While a zombie virus breaks out in South Korea, passengers struggle to survive on the train from Seoul to Busan.While a zombie virus breaks out in South Korea, passengers struggle to survive on the train from Seoul to Busan.While a zombie virus breaks out in South Korea, passengers struggle to survive on the train from Seoul to Busan.
- Awards
- 36 wins & 42 nominations
Park Myung-shin
- Jong-gil
- (as Myung-sin Park)
Woo Do-im
- Cabin Attendant Min-ji
- (as Do-im Woo)
Kim Jae-rok
- Mr. Kim
- (as Jae-rok Kim)
Lee Joo Shil
- Seok-woo's Mother
- (as Joo-sil Lee)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe actor Ma Dong-seok (the man with the pregnant wife) used to be Gong Yoo's personal trainer.
- GoofsThe abilities of the infected seem to change for the convenience of the plot. For example, before they claim the infected will only attack if they see you, Sang-hwa traps an infected man in the toilet and it still tries to attack him, despite not being able to see him. Also, it is clearly shown that the doors aren't automatic as the handle needs to be pulled down, but eventually they realise that the infected can't open doors, but during the initial outbreak several do so with ease.
- Alternate versionsThe Indian cinema version is a minute shorter than the original version with a few violent zombie shots being censored.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Evening Urgant: Andrey Knyshev/Bi-2 (2016)
- SoundtracksGoodbye World
Music by Young-gyu Jang
Featured review
We're leaving (leaving) on that Zombie Train to Busan (leaving on the undead train).
Use to seeing Korean horror films about ghost, but Zombies!? This was refreshing.
So this neglectful dad tries to make amends with his daughter by riding with her on the train (which she wanted to go by herself) to take her back to his ex-wife. Lucky for both of them as a zombie outbreak happens while their on the train. Now, their only hope for survival is to make it to the Busan stop.
You really can't go wrong with a Zombie movie. It's rare that I've have seen one that I did not like. Train to Busan is definitely a good one too. Its filled with interesting characters. Other than the father daughter team, the train is also occupied by a pregnant women and her Macho and humorous husband, a school girl and her baseball playing boyfriend and some homeless wonderer who saw the outbreak first hand, just to name a few.
The social commentary speaks on what you are made of as an individual and as a society with the best and the worse coming out of everyone during this crisis.
I loved how relentless and aggressive the Zombies were. More like 28 days later than Romero. The special effects do get a little cartoony with zombies that seem to come form nowhere piling over one another like poring cereal into a bowl or something, but it does give you that man, these guys are screwed feel. Train to Busan focus on the idea that the walking dead sense you through sight and sound. If they can not see you or hear you they have no way of knowing your living flesh is a foot away from their hunger. It made for some cleaver obstacles when a group of passengers have to maneuver through train cars filled with zombie passengers (Sounds like the next game in the Resident Evil franchise).
Also found it interesting that no zombies were shot in this picture. I don't know how Korean gun control laws work, but I can assume it's strict enough that the story would make no sense if someone on the train just happen to have one for zombie killing (unlike an American movie in which the unborn child having a gun would be fine so long as it moved along the story). Definitely a rarity in a Zombie picture and it worked.
It's Action packed, it's humorless, with incredible looking zombies and a cast of characters so lively you give a crap what happens to them in the end.
http://cinemagardens.com/
Use to seeing Korean horror films about ghost, but Zombies!? This was refreshing.
So this neglectful dad tries to make amends with his daughter by riding with her on the train (which she wanted to go by herself) to take her back to his ex-wife. Lucky for both of them as a zombie outbreak happens while their on the train. Now, their only hope for survival is to make it to the Busan stop.
You really can't go wrong with a Zombie movie. It's rare that I've have seen one that I did not like. Train to Busan is definitely a good one too. Its filled with interesting characters. Other than the father daughter team, the train is also occupied by a pregnant women and her Macho and humorous husband, a school girl and her baseball playing boyfriend and some homeless wonderer who saw the outbreak first hand, just to name a few.
The social commentary speaks on what you are made of as an individual and as a society with the best and the worse coming out of everyone during this crisis.
I loved how relentless and aggressive the Zombies were. More like 28 days later than Romero. The special effects do get a little cartoony with zombies that seem to come form nowhere piling over one another like poring cereal into a bowl or something, but it does give you that man, these guys are screwed feel. Train to Busan focus on the idea that the walking dead sense you through sight and sound. If they can not see you or hear you they have no way of knowing your living flesh is a foot away from their hunger. It made for some cleaver obstacles when a group of passengers have to maneuver through train cars filled with zombie passengers (Sounds like the next game in the Resident Evil franchise).
Also found it interesting that no zombies were shot in this picture. I don't know how Korean gun control laws work, but I can assume it's strict enough that the story would make no sense if someone on the train just happen to have one for zombie killing (unlike an American movie in which the unborn child having a gun would be fine so long as it moved along the story). Definitely a rarity in a Zombie picture and it worked.
It's Action packed, it's humorless, with incredible looking zombies and a cast of characters so lively you give a crap what happens to them in the end.
http://cinemagardens.com/
- subxerogravity
- Jul 30, 2016
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Estación zombi. Tren a Busan
- Filming locations
- Daejeon Station, Daejeon, South Korea(first stop)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- ₩10,000,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,129,768
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $284,776
- Jul 24, 2016
- Gross worldwide
- $92,767,524
- Runtime1 hour 58 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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