Remember the first time you saw My Sassy Girl? Jun Ji-hyun was love at first sight, or for the ladies, Cha Tae-hyun was the studly oppa of 2001. You knew you had to marry them. But they found each other and left you crying to Sad Movie, which hurt even more because Cha Tae-hyun cheated on you again. After all those years, you’re still thinking about your first love. My Sassy Girl is your ex-lover; 2001 is 8 years ago, and that’s a lot of time in movie years. But can you ever get over that movie, that first crush you ever had?
When choosing the top ten Korean movies, there was a lot of sifting through much of the clichéd melodramas. From the excessive amounts of “cheese” that could go on a dozen pizzas, the overly excessive crying that can fill the Han River, and incoherent plots that would actually make “My Father” a good movie, it was only a matter of time before we found the gems of Korean cinema. And there were great gems found indeed. For a film to make the best ten Korean movies, it has to have the following: solid acting, an epic story, a noticeable impact on Korean cinema, and most importantly, an underlying message or meaning upon society. So without further ado, POPSEOUL! would like to present the top 10:
#10) Silmido
Director: Kang Woo-Suk
Writer: Kim Hie-Jae
Genre: Drama, Action, True story
Release Date: December 2003
In the early morning of 1968, 31 young men are forced to run a five mile course with 50 lbs. of military gear and boots in the sweltering heat. After an exhausting trek of tireless running, these young soldiers crawl through muddy waters, navigate themselves to avoid barbed wire, and duck unrelenting machine gun fire during the afternoon. At night, they endure endless pain with heated stakes inserted into the shirtless men’s backs, leaving scarring burn marks on their bodies. Finally, filled with sweat, mud, and grime, they drag themselves to bed late at night to gather a couple hours of sleep in preparation to do the same hellish routine tomorrow. If this sounds like joining an elite Special Forces brigade, you would be correct. Welcome to Silmido soldier!
Silmido is based on a true story of events happening from 1968 to 1971, although the details surrounding the event did not go public until 1999. When a group of North Korean commandos infiltrate the South to assassinate then Korean president Park Jung-Hee, the South Korean and US military barely intercept the would-be assassins before their mission is completed. As the North-South tensions reach their breaking point, the South decides to secretly train its own Special Forces codenamed Unit 684, to exact revenge and kill North Korea’s premier, Kim-Il Sung. Thus the story of Silmido Island and Unit 684 begins.
Silmido Island is 3.5 miles southwest of Inchon, and was used for the sole purpose of creating a squad of lethal killers. To make up this squad, a handful of death row criminals were given two choices: to be executed for their crimes or to join the Special Forces. As only a very few important government officials and military commanders knew of this new unit, they were to secretly train the group for two years until given the “green light” to go ahead and assassinate North Korea’s primer. During these two years of non-stop rigorous training, this handful of former misfits have became some of the strongest soldiers, deadliest snipers, sneakiest saboteurs, and most fanatical men ever trained. Yet when peace agreements started to look more likely in the days before Unit 684’s fateful mission, the South Korean leaders felt the unit was detrimental to a safe Korean peninsula. So what happened to these young men?

The film is built more around the surrounding drama, friendship, and struggles Unit 684 endure together, rather than going deep into the individual characters. This direction makes sense because understanding all 31 characters would not only take too long, but would also dilute the overall story. The corrupt politics between the various South Korean politicians, the rising tension between the two countries, and the officers’ decisions in training the assassin unit also add to the movie’s backdrop quite well. As everything in the movie builds up to the big finale, it is an incredible thriller and suspenseful ride, as the viewer will appreciate and understand Unit 684’s story even more.
One would imagine that a movie based on a true story would bring some controversy over true facts vs. fiction simply added for movie entertainment. Yet, according to various Korean reviewers and notes, the film portrays a fairly accurate assessment of what occurred during the Silmido incident without going overboard. But as with most movies dealing with war or real events, Silmido shouldn’t be watched as the next great historical discovery, but rather, as an untold story about a ragged group of 31 men and their impact on Korean history.
