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Train To Busan Movie Review

Train To Busan Movie Review

By Rashmi DahalPublished 3 years ago 4 min read
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Train To Busan

Zombies on the Yeon Sang-hos train to Busan catch the next person from it and bite one of them in seconds. After the train was released, a group of Zombies caught the train while Seok-woo (Su Seong-kyeong) was on his way to Busan, but the zombified Yon-suk attacked Seok-woo and bit him hard and threw him on a working train. Sewa Woo-sang Hwa Baseball player Min Yong-guk (Choi Woo-Shik) is trapped in the back of the train and fights past the train carts while Zombies approach his loved ones in front of the trains.

"Train to Busan" can be a zombie horror film, but it is also a film with a message. Zombie films must have a conscience in society, and the film is dedicated to those facing economic discrimination.

The film features one of the main characters, Seok-woo (Gong Yoo), a wealthy fundraiser who is concerned about his career, and his daughter Su-Kim (Su Ran), who wants to visit her mother on her birthday in Busan. The missing passenger managed to stumble and spread chaos as the violent virus turned helpless passengers into Zombies, leaving Seok Woo-soo (Soo An) fighting for his life. Modern zombie movies are often associated with mindless clouds, CGI buckets, and terrifying horror tactics that can be seen from miles away by a typical horror fan. One by one, Ma Dong-suk proves to be a film star as she presses the train.

Yon emphasizes the films to send Zombie waves through their dense train chambers. The train to Busan is stronger than your regular zombie movie because it captures the horrors of monsters about us, and that it is our job to overcome this fundamental cause in times of difficulty. It owes much to Train To Busan's previous films, such as World War Z and 28 days later, but it is one and the same.

After a group of motley crews escaped a zombie eruption on a grueling journey from Seoul to Busan, author and director Yeon Sang-hos releases the film Toor To Busan, a locomotive-powered locomotive dynamics. South Korea's fast-track, record-breaking train, which has been on foot for the Dawn of the Dead, a clever return of pride and prejudice with the Zombies and the spectacular World War, is accompanied by The Girl With All the Gifts, breathing new life into a genre that refuses to lie down and die.

The 2016 Yeon Sang-ho film Train to Busan was very popular because it provided a new kind of zombie by blocking the character's "freedom of movement, and because most of the film is set on a timeless train, which gives trains an unsafe but acceptable arrival. South Korea zombie thriller Train To Busan does not escape the snare of creation, but its heroes run the train with immortal soldiers on a dangerous, extremely dangerous journey through Korea with a brave heart. , the disgusting businessman (Vision Seok-woo) and a few decades on the baseball team.

When South Korean director Yeon Sang-ho puts the Zombies on the train, it is a heavenly game at a very low level. Snowpiercer meets World War Z in his King of the Pig Fake, which is the first live movie in which passengers on a high-speed train from Seoul to Busan will not be able to go unless they pay for an outbreak of a virus that infects them. Elite passengers on a South Korean bullet train face swaying, screaming threats, and cheap seats, but the Busan-Seoul train is a scary film loaded with military-powered civilian vehicles.

Contrary to many meetings of zombie action movies, Train to Busan takes time to nurture its characters and ensure that the audience is involved in all the events of the action and the emotional beating. With the film, it is important to set the rules of the game - zombies must be fast, their attacks must be visible, the infection must spread in seconds, and anyone who resists difficulty breaks the rules - before everything goes into a tailspin in the third unfounded act. In the first part, the film presents drawings of genres such as slow response times and a terrifying movie concept, but powerful enough to plow.

As the film progresses and the threat of Zombies grows, Seok-woo begins to re-examine his behavior and care for others, which has led to one of the most satisfying characters of recent horror films.

Busan is a South Korean movie of horror action from Yeon Sang-ho [4] from 2016 starring Gong Yoo, Jung Yu-mi, Ma Dong-Seok, Kim Su-an, Choi Woo-Shik, Ahn Hee, and Kim Eui -sung. The dump bag manager Seok Woo (Gong Yoo) and his daughter boarded a high-speed KTX train from Seoul to Busan during a wildfire, giving a new meaning to the term “passenger disruption”. It doesn't help that Jung Seok is a stockbroker, unlike the Busan train, and that Seok woo kind of asshole with a bite hiding behind villains in some zombie movies.

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About the Creator

Rashmi Dahal

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