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Home — Entertainment — Movies

Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning Tries Too Hard To Be Epic

Korean animation spectacle lost in its own complicated mythology

by Arin Tripathi
October 24, 2025
in Movies
Exorcism Chronicles The Beginning

Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning (Credit: Showbox)

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Some films drown in their own ambition, and Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning fits this description from its opening minute. Adapted from the first chapter of Toemarok by Lee Woo-hyeok, the Korean animated feature wants to feel grand, ancient, and culturally rooted.

What it accomplishes instead is a head-spinning blur of exposition. Writers Lee Dong-ha and Park Seong-hee position the story as the beginning of a vast mythological saga, yet they spend so much time setting up the world’s backstory that little emotional space remains for actual character growth.

Visually, it is an impressive product. Years of animation work by LOCUS Corporation have yielded beautifully animated fight sequences, glowing temples, and elaborate renderings of Korean and mythical terrain.

At moments, it feels less like a film and more like a sizzle reel for a high-budget anime series that might have been more suited to serialized storytelling than an 85-minute feature. The result is a movie that demands patience yet seldom rewards it.

Also read: Paramount Skydance’s New Era: Bari Weiss Leads CBS News After Free Press Acquisition

Director Kim Dong-chul maintains a slick pace, cutting quickly between battles, flashbacks, and philosophical chatter about rituals and possession. Unfortunately, this rhythm only exposes how fragmented the script feels.

Every scene races to explain another piece of ancient lore instead of grounding viewers in emotion or suspense. The story’s energy is there, but its pulse is missing.

Father Park’s Struggle Feels Symbolic but Hollow

The film revolves around Father Park, voiced by Choi Han, a former doctor turned exorcist whose towering presence contrasts with his quiet grief. His introduction sets him up as a weary man haunted by loss and purpose.

When approached by his old acquaintance Guardian Jang, he gets pulled into a war between spiritual factions and forbidden rituals that threaten to unleash cataclysmic power.

On paper, this should have been a strong emotional core: a man of science turned man of faith contending with moral conflict. Instead, his arc is hijacked by convoluted legends and unnecessary subplots.

Father Park’s story could have served as a human anchor in this supernatural storm. He is sympathetic and visually striking, constantly clutching a flask of holy water as though it were whisky. Yet, the script offers him no real introspection beyond occasional exchanges about divine duty.

We are told he has suffered losses, but we never learn who he loved or what truly motivates him to fight. His partnership with Jang feels functional rather than emotional, primarily used to deliver heavy exposition.

That exposition dominates everything. Early scenes between Park and Jang unfold like lectures rather than conversations. They discuss orders, demons, and rituals, yet their shared past remains a mystery.

When they mention the Haedong Order and its internal corruption under Master Seo, the audience expects tension, but every reveal is buried beneath more mythological jargon. The film’s structure prioritizes building lore over fostering empathy.

Then there is Joon-hoo, the gifted child they are assigned to protect. Supposedly central to the story’s prophecy, Joon-hoo rarely speaks and has almost no development.

Instead of creating an emotional thread around protecting innocence amidst chaos, he becomes just another vessel for exposition. By the midpoint, the viewer forgets who exactly needs saving or why.

A Visual Triumph With Narrative Fatigue

The greatest strength of Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning lies in its craftsmanship. The hand-rendered animation steeped in Korean architecture and mythology is consistently beautiful.

LOCUS Corporation’s six-year effort pays off in small moments, a swirling temple emerging through fog, the vivid contrast between old stone and blue moonlight, or the kinetic flow of supernatural energy during battles. Each frame displays extraordinary attention to tone and texture.

Exorcism Chronicles The Beginning
Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning (Credit: Showbox)

Action scenes, particularly those featuring fire, water, and lightning-based powers, show why Korean animation is becoming a global force.

The characters fight with a choreography that feels rooted in both martial arts and spiritual ritual. In a purely visual sense, the movie belongs in the same conversation as Demon Slayer and Jujutsu Kaisen, though its storytelling never reaches those heights.

Despite this polish, the editing works against the film’s emotional potential. Viewers are rushed from scene to scene without time to breathe. Exposition-heavy montages substitute for genuine progression.

The dialogue constantly references prophecies, Hindu deities, and multiple guardians whose connections to the present plot are murky. Mentions of Kali, Asura, and Shiva promise cosmic confrontation, but their symbolic presence is muddled by nonlinear writing. The result feels more like an anthology sampler than a cohesive film.

Even the musical score, though energetic, contributes to fatigue. Loud percussion underscores nearly every moment, erasing nuance where silence might have conveyed more tension. What could have been a haunting spiritual horror about inner torment instead becomes an overburdened fantasy epic.

The Curse of Too Much Lore

The rich mythology of Toemarok deserved careful adaptation. However, Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning gets caught between fan service and cinematic structure.

Rather than simplifying its story for new audiences, it insists on introducing every faction, deity, and elemental warrior as quickly as possible. For viewers unfamiliar with the source, it feels like being dropped into the finale of a complex series halfway through.

Even hardcore fantasy fans may feel disoriented. Exposition lines arrive so rapidly that key ideas vanish almost immediately. When the villainous Master Seo finally reveals his intentions to harness ancient powers through a grand ritual, the moment lacks weight because his motives have been lost amid prior chaos.

The same issue wrecks the subplot involving Lee Hyun-am, a vengeful teenager whose fire-scorched arm and personal loss could have added emotional grit. Instead, his arrival feels random, creating more confusion than context.

The movie seems aware it might one day spawn sequels and, therefore, treats every scene like a teaser for future revelations. It positions itself as chapter one of an epic saga while wrongfully assuming viewers will stick around for clarity later. That decision drains tension from the immediate story.

The title promises an exorcism but gives audiences endless mythology instead.

Creative Vision Without Coherence

Director Kim Dong-chul’s team clearly loves the source material. Their dedication shows in scale, animation, and defining visual choices. Yet, passion without focus only amplifies chaos. The film’s obsession with building a massive mythos prevents any emotional anchor from forming.

Each element of Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning almost works in isolation. The tragic exorcist, the rebellious acolyte, and the demonic overlord are all archetypes that function well in fantasy anime.

But when mashed together without proper rhythm, they cancel one another out. The experience feels similar to watching an extended video game cutscene where control has been stripped away. Spectacle remains; immersion fades.

Though the film ends with the promise of resolution, it never justifies the journey. The viewer exits with admiration for the artwork but exhaustion from the storytelling. If this truly is “the beginning,” the hope is that a potential sequel would focus less on assembling mythology and more on giving humanity back to its heroes.

A Cautionary Start for Korean Animation Epics

Exorcism Chronicles: The Beginning proves that visual excellence cannot compensate for weak narrative design. It is both striking and frustrating, filled with imagination but lacking emotional rhythm.

Its ambition to craft a Korean fantasy mythos like Demon Slayer or Bleach is commendable, yet structure matters as much as spectacle.

The film’s team has proven Korea can deliver animation on par with Japan’s best. Now the challenge is achieving emotional storytelling that audiences can not only watch but truly feel. For all its promise, this beginning feels like a story searching for its reason to exist.

Also read: Inside the Gaming Industry’s Job Meltdown: Why Studios Keep Cutting Staff

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Arin Tripathi

Arin Tripathi

Arin Tripathi, a dedicated final year BCA student, resides in the vibrant city of Bangalore. During his leisure hours, he immerses himself in the world of manga and enjoys watching TV shows on platforms like Netflix and Hulu. His specialization lies in crafting content related to U.S-based shows and series.

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