
Set in rural South Korea in the late 1980s, “Memories of Murder” chronicles a series of grisly murders that shake a small town and obsess a team of local detectives.
Detective Park Doo-man, a man with faith in his observational prowess, is joined by Seoul detective Seo Tae-yoon, who prefers scientific methods over intuition and impulse.
The investigation faces several setbacks from the start. Initially, sexism and corruption within the police force, including hasty confessions extracted through brutality, result in false leads and missed opportunities.
The detectives pursue various suspects, relying on circumstantial evidence and Park’s unique idea that he can recognize the guilty by their gaze. But each suspect is eventually cleared. Missed clues and mishandled interrogations only increase the pressure.
Fresh hope arises when forensic science finally enters the case. A DNA sample from the latest victim offers a potential breakthrough, leading detectives to focus on Hyeon-gyu, a factory worker who fits the survivor’s description of soft hands and has suspicious ties to the murders.
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The tension between Park and Seo heightens as frustration and feelings of personal failure mount, culminating in impulsive violence and emotional breakdown.
Pursuit, Doubt, and Defeat: What Happened
Events take a pivotal turn near the movie’s end with the murder of a young schoolgirl for whom Seo feels personally responsible. Having once bandaged her wound and promised safety, Seo cannot bear the weight of his perceived failure.
When forensic documents from the U.S. arrive, the results prove inconclusive; the semen sample does not match Hyeon-gyu’s DNA.
This revelation devastates both detectives. Seo, determined that Hyeon-gyu is guilty, denounces the documents he trusted throughout the case, while Park, who has long relied on gut feeling, can no longer sense guilt or innocence in the suspect’s eyes.
This moment is crucial because both men are confronted with the limits of their beliefs. Park’s method fails him; Seo’s faith in evidence is shattered. They release Hyeon-gyu, leaving him to disappear into the night, just another face swallowed by darkness and unanswered questions.
Years later, Park has abandoned policing, becoming a businessman and family man. During a routine sales trip, he visits the site where the first murder occurred, unable to let go of the years of unanswered questions.
There, a local girl tells Park that another man recently stood at the same spot, looking into the ditch and reminiscing about something he did long ago. When Park asks what the man looked like, she replies that he was “very ordinary” and she couldn’t describe any distinguishing features.
This scene is both chilling and profound. Park’s realization that he likely just missed encountering the real killer, who calmly visited the crime scene all these years later, delivers the final emotional blow. Park stares into the camera with a lost, searching expression.
The director intentionally leaves viewers unsettled, as though inviting them to feel the weight of unresolved guilt and truth. The killer could be anyone; his identity remains hidden behind a normal facade.
Legacy, Ambiguity, and the Meaning Behind the Final Scene
Director Bong Joon-ho’s ending emphasizes ambiguity over resolution. There are no dramatic confessions, courtroom victories, or moments of triumph. The final shot of Detective Park breaking the fourth wall stands as one of the most memorable moments in modern cinema.
Bong Joon-ho has stated that part of his idea was that if the real-life serial killer ever watched the film, he might feel the detective’s gaze upon him, locking eyes with his pursuer through the medium of film itself.

The ending is not simply about failure to catch a killer; it is a reflection on the nature of truth, memory, and how violence haunts both those who commit it and those left seeking justice.
The director uses Park’s transformation from an arrogant cop certain of his methods, to a heartbroken man devoid of certainty, to mirror society’s deeper struggle with unsolved crimes and the corrosive effects on those involved.
The ambiguous ending ties back to several points established throughout the movie:
False accusations and police violence leave both the suspects and detectives scarred.
The hope placed in scientific evidence, exemplified by Seo, is not enough. The technology of the era failed to match the killer’s DNA.
Innocence and guilt remain blurry amid mounting pressure to resolve the case quickly.
The open wound of the unsolved case remains. For Park, every personal change, including leaving the police force and settling into a normal life, is shadowed by memories of victims and missed chances. The last murder victim, the schoolgirl, compounds this torment, as Seo’s emotional connection to her amplifies his sense of loss.
Bong Joon-ho’s direct gaze invites viewers to reflect on their role as witnesses. If the audience feels unsettled, it is intentional. The director turns the search for the killer into a mirror, reflecting the lingering doubts, failures, and unanswered questions that remain long after the official investigation ends.
Decades of Mystery: Context and Impact
Based on the true story of Korea’s first documented serial killings, “Memories of Murder” remains one of the nation’s most acclaimed films. It resonates deeply in Korean society, not only for its gripping story but for its powerful portrayal of flawed justice and unresolved trauma.
Years after the film’s release, new forensic technology did indeed lead to the arrest of a suspect for the real-life Hwaseong murders, but at the time of the movie’s conclusion, the crimes remained unsolved.
The story’s ambiguity directly reflects the frustrations of investigators and victims’ families. That haunting lack of closure is what gives the film its powerful effect.
“Memories of Murder” concludes not with answers, but with burning questions: Is justice always possible? What toll does failure take on those who chase the truth?
By refusing to provide a neat resolution, the film maintains an emotional intensity that lasts long after the credits roll. Park’s silent gaze reminds everyone that some mysteries refuse to fade, and the search for truth can leave scars deeper than any solved crime.
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