#9) Memories of Murder
Director: Bong Joon-Ho
Writer: Bong Joon-Ho, Kim Kwang-Rim,
Shim Sung Bo
Genre: Thriller, Crime, True Story documentation
Release Date: May 2003
A young woman met an unfortunate fate; she is found bloodied, strangled, raped, and thrown into a countryside ditch. Days later, around the same rural area, another woman’s corpse is discovered with similar brutal torture as the first. But who would do these murders? How did the killer pull off the murders? And most importantly, why would the murderer do such a thing? These are the questions that confronted the Gyonggi police force in 1986, as South Korea was confronted with its first serial killer that lasted until 1991.
Memories of Murder skirts a fine line in retelling a sensitive subject, as the killings bring up painful memories and utter disbelief to the Korean public nearly twenty years ago. The balance between entertainment and sympathy has to be taken into consideration. Fortunately, the movie does a fine job in taking another angle on the brutal tale. While many crime thrillers would go into the killer or the murders, the movie shows how the good guys — the “justice” — are just as corrupt, unruly, and desperate to catch the killer to restore peace. In one scene, blind accusations are taken to the extreme as one suspect gets “interrogated” with fists and kicks. And for this, director Bong Joon-ho deserves praise for presenting the truth instead of taking old wounds and covering them up with new bandages.
Even if one is already familiar with the murder tale, the incentive to see this film lays in its consistent story flow and the male acting leads. Song Kang-ho takes the first lead as the blue-collar Park Du-man, an arrest-first-and-ask-later detective that doesn’t believe in evidence or logical arguments. Kim Sang-kyung, on the other hand, plays the more calm and sane polar opposite, detective . Together, they display a great acting job, showing the constant tension from their philosophical differences, the emotional toll suffered after each passing day, and the frustration of not having the necessary resources from their own police department.
Memories of Murder is one of the many movies that is largely unknown to non-Korean viewers, yet is definitely recommended to those that loves mystery, crime thrillers, or wants a modern perspective on the infamous murder case.
#8) 3-Iron
Director: Kim Ki-Duk
Writer: Kim Ki-Duk
Genre: Thriller, Drama, Romance, Crime
Release Date: October 2004
When 95% of the main character is through his actions and not words, one can’t help but remember the old saying, “Action speak louder than words… much louder.” So what can one say about 3-Iron? If one were to look at the script of the main character during development, it would look similar to this “…” Exactly. Silence is an art. It leaves room for interpretation. It is rare for a lead character in a movie to speak so little, yet mean so much.
Director Kim Ki-duk is known to express his movies by using outside themes, such as the environment, sexuality, subtle silence, or violence to communicate to the viewer, rather than direct dialogue between actors. 3-Iron follows Young Tae-suk, a young, free-spirited, homeless man that breaks into peoples’ houses when they are away on vacation. His intent, however, isn’t to steal valuables. Rather, he uses the owner’s vacant house as a hotel for a day and becomes a “butler”: repairing broken appliances, doing the laundry, and cleaning. Tae-suk’s nomadic lifestyle, however, takes a sharp turn when he comforts an abused wife he meets after a break-in. As they start to become closer, Tae-suk knows that his wandering ways of living will change as well.
Through the silence and his many body gestures, the viewer learns of Tae-suk’s desire to live as a free spirit in secrecy, living as a ghostly presence in many homes without being noticed. Even when thrusted into confrontation and danger, he is a man of very few words, unflinching, unafraid, and not hostile of the consequences. Lee Hyun-kyoon plays the silent protagonist to a tee, as his body movements and facial expressions say more than his words. Lee Seung-yeon blends her acting skills as the distressed wife as she finds true happiness only when she meets her quiet co-star. The amazing part is that neither of the main stars, even as they fall for one another, rarely say a word to the other when expressing their feelings. Yet, during the movie, their adulterous romance is very believable.
