A team of scientists led by Hashimoto has managed to capture the energy of a ghost child, thanks to their newly invented device called Menger Sponge. The child, isolated in an empty flat, moves his lips to words no one understands. Hashimoto enlists special agent Ye Qi-Dong, who is able to read on lips, in order to figure out how this child can shed light on life...and especially life after death...
With a tale about crippled scientist Hashimoto (Yosuke Eguchi) capturing a ghost with his anti-gravity invention called the Menger Sponge, you would think that "Silk" is another "Ghostbuster" caper with a few scares thrown in.
However, instead of scares, all we get are a lot of mumbo-jumbo about spiritual energy, microwave frequency, parental love and a gossamer-like thread of Silk that is supposed to link all these things together.
And halfway into the movie, you would realise that "Silk" is just another Asian production jumping on the bandwagon of successful Asian horrors like "Ringu", "The Grudge" and "The Eye". Nothing makes sense in this fuzzily-written psychological thriller which is reportedly the most expensive (US$6.2 million) movie ever made in Taiwan.
Things start falling apart early when Ye Chi-tung (Chang Chen), a local police sharp-shooter, is called in by Hashimoto to probe into the background of the captured ghost of a boy (Chen Kuan-po). Besides being able to speak Japanese, the cop can also lip-read, which comes in handy in translating the mumblings of the little ghost they had trapped in a dilapidated Taipei apartment.
Who was the young boy and how did he die? Why is his spirit still lurking around? Sure, our cop hero finds the answers to these soon enough but apparently this is not enough for writer-director Su Chao-pin who is intent on endowing his movie with subplots and 'narrative depth'. Somehow, one of the subplots seem promising, though. This concerns Hashimoto's assistant Su Yuen (Barbie Su) who resents having Ye as the hired snoop. She also has the hots for Hashimoto. What has she got against the cop? Does she have an agenda of her own?
Alas, Su Yuen is quickly disposed of in one of the movie's scariest sequences and what we have left are a bunch of irrelevant subplots and themes. One of these concerns Ye's mother, who is critically ill in hospital; another involves the dead boy's mother, a psychotic. There is a romantic angle, involving Ye's girlfriend Wei (Karena Lam) but it is largely undeveloped. Lam, the most watchable of the cast, is simply wasted here.
It would have helped if the audience is made to feel for some of the characters but we get nothing of the sort. Hashimoto and Ye are portrayed as soul-less guys who do not even care about their own lives. And the story of the boy-ghost is so trite that it is a forgettable.
We have no complaints with the technical aspects of the film, provided by a team from Hong Kong. The photography (by Arthur Wong) is up to par and the music (Peter Kam's) enhances the atmosphere. What irritates us most is Su's self-indulgence with his own story, dragging the footage to almost two hours when the plot has run out of steam 30 minutes earlier.
Su got the attention of Taiwan movie-goers with his comedy "Better Than Sex" in 2002. He should have stuck to comedies instead of trying to con viewers with such 'rojak horror' that mixes science with supernatural cliches and mundane human problems.