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Sea Fog

Original title: Haemoo
  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Sea Fog (2014)
Trailer for Sea Fog
Play trailer1:41
2 Videos
16 Photos
Conspiracy ThrillerPsychological DramaDramaThriller

A fishing-boat crew takes on a dangerous commission to smuggle a group of illegal immigrants from China to Korea.A fishing-boat crew takes on a dangerous commission to smuggle a group of illegal immigrants from China to Korea.A fishing-boat crew takes on a dangerous commission to smuggle a group of illegal immigrants from China to Korea.

  • Director
    • Sung-bo Shim
  • Writers
    • Sung-bo Shim
    • Bong Joon Ho
    • Min Jeong Kim
  • Stars
    • Kim Yoon-seok
    • Park Yoo-chun
    • Han Ye-ri
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sung-bo Shim
    • Writers
      • Sung-bo Shim
      • Bong Joon Ho
      • Min Jeong Kim
    • Stars
      • Kim Yoon-seok
      • Park Yoo-chun
      • Han Ye-ri
    • 22User reviews
    • 69Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 18 wins & 17 nominations total

    Videos2

    Sea Fog
    Trailer 1:41
    Sea Fog
    SEA FOG - OFFICIAL US Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    SEA FOG - OFFICIAL US Trailer
    SEA FOG - OFFICIAL US Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    SEA FOG - OFFICIAL US Trailer

    Photos15

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    Top cast13

    Edit
    Kim Yoon-seok
    Kim Yoon-seok
    • Capt. Kang Chul-joo
    Park Yoo-chun
    Park Yoo-chun
    • Dong-sik
    Han Ye-ri
    Han Ye-ri
    • Hong-mae
    Moon Sung-keun
    Moon Sung-keun
    • Wan-ho
    Kim Sang-ho
    Kim Sang-ho
    • Ho-young
    Lee Hee-joon
    Lee Hee-joon
    • Chan-wook
    Yoo Seung-mok
    • Kyung-koo
    Jeong In-gi
    Jeong In-gi
    • Stowaway
    Jo Kyeong-sook
    Jo Kyeong-sook
    • Yool-nyeo
    Kim Bo-jung
    • Kyeong-goo ticket girl
    • (as Kim Bo-jeong)
    Jo Deok-jae
    Lee Dong-yong
    Lee Dong-yong
    • Man having sex at restaurant
    Lee Joo-han
    • Smuggled illegal migrant
    • (as Ju-Han Lee)
    • Director
      • Sung-bo Shim
    • Writers
      • Sung-bo Shim
      • Bong Joon Ho
      • Min Jeong Kim
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.84.1K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6grantss

    Interesting drama

    The captain of a South Korean fishing trawler is offered his biggest payday yet. All he has to do is pick up a bunch of Chinese refugees off the mainland of China and bring them to South Korea. He takes the job and initially everything goes well. However, the plans are thrown into disarray when tragedy strikes...

    Interesting drama. Plot starts and develops well. The event that changes the course of the plot is shown in a semi-sympathetic light towards the crew and captain and you get the feeling it is going to be story about how the crew manage to evade the authorities, and smooth things over with their paymasters.

    However, from a point the movie takes a romantic turn, and an idealistic turn, and this reduces it from a crew vs the authorities movies to a much more conventional good guys vs bad guys film. The multi-layered shades of gray is replaced a one-dimensional black- and-white. This takes the lustre off the movie to an extent.

    Is still reasonably entertaining in the end, but had the potential to be something great.
    6yoggwork

    the outbreak of the evil part of human nature is a little too abrupt and short

    Generally speaking, it's OK. But the difficulties ahead are a little thin, and the outbreak of the evil part of human nature is a little too abrupt and short.
    9TribalWho

    There are movies you watch to forget, and movies you watch to remember. Watch Haemoo to remember.

    (TIFF'14 Intro) Director Sung Bo Shim introduced the movie's afternoon screening and stuck around for Q&A session afterwards.

    (Review) I consider Snowpiercer to be one of the best films to come out of 2013, and Joon-ho Bong's co-scripting duties on Haemoo was what attracted me to Haemoo. While first time director, and co-script(er) Sung Bo Shim took over directorial duties for Haemoo, it is with Snowpiercer that the film will most draw comparisons. Although they couldn't be more different in terms of scripting, plot, or even the message they aim to get across, they are both a gritty, bleak look at humanity's darker side, and in both cases, play their conflicts out in locations that mirror the messages the films are trying to get across. As Snowpiercer traces a revolution that begins in the bleak lower classes back carriages of the last remaining train on Earth, moves through the empowered, and autonomous middle class cars and ends at the apathetic, electronically numb upper classes carriages, the audience are treated to a class warfare fueled journey through the entirely of our world.

