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The Yellow Sea

Original title: Hwanghae
  • 2010
  • R
  • 2h 16m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Ha Jung-woo and Kim Yoon-seok in The Yellow Sea (2010)
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

When the attempt to kill a professor goes wrong, a series of violent events are triggered which force a taxi driver to run for his life.When the attempt to kill a professor goes wrong, a series of violent events are triggered which force a taxi driver to run for his life.When the attempt to kill a professor goes wrong, a series of violent events are triggered which force a taxi driver to run for his life.

  • Director
    • Na Hong-jin
  • Writers
    • Na Hong-jin
    • Hong Won-chan
  • Stars
    • Lee El
    • Lee Yoo-mi
    • Ha Jung-woo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Na Hong-jin
    • Writers
      • Na Hong-jin
      • Hong Won-chan
    • Stars
      • Lee El
      • Lee Yoo-mi
      • Ha Jung-woo
    • 51User reviews
    • 126Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 24 nominations total

    Photos27

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Lee El
    Lee El
    • Kim Tae-won's mistress
    Lee Yoo-mi
    Lee Yoo-mi
    • Tae-Won's Daughter
    Ha Jung-woo
    Ha Jung-woo
    • Gu-nam
    Lee Hee-joon
    Lee Hee-joon
    • Boeun Police 2
    Jo Sung-ha
    Jo Sung-ha
    • Tae-won
    Kim Yoon-seok
    Kim Yoon-seok
    • Myun-ga
    Baek Seung-chul
    Baek Seung-chul
    • Debt collector
    Park Byeong-eun
    Park Byeong-eun
    • Bank Employee
    Kwak Do-won
    Kwak Do-won
    • Professor Kim Seung-hyun
    Jang So-yeon
    Jang So-yeon
    • Do-Man Hotel receptionist
    Jeong Man-sik
    Jeong Man-sik
    • Detective 1
    Ahn Seo-hyun
    Ahn Seo-hyun
    • Professor's daughter
    Hwang Seok-jeong
    Hwang Seok-jeong
    • Dollar Dealer
    Lee Cheol-min
    Lee Cheol-min
    • Choi Seong-nam
    Kong Jeong-hwan
    • Jeon Phil-kyoo
    Sung Byoung-sook
    Sung Byoung-sook
    • Gu-nam's mother
    Jo Ha-seok
    Jo Ha-seok
    • Dog seller
    Yu Ha-bok
    • Yanbian taxi boss
    • Director
      • Na Hong-jin
    • Writers
      • Na Hong-jin
      • Hong Won-chan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    7.324.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6dwankan

    Fun but Absurd

    This film is quite a ride. If you like nonstop action, you might like it. If you like stories about desperate people stuck in desperate situations and struggling to get out of them, you might like it.

    Unfortunately, you have to be willing to suspend quite a bit of disbelief to keep watching it, as each five minutes takes the main character further into unbelievable territory. By the end of the film, he's outsmarted several police organizations and several crime organizations, all of which have been chasing him through most of the movie, and it tells in several scenes where, rather than showing how he got out of an impossible situation, the film simply cuts to him driving or running away with nobody in close pursuit, suggesting he did it . . . Um, somehow?

    Other reviewers talk about gritty realism, and while it is gritty, it isn't within miles of realistic. In the real world, the main character of this film would have been either killed or put in prison within thirty minutes of this 2.5 hour story.
    8mute99

    Another bleak offering from Na Hong-Jin

    featuring the same trio of director and leading men from the outstanding "The Chaser" Na Hong-Jin gives us a bleak slice of Korean life. All of the characters are unappealing and unsympathetic, but especially the violent loser Gu-Nam, who is sent on a murderous mission to Seoul by people trafficking gangster Myun-Ga. But despite Gu-Nams hopelessness you still root for him to survive and win despite the odds stacked against him. Na has crafted a flawed masterpiece from these broken elements, with plenty of his trademarks from The Chaser, like the outstanding cinematography (apart from some of the later chase scenes which seem to have been shot on a horrible video camera) and unrelenting violence. I would recommend it very highly.
    8frankenbenz

    A Yellow Stream All Over Hollywood

    www.eattheblinds.com

    I can't remember the last time Hollywood offered me anything mind-blowing. An industry now controlled by bankers for shareholders, even filmmaking geniuses like Martin Scorsese have been reduced to making pointless kids movies. Not even the so-called independent cinema in the US has been spared Hollywood's fixation with the bottom line, where the few table scraps left are thrown to a dwindling numbers of original voices still relevant. If ever we needed another Easy Rider inspired industry revolt, then now is the time.

    With American cinema (not unlike the country itself) irrelevant and hopelessly behind the times, the only option North American cinephiles have, is to go abroad. One of the countries that's long since surpassed American cinema for shock and originality is South Korea. And it's not like Hollywood is oblivious, they're actually cannibalizing SK cinema by remaking Korean gems into pointless American knockoffs. The latest SK gem ripe for reproduction is Hong-jin Na's The Yellow Sea (Hwanghae).

    Like Ravel's Bolero, The Yellow Sea understands the patient reward of crescendo: starting slow and building to a fevered climax. By the end of this, we're left with what seems impossible for an epic 156 minute film: wanting more. With the exception of one car chase marred by phony green screen cutaways (see the video below), the breakneck action, extreme violence and hyper-realistic gore is virtuosic. Guns noticeably absent, whooshing knives, devastating hatchets and the blunt trauma of gnawed animal bones provide The Yellow Sea with brutal, bloody and refreshingly lo-tech weapons of choice, a grim example of how Hollywood and it's obsession with appeasing demographics can't compete.

