The elder’s battle against madness serves as a microcosm for the village’s collective insanity.
Paper Title: The Soil’s Judgment: Analyzing Communal Guilt and Folk Horror in Jikirag (2022) 1. Introduction
The village is not a sanctuary but a graveyard. The film suggests that survival at the cost of moral integrity creates a "debt" to the earth.
The visuals evoke a sense of "ancient Eden" gone sour. The environment is a character in itself, mirroring the mental state of the villagers.
The horror in Jikirag is chthonic; the judgment "burrows up from below," symbolizing a repressed history that can no longer be buried. 3. Visual Language and Worldbuilding
Jikirag is a significant addition to folk horror for its focus on the "monstrous judgment" that arises from within a closed system. While it struggles with traditional narrative momentum, its contribution to the genre lies in its evocative worldbuilding and its grim meditation on the idea that no village can truly outrun its own history. Jikirag (2022) - IMDb
Jikirag (2022) enters the contemporary folk horror revival by situating its narrative in a remote, archaic village built on a foundation of historical trauma. Unlike films that focus on an outsider’s arrival (like The Wicker Man ), Jikirag focuses on internal decay. The film’s central thesis posits that the "balance of flesh and soil" is a fragile covenant, and when that balance is broken by human depravity, the land itself exacts a monstrous judgment. 2. Narrative Architecture: The Cycle of Sin