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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

    View Poster
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    + 12
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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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    Featured reviews

    7Misss25

    A thriller based on true story, I really loved it

    I started watching it and thought it's all about an ordinary illegal immigration but guess what I was wrong and I just realized this in half way. Highly tensed, it kept me thinking what's gonna happend next!!

    Are all the crew members gonna survive?

    Are they gonna caught?

    Is Dong sik gonna able to start a new life with that girl?

    I would please to rate this 8/10 but I really dont like it's ending :)
    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.
    10I_Ailurophile

    Striking and harrowing

    This isn't the movie I was expecting - it's so much better.

    The tonal shifts in the film are jarring, throwing the audience off from our expectations. Early exposition introduces the crew of the ship and makes a display of the human element as they first bring the immigrants on board and show them kindness. This contrasts sharply with early moments of conflict as tempers flare, to say nothing of the dramatic turn within the second half.

    For as dark as it is, and well made, 'Sea fog' is deeply, terribly engrossing.

    It's notable that the film was co-written between director Shim Sung-bo and celebrated film-maker Bong Joon-ho, who both similarly collaborated on Bong's marvelous 'Memories of murder.' The same grim atmosphere that pervades the latter film is just as inescapable here, if not more so, as the picture progresses. Where earlier scenes almost let us believe that 'Sea fog' is built as a sentimental human interest story along the lines of Disney's 'The finest hours,' that illusion is quickly dispelled in the second act.

    It doesn't seem especially remarkable, at first, in any way. But Shim's eye as a director waits for the titular sea fog to roll in, literally lending atmosphere to the film, before he pointedly stirs it into his feature with tension as thick as the murky air. The cast roars to life with the onset of great violence and desperation, and every performance is truly riveting as the complexity of each character, and their altogether horrific personalities, are brought to the forefront.

    While all excel, I'm especially enamored with the display of acting from Kim Yoon-seok, who portrays the stubborn, sole-minded captain with an unexpected range that's increasingly captivating as the feature rolls toward its conclusion. Then, too: Han Ye-ri, as Hong-mae, and Park Yoochun, as Dong-sik, share chemistry as scene partners that's greatly alluring. This is especially true in a tender scene that marks the transition from the second to third acts. Both bear such swirling, conflicting emotions in their countenance that, together with the swelling, affecting chords of Jung Jae-il's fantastic score, a scene that should be rousing and touching in a romantic sense instead feels direly tragic and heart-breaking. For as much as 'Sea fog' makes an impression from start to finish, not least of all at the climax, this scene in particular is one I am simply not going to forget.

    The production design is arresting, with the scent of fish and sea air practically wafting through our screens along with the din and grit off the boat, to say nothing of the gloom of the fog. That deepening vapor is employed as pathetic fallacy in 'Sea fog,' to an extent that's maybe a bit heavy-handed, but it feels far more natural than arbitrary. The sheer quality of the storytelling and film-making herein makes this an essential watch, to say nothing of the fact that it's based on real life events.

    This was only Shim's first full-length feature film, and still to date his only credit as director, but he has absolutely proven his worth. The accolades and nominations it received are very well deserved, and by all means it was a fine submission for the Academy Awards that sadly was not selected. I began watching with a particular idea in mind of what I was about to see, and I've been blown away with the experience I got instead. 'Sea fog' is an outstanding movie, highly recommended for all comers.
    8totalovrdose

    Sometimes Shocking, Sometimes Beautiful, Haemoo is a Rare Film that Deserves Viewing

    Haemoo is one of those few films, where to reveal too much while discussing it, would completely ruin the intensity of the story. If you're anything like me, you'll go into the film assuming it will be similar to 'A Perfect Storm', and you will instead find yourself in the middle of something else entirely. Kang (Kim Yun-Seok) is not only a man at the end of his tether, but the captain of fishing vessel Jeonjiho, a bucket of bolts and disrepair, in need of immediate overhaul. The owner, who he reports to, wishes to sell the vessel, though Kang's bond with his ship, which is stronger than any he has with the people in his life, leaves him desperately trying to keep that which has been in his family for generations. Unable to afford the hefty price of buying the vessel, he agrees to illegally transport Chinese-Korean stowaways, from a prearranged location at sea, to the mainland.

    Dong-Sik (Park Yoo-Chun), the youngest and newest member of the Jeonjiho, is one of only a couple crew members who initially expresses issue with this plan, though the lacking quantity of fish, and the need for money, causes everyone to unanimously agree. When moving the illegal immigrants onto the vessel, the beautiful Hong-Mae (Han Ye-Ri), falls into the ocean, Dong-Sik jumping in to save her, thus beginning a strong bond that ties them together.

    The inexperience the Jeonjiho crew have in transporting stowaways, alongside the lustful attraction several of the men have towards a number of the women, results in the build up of tension, as several crew members try to take advantage of the situation. Despite the dangerous conditions, and the threat of being boarded by security, Haemoo explores how sometimes, the greatest threat when you're out at sea, are the people around you.

    Themes concerning love, friendship, trust, greed and fear are interwoven into the plot, the tension slowly escalating with such precise execution, that viewers will literally find themselves inches from the screen, hanging onto every action. Though there are occasional sex scenes, and moments of violence, the film is neither bloodthirsty, nor extreme in their depiction, these instead being used to heighten the story-line.

    The acting is especially convincing, and it is the talents of the crew that especially increases the level of panic, fear and dread that grips the film. Despite characterization being only in short supply, the emotional depth and poignancy surrounding the leads engages us, especially as the film begins to traverse into darker territory.

    A very dark, sophisticated and powerful dramatic thriller, Haemoo shows humanity at its best and worst, and though the theme of hope is continually in a state of flux, I certainly hope you watch this film; if not for any other reason, then for the wide variety of emotions Haemoo is guaranteed to offer.
    7Josh_Friesen

    More solid work from Korea

    It is a really interesting time for Korean cinema. Chan-wook Park and Joon-ho Bong, South Korea's leading auteurs have successfully transitioned into the English language with Stoker and Snowpiercer, introducing a larger audience to their respective cannons. South Korean cinema is flourishing. Haemoo's success on the festival circuit and its selection as Korea's entry for the foreign language Oscar is probably due in a large part to Joon-ho Bong's credit as producer and screenwriter.

    Haemoo (Sea Fog) is based on a stage play which is in turn based on a real event that occurred in 2001. Judging by the collective gasp in the VIFF screening I was in, I assume most were not aware of what event it was based on. All I will say is that the incident is shocking and traumatic; this is not a film for the squeamish.

    The film centers on Captain Kang and his fishing crew. He is about to lose his boat due to lack of finances so in an act of desperation he agrees to the job of smuggling Chinese-Korean immigrants into the country. His crew is not told until they are at sea.

    First time director Sung Bo Shim competently handles the film, employing a straight forward, no bullshit approach to storytelling that would make Clint Eastwood proud. The set pieces are solid, especially the ship itself, although the film would have benefited from a cinematographer who wasn't afraid to take a step back. The camera is often too close to the action and three uses of shaky-cam are three too many.

    Haemoo has its flaws but it's properly paced and well told. The audience at the screening seemed to love it, simultaneously applauding loudly at the finish. I look forward to seeing what Sung Bo Shim does next, preferably with a slightly larger budget.

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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

    • How long is Sea Fog?Powered by Alexa

    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

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

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