Wishing Stairs

Wishing Stairs (Korean: 여고괴담 3: 여우계단; RR: Yeogogoedam 3: Yeowoogyedan; also known as Whispering Corridors 3: Wishing Stairs) is a 2003 South Korean horror film. It is the third installment of the Whispering Corridors film series set in girls high schools, but, as with all films in the series, is unrelated to the others; apart from a song being sung in one scene that is a pivotal plot in Voice.[1][2]

Wishing Stairs
Theatrical release poster
Hangul
여고괴담 3: 여우계단
Revised RomanizationYeogogoedam 3: Yeowoogyedan
McCune–ReischauerYŏgogoedam 3: Yŏukyedan
Directed byYun Jae-yeon
Written by
  • Kim Su-ah
  • Lee Yong-yeon
  • Eun Si-yeon
  • Lee Soyoung
Produced byLee Chun-yeon
Starring
CinematographySeo Jeong-min
Music byGong Myeong-ah
Production
company
Cine2000
Distributed byCinema Service
Release dates
  • July 13, 2003 (2003-07-13) (PIF Film Festival)
  • August 1, 2003 (2003-08-01) (South Korea)
Running time
97 minutes
CountrySouth Korea
LanguageKorean

Plot

Yun Jin-sung (Song Ji-hyo), a modest girl from a humble background and privileged, graceful Kim So-hee (Park Han-byul) are friends studying ballet at an all-girls art school. So-hee mainly dances to please her mother, but she possesses natural talent and grace for the art and as such gains much favoritism from the faculty while Jin-sung has to catch up to her friend. Despite circumstances, the two continue to grow closer; it is heavily implied that So-hee has lesbian feelings for her newly declared best friend. However, their friendship sours when they find themselves competing for a single spot at a Russian ballet school and the odds are heavily in So-hee's favor. Jin-sung learns from a timid, overweight and severely bullied sculpture student named Eom Hye-ju (Jo An) of an old legend that if a person climbs the twenty eight steps leading up to the school's dormitory and finds a twenty ninth step, a fox spirit will grant that person's wish. Curious, Jin-sung climbs the stairs and upon coming across the twenty ninth, eagerly wishes for the spot. To her surprise and anger, So-hee is selected instead. Jin-sung declares her hatred toward So-hee and accidentally sends her down a flight of stairs during a row. So-hee is left unconscious and hospitalized.

Jin-sung learns that the injuries render So-hee unable to continue pursuing ballet. She tries to apologize, but receives no response and leaves with guilt. The next day, she learns that So-hee has committed suicide. As the fight between the two was witnessed by several others, Jin-sung is now subjected to other students' bullying, who believe that she intentionally injured So-hee out of jealousy. Jin-sung's wish comes true and she gets the spot for the ballet school but her fellow students treat her coldly. The belief that Jin-sung is partially to blame for So-hee's death continues to spread, overwhelming Jin-sung; news of this gossip even spreads to the ghost of So-hee, who begins to haunt her former crush.

Affected by the death of So-hee, the only person to have treated her with kindness, Hye-ju (who has become slim due to a wish fulfilled by the stairs at the price of suffering bulimia) attempts to keep So-hee's belongings as a reminder of her only friend, but is bullied even further for this, especially from Han Yun-ji, a fellow sculpture student. She climbs the steps and wishes for So-hee to come back. Hearing her friend's cry, So-hee stops her relentless haunting of Jin-sung and possesses Hye-ju in order to help Hye-ju get revenge against her bullies. The possessed Hye-ju confronts Yun-ji for bullying her and stabs her to death. Jin-sung encounters Hye-ju, who tries to convince her that she is So-hee which frightens Jin-sung into fleeing. The spirit of So-hee, angered by this, makes Hye-ju light a match in a basement drenched in paint thinner, presumably to kill Jin-sung and several others, but at the last moment is overcome again by her feelings for Jin-sung and instead the fire kills Hye-ju.

The night before Jin-sung's departure to the ballet school, she is haunted even further by So-hee; she is now aware the ghost is So-hee. Unable to endure the torment, she tries to climb the stairs again in order to wish So-hee away. Before she can reach the 29th step, So-hee appears and holds her. Traumatized and upset, Jin-sung confesses that she did not hate her and simply wanted to accomplish something of her own and be happy. Believing that Jin-sung does not love her as much she does, So-hee crushes Jin-sung's stomach with her embrace, killing her, before vanishing.

Some time later, a new student moves into the dorm room that Jin-sung once occupied. A picture of Jin-sung and So-hee is seen on the floor. In the photo, So-hee's irises disappear, implying that she still remains and has possessed the photo.

Cast

Notes

The film itself seems to mirror the ballet Giselle, which the girls in the film are studying, as well as drawing upon the classic short story "The Monkey's Paw", with So-hee as Giselle, and Jin-sung as Albrecht. Unhappy with always having to play the "prince" to So-hee's princess, Jin-sung betrays So-hee, which in turn leads to So-hee being crippled and commits suicide after her friend Jin-sung confesses she has hated her all along. When So-hee's spirit is wished back, Jin-sung is haunted by So-hee's ghost, the love she once felt for her friend warped by Jin-sung's hurtful actions.

As in the two previous movies, this film has strong themes of friendship, betrayal, and the taboo of lesbian affairs in an all-girls school.

Release

Wishing Stairs was released on the August 1, 2003, and exceeded 680,000 nationwide audiences within three days of its release.[3] By August 10, the second week of its release, it was announced that it had surpassed 1.3 million nationwide audiences.[4] In the Philippines, the film was released by Cinema Service on February 11, 2004.[5]

The film which was released in Singapore, has achieved $377,298 (USD) for 11 days from the 13th to the 23rd, setting up as the highest box office record in South Korea.[6] Wishing Stairs has recorded an overseas export of $500,000 (USD) across 10 countries including Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand.

References

  1. "여우야 여우야 숨긴걸 말해줘, <여고괴담3: 여우계단>". Cine21. 2003-11-12. Archived from the original on 2015-05-05. Retrieved 2014-03-26.
  2. tenasia.hankyung.com, Digital (July 4, 2014). "여고괴담부터 소녀괴담까지, 학원 공포물 변천사 | 텐아시아". 텐아시아 연예뉴스. Archived from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
  3. "[코스닥] 플레너스'여고괴담3' 첫주 68만명(상보)". Naver (in Korean). Archived from the original on December 19, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  4. "[코스닥] 플레너스 '여고괴담3', 130만명 돌파". Naver (in Korean). Archived from the original on December 19, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  5. "Opens Today!". Philippine Daily Inquirer. The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc. February 11, 2004. p. A29. Retrieved September 12, 2022. Babala: Bawal manuod ang mga mahina sikmura. Pasisigawin ka mula simula hanggang wakas.
  6. "싱가폴 접수한 '여우계단'의 여고딩들". www.movist.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on December 19, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
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