Films from South Korea were not something you would expect to see at the local cineplex in the U.S. until around 2006 when Park Chan-wook’s kaiju horror fantasy The Host became a surprise crossover hit, appealing to fans of Godzilla and other giant rampaging monster flicks. Prior to that, a few South Korean movies such as Kim Ki-duk’s Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter…and Spring (2003), Bong Joon Ho’s Memories of Murder (2003) and Chan-wook’s Oldboy (2003) had attracted critical acclaim and popularity on the art house circuit. But it was The Host that really opened the floodgates for South Korean cinema in the U.S., reaching a peak in 2019 with Joon Ho’s Gisaengchung (English title: Parasite). It won four Oscars including Best International Feature Film and, more importantly, Best Picture, the first foreign language movie to ever snag that award. Currently you can find numerous South Korean films and TV series like Squid Game available on Netflix and other streaming platforms and most of them are not art house darlings but easily accessible genre movies that U.S. audiences can enjoy. Talju (English title: Escape, 2024), a slickly produced, fast paced chase thriller is a perfect example of this, which interestingly enough, is set entirely in North Korea, a country which does not distribute movies in America due to their restrictive media policies.
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