    Bo Shim, here, plays his tale out on a small fishing vessel, and a desperate captain, who decides to transport human cargo when business runs slow. As in Snowpiercer, the fishing vessel, and the ocean it travels on, reflect the mental state of the crew. Clear waters and sunny oceans start their journey, dark stormy waters mark their arrival to pick up the new cargo and as the crew start breaking and coming to terms with what they've been forced to do, the Haemoo (sea fog) sets in, blinding our screens, and trapping the vessel in ethereal limbo. Bo Shim takes visual clues from Joon-ho Bong and dresses up the three areas of the ship according to their roles: the uppers decks are gray and steely, the fish hold (a very bad place) is dark and bleak, and the engine room, the only 'sanctuary' for a large part of the film, is decked in shades warm yellow and brown. The film looks stark and visceral, and everything, from the script to the acting, helps get that across.

    All the sights and sounds would be a waste without a solid script to back it up, and the movie does not disappoint. Haemoo throws average, ordinary, salt of the earth people into desperate situations that shatter, twist and test them. The movie's first act traces the lives of these fishermen, on and off land, and shows them going about their lives. The writing in these parts is so authentic that it's hard not to view them as real people, with real, crappy jobs by the time they head back off to sea. It is through these unremarkable and slow sequences (a charming little love story on the boat takes the better part of the first hour) that the script manages to put us at ease and catch us off guard when the s**t hits the fan. And it does hit the fan. I won't spoil anything for you, and while there's hardly any on screen violence, Haemoo was more effective as a horror movie than last night's screening of Rec 4. The final act culminates in one of the most haunting sequences you will see this year on the big screen, and ends with a perfect ending: unapologetic, chaotic, confusing, without closure. Real.

    Before the film began, one of the film's protagonists (also in attendance) said she hoped that the movie will stay with the audience long after it's over. I find it hard to imagine anyone walking away from this film unscathed. How could ordinary people do these acts? Was there something dark inside them all along? Perhaps the things they were forced to do shattered their minds? Perhaps there something dark and twisted in everyone? These are questions I should stop asking myself, but I can't. Haemoo is a masterpiece, and excels in getting under your skin and affecting you on a very primal level. This is a movie you need to watch, and with an excellent score to boot, one you should want to.
    MovieIQTest

    Kudos to Korean Movie People

    This film is another living proof to show the world how Korean movies could be so unique and so creative. If you turn your eyes to the recent Chinese movies, including those from Taiwan and Hong Kong, you might immediately be able to tell the day and night differences and how superior and transcendent are the Korean movies, their screenplay writers, their directors and their actors are just so superior to other Asian movie industries. Japanese movies used to be good, but after their anime crap dominated over everything, their movie industries just suffered a nose dive, most of their great movies were produced between 1930 to 1070, after that golden era, Japanese movies simply lost almost everything worth mentioning.

    "Sea Fog" is another memorable Korean masterpiece. Those familiar actors were doing great in this bone-chilling film. A fishing boat, fishing bad luck, down and out captain, crew and those smuggling illegals, accident (a so appropriate American slang: "Shit happens"); so unpredictable and so unavoidable....

    Then, there's one thing also proved that we are too human, too subconsciously trying to hide from the atrocity and tragedy by using sudden unexplainable sex to get a cathartic escape. I do understand that under some weird, dangerous, suffocating occasions, when the tension is too high to bear, if there is an opposite gender facing the same situation with you, both you and her or him, just might use love making as a safe harbor to escape the atrocious storm and to release the pressure right afterward. But still, when that moment happened in this film, I still couldn't help shaking my head and murmuring: "WTF!??", then suddenly I realized that episode was quite possible.

    If you like this movie, please don't forget to check out another great Korean movie, "The Yellow Sea", that's another bone-chilling film that only the great Korean movie people could have achieved.
    8kosmasp

    What you sea ...

    ... is what you get? You may expect certain things to happen, but I would think that if you haven't read too much about the story, at least the inciting incident will come as a shock. That doesn't mean that the movie has not prepared you for this, but it still is quite the shocker.

    Having said all that, the characters are very well drawn. And while some things may feel like over the top (or over the board?), it all makes sense in the grander scheme of things. Very well acted and suspensful from start to finish. Although the ending may not be everyone's cup of tea I reckon (no pun intended).

    If you are already a fan of Korean cinema, this will only underline that sentiment. If this is your first journey (again with the puns) into that territory (I do those on purpose don't I?), then you are in for a treat - might not be entirely a sweet one, but we wouldn't want to have it any other way (the majority of characters here will very likely disagree)

    Best Emmys Moments

    Best Emmys Moments
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    Related interests

    Gene Hackman in The Conversation (1974)
    Conspiracy Thriller
    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie is based on a true story called "the 7th Taechangho accident" that happened at South Korea, in 2001. A group of illegal immigrants from mainland China was tried to smuggled to Korea but 25 people were suffocated to death in the fish tank and dumped to the sea by the fisherman. Rest 35 people were set on foot to Korea and they disappeared until one was found, arrested and confess the whole event to authority.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 482: TIFF 2014 (2014)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 13, 2014 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • 海霧
    • Filming locations
      • Goyang, South Korea
    • Production company
      • Lewis Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,418,310
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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