3-Iron is a work of movie art, relying heavily on its great acting a lot more than any other movie feature. While the movie starts off slow, the viewer will find appreciation in seeing how Tae-suk grows and evolves throughout the film. Foreign movie critics certainly found appreciation of 3-Iron, as to date, has won six awards and was nominated six times for various categories. This film is a truly unique movie experience and one that should not be missed.
#7) Joint Security Area (JSA)
Director: Park Chan-wook
Writer: Jeong Seong-San, Kim Hyeon-Seok,
Lee Mu-Yeong, Park Chan-Wook,
Based on Park Sang-Yeon (author of DMZ)
Genre: Mystery, Thriller, Drama, War
Release Date: September 2000
In 1989 the Berlin wall fell and reunited Germany. But another wall along the 38th parallel goes without mention and it lies between two sides braced for an inevitable war. It is known as the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). When alarms started to blare throughout the DMZ, both the North and South Koreans started to fire upon one another. A deeply injured soldier made a limping run during the fire fight from the North to the Southern border. Two North Korean soldiers were found shot and dead along the border, as the two Koreas were tethering on the brink of all-out war. The Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission (NNSC) – a non-biased mediator consisting of Swiss and Swedish investigators — were immediately rushed to the DMZ to diffuse the escalating hostilities and uncover the truth. But who were involved in the incident? What happened exactly? Is there more to the story than the testimonies given?
Enter Major Sophie, an investigator of Korean descent, but Swiss citizenship. As Sophie’s first time in Korea, she begins in asking those involved what happened. However, as interrogation after interrogation revealed no results, it became apparent that the soldiers were keeping a crucial secret to finding the truth. When the testimonies from each Korea arrived, their stories posed two vastly differing scenarios that were inconsistent with the other. Even with Sophie’s unique questioning – such as the number of bullets fired and where the gunshots landed – and persistence to the case, without the soldiers’ cooperation, she was getting nowhere. As the investigation grinded to a hopeless rut, both Koreas threatened to extradite the NNSC back to Switzerland within three days. It was apparent that neither side wanted a fair resolution, but to instead believe their own account. However, Sophie had other plans.
While action-thriller Shiri explored both sides of the North-South Korean animosities in 1999, Joint Security Area (JSA) delves even further. Rather than taking the easy route and stereotyping one side as “good” and the other as “evil” or implying hidden biases, JSA director Park Chan-woon shows that both North and South Korean soldiers are, at the core, humans that can have empathy for one another regardless of nationality. The soldiers on both sides have deep, well thought-out, and compelling stories. This is commendable as this movie touches upon the most sensitive topic of Korean Unification and yet presents the subject tastefully.
The movie’s excellent pacing also deserves mention. Through the brilliant execution of bouncing between extended flashbacks and engaging interrogation scenes, the movie really shines at its brightest. The viewer then must go alongside Major Sophie as they piece together the scenes of truth and weed out the scenes of fiction. Only then can a full picture be revealed.
The acting is also top-notch as Lee Young-ae’s portrayal as the charismatic Major Sophie, Lee Byung-hun’s display as guilt-torn Sgt. Lee Soo-hyeok, and Song Kang-ho’s acting of the honorable Sgt. Oh Kyeong-pil were spot on. Many side characters in the film were also acted admirably as well. From being vindictive and disappointed during the interrogations, to showing anger, shock, and desperation during the flashbacks, the movie shows a wide variety of emotions. If there is one thing to knock about JSA’s acting, however, it is Lee Young-ae’s English dialogue. While she is not expected to be fluent in speaking English – as she is fluent in both her native Korean and German – both her pronunciation and script writing sounded clumsy and choppy.
Joint Security Area was one of the biggest blockbusters of 2000. Expenses were not spared in its cinematography due to the new Super-35 mm format, making the camera shots clean and sleek. Its environment was also surreal, as the film studio spent nearly $1 million US dollars into recreating the Pannumejoum truce village seen in the movie. While the film’s acting, presentation, pacing, and realism are all excellent, its deep underlying message is what truly sets this movie to a new level.
