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The Yellow Sea
Description
A taxi driver (Ha Jung-woo) goes on the run after an attempt to carry out a hit on a professor (Kwak Do-won) goes terribly awry. The police, the South Korean mob, as well as the ethnic Korean Chinese mafia all frantically search for him.
A taxi driver (Ha Jung-woo) goes on the run after an attempt to carry out a hit on a professor (Kwak Do-won) goes terribly awry. The police, the South Korean mob, as well as the ethnic Korean Chinese mafia all frantically search for him.
Actors:
Ha-bok Yu,
Yun-seok Kim,
Jae-hwa Kim,
Byeong-eun Park,
Seok-jeong Hwang,
Seo-Hyun Ahn,
Jung-woo Ha,
Yoo-Mi Lee,
Cheol-min Lee,
Sung-ha Jo,
Man-sik Jeong,
...»
Ha-bok Yu
Yun-seok Kim
21 January 1968, Danyang County, North Chungcheong Province, South Korea
Jae-hwa Kim
1 September 1980, South Korea
Byeong-eun Park
Seok-jeong Hwang
Seo-Hyun Ahn
12 January 2004, Suwon, South Korea
Jung-woo Ha
11 March 1978
Yoo-Mi Lee
Cheol-min Lee
11 July 1970, South Korea
Sung-ha Jo
Man-sik Jeong
11 December 1974, South Korea
Director:
Hong-jin Na
Hong-jin Na
Country:
United States, Korea, Hong Kong
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October 23, 2011
[A] highly efficient Korean thriller...December 01, 2011
A breakneck mix of bone-crunching freneticism and bloody close-quarters knife-fighting with a strand of romantic melancholy.
London Evening Standard
October 21, 2011
The action is epic but there's psychological depth too.October 18, 2011
A listless succession of brutal, consequence-free stabbings encase a pair of lengthy chase set pieces, both technically adept, both utterly ridiculous.October 25, 2011
At nearly two and a half hours long, The Yellow Sea is overkill in every sense.December 14, 2011
Although the central story is compelling, even fans of this ultra-violent genre might find The Yellow Sea (the water between China and Korea) is too long and dark, especially given the way the leading characters wear black at night.March 21, 2013
...does boast its fair share of gripping moments.November 29, 2011
The Yellow Sea is far less interested in character than in choreographing pursuit scenes spiced with Asia Extreme levels of violence.November 10, 2011
a gripping existentialist thriller, where jealousy, greed and desperation lead inexorably to a chaos of carnage, and where exile and death cross their borders to merge into an emotionally-charged sequence of final images.
New York Times
December 01, 2011
A rush of a movie from South Korea that slips and slides from horror to humor on rivers of blood and offers the haunting image of a man, primitive incarnate, beating other men with an enormous, gnawed-over meat bone.December 05, 2011
Probably the year's best crime drama and might be confirmation that there is a new master of the genre, spinning tough as teak tales, ready to emergeNovember 29, 2011
Writer-director Na Hong-Jin achieves a vibe of urban desolation right off the bat, and deepens the mayhem with acutely observed and charged details about illegal-immigrant life.