    But The Yellow Sea is much more than just a knife brandishing ballet that hearkens back to early 90s HK bullet ballets, it's exceptionally well written and acted with none of HK cinema's clichéd melodrama. The characters here are many shades of grey, avoiding archetypal absolutes, allowing us to identify with and like even the worst of the worst. All of the action is beautifully composed with kinetic, hand-held photography that compliments the bleak color palette, which results in a gritty and ultra-realistic film, not unlike so many American masterworks from the 1970s.
    lewism200

    Well-made but too gritty to really enjoy

    The latest Korean thriller to make the international leap is quite an event. Weighing in at a respectable 140 minutes (still 17 minutes shorter than the Korean version) it is filled to the brim with as much grit as anyone could wish for. I knew from the opening voice-over that I wasn't in for a barrel of laughs. The cold monotone relating the tale of a childhood pet dog that died of rabies set the tone for the uncompromisingly grim two-and-a-bit hours to follow. The story follows Gu-Nam, a taxi-driver struggling to make ends meet in a province between Korea and China. His wife has moved away to earn money but hasn't made contact.. In an impossible hole of debt, he is offered a way out. He has to go to Korea and kill someone there. The gangster (the ruthless and unflappable Myun) offering this once-in-a- lifetime chance will, of course, kill his family if he fails. Not, you might think, a terribly original plot idea but there are a number of qualities which make it rather special. First, the setting; South Korea's major cities provide a wonderfully bleak backdrop to the action and much of this is rather beautifully showcased by director Hong-Jin Na. But more than this, the film gives an insight into aspects of Korean culture never normally seen by the Western world, particularly the discrimination against the region Gu-Nam is from (the name of which I will not attempt to type). However, the film's defining feature must be its sheer, visceral grit. Everything, including our desperate protagonist feels painful and dirty. The bloody fight scenes are utterly devoid of glamour and deliberately so. Sadly however, this also robbed them, for me at least, of much of the charm I normally find in well-choreographed fight scenes. This is a trend continued throughout the film. The story, though fairly linear, is complicated by a plethora of characters and the audience is given little to nothing in the way of tantalising hints to lead us through. Essentially, Na has gone out of his way to produce as brutal and harsh a film as he could and, in the process, sacrificed a great deal of potential enjoyment.
    8Ramuna

    It is good but could be better

    First I have to admit that nowadays the more I watched Korean movies, the more I appreciate their good work with a stretch range of variance themes. For right now I am in a state that I will pick a recommended Korean movie over the mega budget Hollywood flick any day of the week. Since my first introductory of Korean movie more or less a decade ago with the like of 'My Sassy Girl', 'Sorum', 'Memories of Murder', 'Oldboy', etc, things only get better.

    And with 'The Yellow Sea' I can't help but to once again utter my sincere compliment. The movie basically divided into four segments each related to the situation of our protagonist. The protagonist himself is a grey character between evil and good, which didn't come as surprise, as many Korean movies has done a lot deal with such a character, take 'Oldboy' or 'I am a Father'.

    The first segment is meant to tell us about the dark and depressing background of the protagonist and the motive following his grim decision for the audience to tolerate. The second segment is what followed after and I assured you it will thrill and hold you at the edge of your chair. Very pacey and full of suspense that the second segment itself could stand as a suspenseful modern noir, of which Alfred Hitchcock and Billy Wilder will nod in full agreement.

    But I think what followed after the second segment is where the movie slipped over. Director Na Hong Jin (from 'The Chaser') tried everything to provide a decent thriller, but maybe he just tried too hard. The way he prolonged the movie and transformed it into multi characters rather than kept focusing on the main character, the die hard character in bloody melee combat, the car flipping and car chasing scenes which was superb and not inferior to that Hollywood's made, those were all but just not add up to the movie's substantial but rather blurred the entire purpose of the movie.

    If the movie is intended as a powerful thriller drama then it surely slipped in the latter half of the movie. A decent thriller drama can not be stuffed with too much action flick I guess. Nevertheless I still like the movie very much and would like to recommend it to all Asian(or Korean) movie enthusiast. Only that I really wish the director made the movie only three quarters as long, stayed focus on the protagonist's gloomy campaign and ended it up the way it was. It would be a dark and a too powerful movie instead.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film opened on December 22, 2010 in South Korea and was top of the box office, selling 1.05 million tickets in its first five days of release, according to the Korean Film Council.
    • Quotes

      Gu-nam: Who's the boss here?

    • Crazy credits
      The film's story unfolds in chapters.
    • Alternate versions
      The US R-Rated version was heavily edited but it's based on the shorter Korean Director's Cut, but apart from some minor story cuts several short cuts typical for the MPAA had to be made due to depiction of action, violence and sex. The Director's Cut runs 4 minutes and 3 seconds longer than the US R-Rated version.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Vdud: Kvataniya (2022)

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    FAQ19

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    • What are the differences between the R-Rated Version and the Director's Cut?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 2, 2011 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • South Korea
      • Hong Kong
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Vidio (Indonesia)
    • Languages
      • Korean
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • The Murderer
    • Filming locations
      • South Korea
    • Production companies
      • Wellmade Starm
      • Popcorn Films
      • Showbox/Mediaplex
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,170,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $15,789,762
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 16m(136 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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