#6)Oldboy
Director: Park Chan-wook
Writer: Hwang Jo-Hun, Lim Chung-Hyeong,
Lim Joon-Hyung, Park Chan-Wook
Based on Garon Tsuchiya (story),
Nobuyuki Minegishi (comic)
Genre: Drama, Mystery, Thriller
Release Date: November 2003
A man wakes up in a shabby hotel room and has no clue how he got there. Recovering from a hangover the night before, he finds that the room has the basic human necessities: a desk, a bed, a bathroom, and even a small TV for news. Yet, when he goes to the steel front door, he notices there is a small slot on the bottom and is locked from the outside. He is essentially imprisoned in this room. He soon hears a quaint tune and seconds later, sleeping gas seeps into the room from the small door crevice knocking him out cold. When he finally wakes up, he notices his new clean clothes, a clean haircut, and a fresh new meal of pot stickers slid under from the door’s slot. How long will he be here? Who placed him here? Most importantly, why is this man even in this room in the first place? This is the new life of Oh Dae-su.
Famed Korean director Park Chan-wook creates a sinister, dark, mysterious, and engaging movie with his 2003 thriller Oldboy. Based off the Japanese manga of the same name, the film, for the most part, stays true to the original. From the get-go, this film sucks the viewer in, as they ask the same question as Dae-su, “How did I get in this nightmare?” A few days after he is thrown into his private prison-for-one, he watches a TV news report of death of his wife. To add further result to misery, he is also named the prime suspect of his spouse’s murder. With his wife dead and no way to get out, he goes into a deep depression, void of any real emotion.
Every day he lives in isolation from anyone doing the same routine: eating, exercising, showering, punching walls, watching TV, and sleeping. Whenever he watches TV, it represents his only window to the outside world. The years in his secluded prison pass by, as he witnesses major world events such as the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997, the return of Hong Kong back to China, and the death of the late Princess Diana. One day, however, he is unexpectedly released from his prison he had called home for the last 15 years. This is just the beginning of his journey; now he can find answers to his questions above.
But imagine, just for a couple minutes, what would you be thinking if you had no human contact for the last 15 years, let alone one week? What would you do? Who would you call or go to first? How do you start the most basic conversations with people on the street? If you’re Oh Dae-su, you would feel the need for justice and take revenge on the people responsible for your 15-year imprisonment. If there is one positive from being secluded, it is the various skills he inherently developed. He honed his awareness by watching TV news, fighting prowess by practicing shadow boxing, and taught himself a keen sense of logic and problem solving by his motivation to finding the culprits. Irony sets in, as the skills he learns during his stay in prison would greatly assist him in catching the villains who threw him there in the beginning.
Oldboy is not for the weak or faint-of-heart. The film seriously questions one’s own morals, values, and life itself without “sugarcoating” its intentions. It is intended to make the viewer uncomfortable. Yet, the viewer will be rewarded. Between the movie’s dark tones, vengeful feelings, and sadistic atmosphere, the viewer is pulled into Oh Dae-su’s world. The ending is also crafted quite well, as it contains a both shocking twists and more questions to ponder. Where many other films have difficulty in presenting mature themes, Oldboy succeeds in exploring deeply mature and painful subjects. Choi Min-sik is the actor that makes this dark and mature film work, as his portrayal of Oh Dae-su is amazing.
This is Park Chan-wook’s 2nd movie on this list and it’s no fluke; his movies are just that good. While some of the movies on this list are unheard to non-Korean movie fans, Oldboy is known in many world movie circles. The film has garnered many awards in various film festivals (17 awards total), great praise from movie critics, and a must-see reputation from netizens. Even famous movie directors, such as Quentin Tarantino, who is known to have made films similar in nature to Oldboy, enjoyed the film so much that he wanted it to receive the 2004 Cannes’s Palme D’Or award. Instead, that award went to Michael Moore’s much safer and anti-Bush documentary Fahrenheit 911.
