypocrite: he must kill to survive, yet he believes in the sanctity of life. Park Chan-wook visualizes this conflict through stigmata-like rashes that appear on Sang-hyun’s feet when he resists feeding, suggesting that his body is literally punishing him for denying its nature. The film argues that Catholic guilt is not a solution but a catalyst for greater sin—Sang-hyun’s attempts to rationalize his murders only deepen his damnation.
Park Chan-wook’s signature stylistic flourishes elevate Thirst beyond genre fare. The cinematography (by Chung Chung-hoon) alternates between the sterile, blue-gray light of the hospital and the lurid, over-saturated reds of the couple’s murderous nights. The famous “mahjong murder” scene uses slow motion and abrupt cuts to transform a domestic argument into an operatic ballet of violence. Park also employs his characteristic black humor—Sang-hyun using a flower vase to bash a man’s head, only to ask Tae-ju for a different vase because the first one is “sentimental”—to undercut the horror with absurdity, reminding the audience that these are flawed, petty humans, not mythic monsters.
Park Chan-wook’s Thirst (2009) is a radical deconstruction of both the vampire genre and the religious redemption narrative. Reuniting with Oldboy star Choi Min-sik, the film follows Sang-hyun (Song Kang-ho), a respected Catholic priest who, after a failed medical experiment, becomes a vampire. Rather than a simple horror film, Thirst operates as a theological and erotic thriller, interrogating the relationship between sin, guilt, and desire. This paper argues that Thirst uses its vampiric framework to critique the impossibility of pure morality, suggesting that physical transgression is an inescapable consequence of spiritual hypocrisy. Through the central relationship between Sang-hyun and the repressed Tae-ju (Kim Ok-bin), Park crafts a narrative where the body’s appetites—for blood, sex, and violence—ultimately dismantle the soul’s pretense to holiness.