As with the recent Hollywood trend of importing successful Korean movies, a US remake of the film – starring talented US actor Will Smith and directed by none other than Steven Spielberg – is in the works. Hopefully, we can look forward to Smith duplicating Choi Min-sik’s incredible acting and Spielberg paying homage to Park Chan-wook’s masterpiece.
Check out POPSEOUL’s Top 5 Movies of all time!


























Eh, I hope the Host isn’t on top 5. I really didn’t think it was that great. If anything I expected it to be 6-10 but since it wasn’t..btw i like this writer :]
hi …
boys over flower was fantastic
I would love to see Taegukgi in No. 1
No. 2 – 5, not sure which movies will be selected.
My guess: The Host, My Sassy Girl, Friend, Shiri.
HOnestly, I would not put My Sassy Girl in top 5.
great reviews i will defintely watch some of the movies here. 3 iron sound very intriguing
it’s actually really good I felt really bad for the wife she was just so sad
yeh agree taegukgi was a great film, i cried so much for sure it will make top 5
bin-jip is my fav. film ever!! I also love all the Kim Ki Duk movies, he’s a genius!!
i could see symphaty lady vengance, the host & thirst in the next top 5. yeah and taeguki, shiri etc. a line up of all those dark & heavy movies in this countdown.
maybe u can also do a countdown on top comedy/romance/melodrama movies that are lighter but still can touch your heart like my sassy girl, a moment to remember, the classic & tempation of wolves.
anyway i like this kind of entrees. something useful & different from all the gossips.
Oldboy was shocking and threw every idea I have about good and innovative film script. Just like todays news and media reports, the film was made to shock and titillate the audience; and it did succeed in it’s chosen task. The film created mass curiosity and interest. Film critics and (pseudo)film-intellects till date doesn’t cease to speculate on the film.
To each their own; I didn’t like Oldboy.
I hope Top 5 has better movies.
I agree with the pics but man as a young Korean male nothing influenced me and taught me about loyalty than the movies “FRIEND” and “BEAT”. Beat is older and has its moments of cheeziness but man still a great movie. My friends and I are like if your a young Korean male and you haven’t seen Beat then your not Korean. lol
Friend (Chingoo) just speaks for itself. Loyalt, love, betrayal and it is based on true events. Friend should be no.1!
i wish the chaser is #1…..
oldboy is soooooooooooooooo cooolllllll
I really hope that The Host is not in the top 5 simply because of its commercial success overseas. Taegukgi is an amazing film. I think Princess Aurora with Uhm Jung Hwa was an AMAZING movie also. I loved OLD BOY and Sympathy for Lady Vengance – but as you already have one Park Chan Wook movie in there (also his most celebrated one), I guess I won’t be seeing it in the top 5. My Sassy Girl was a good movie, as was Friend. I am surprised that Silmido is number ten – that is in my top 5 for sure. I bet The King & the Clown will be in there too.
My top 5 would be: Sympathy for Lady Vengance, Taegukgi, My Sassy Girl, Princess Aurora and The King & the Clown.
However, I think a few other movies that should get an honorable mention (that are not mentioned in any of the above posts) are: Arahan (it was interesting & funny), The La La Sisters (as it was one of the few Korean comedies that has no meltdown / crying moment), His Voice (that was a really popular movie about the kidnapper), SsangHwaJeom (simply for the gratuitous nudity of Jo In Sung), Dirty Carnival (a good ganster movie with the obligitary one man against a small army of thugs), No Regrets (an at times touching coming-out movie with the obligitary self-defeatest attitudes of the main characters), A Tale of Two Sisters (despite having Moon Geun Young, whom I can’t stand, it is a decent horror flick), 200 Pound Beauty (Although I AM immensely happy not to have to listen to that Maria song everywhere anymore), The Good, the Bad and the Weird, Antique and finally The Aggressives.
Hi funkoffan,
A lot of movies you list here are really good and fans should go see them. Both Oldboy and Lady Vengeance are solid movies as well; heck, the whole trilogy deserves good mention. I’m also glad you liked Silmido; it’s really an underrated movie, an engaging movie, and one that should get more attention from the foreign press.
I think the tricky thing about a top ten is that there’s so many good movies, but only ten slots to put them in. People are always going to have their favorites — as I have mine — so that’s why I really liked your honorable mentions. It gets people to watch movies outside the top 10.
You really know your movies and I look forward to more of your posts in the future.
Thank you. I actually brought Silmido home and made my family watch it. It’s so powerful. My family were so surprised that something like that occurred. Amazingly moving movie.
I love the vengeance trilogy of park chan wook. I hope the other two movies will make the top ten
I also loved Princess Aurora, and I think it’s under-rated. The good, the bad and the weird is a definite in the top5, Tazza is also a great movie.
I forgot all about Tatja/Tazza…Kim Hye Soo was great in it.
spring summer fall winter and spring. the classic. i hope no.1 isn’t my sassy girl. it’s overrated
I don’t know. I’m from the UK and I’ve heard of Memories Of Murder – it’s in our local library. I think most people who follow Korean film know of it – and Foul King, Barking Dogs Never Bite, A Bittersweet Life and plenty of others like The Harmonium In My Memory, Crush And Blush, Princess Aurora, and Speedy Scandal.
In fact, with the exception of Slimido, all of the above are available at my local library.
you should watch Foul King. it’s good and really funny too.
i agree with funkoffan’s choice for the top 5.
I want to start off by saying: from what you have said, your friends are the real writers, you are just the catalyst, the ink that touches the paper. In other words, This work was created collectively by you and your group of friends. This should be labeled not ‘PopSeoul’s Top 10 Korean Movies of all Time.’ PopSeoul needs to attribute this post to you JangTa and your friends whoever they may be.
The movies you listed are very good so far. I have watched #10 Silimido, #9 Memories of Murder, and #7 JSA. Silimido and Memories of Murder both draw out the viciousness of Koreans and displays it in full view of the viewers. The movies also show the tenderness that Koreans have. In Silimido, the soldiers did what they had to do to get their troops recognized. The commander gave his life to these soldiers who worked so hard to ’save’ the nation.
Memories of Murder, as you said, shows the corruption of the police in a time of turmoil. It also shows how far an officer and detective will go to find the killer.
JSA is a great movie about warring sides who befriends one other. I only wish more of the world would realize that people are people and everyone has different viewpoints.
Both 3-Iron and Oldboy look interesting, your writing has piqued my interest into watching these movies.
I am curious as to your Top 5 list. I hope your picks are as good as these other five.
ampdmg
It’s Jae-Hee, not Lee Hyun-Kyoon in Binjip (3-Iron)! Please fix that!
Jae Hee’s real name is Lee Hyun-Kyoon.
Oldboy is great but messed up movie. I do hope Save the Green Planet makes this list. That movie was great.
“Internal sunshine” should be there somewhere. It’s a great movie that question your morality and many more.
Taegukg!!!!!!!!!!!
I wonder why all these “top” movies have to be so dark, sad and plain horror like? I would like to see a lot more romantic and funny movies on the next list, although I cannot stand “My Sassy Girl” probably the most overrated Korean movie..in this list my favorite is 3-Iron.
I was surprised to see Oldboy in 6… After I saw that, I’m not so excited to see the rest… lol but still will
Btw, the Oldboy remake is at a standstill. Are you actually excited for it to be made? Say it isn’t so.
How come no one is talking about Welcome to Dong Mak Gol? I must say it is one of the most underrated movies. I agree with Diana that My Sassy Girl is the most overrated movie ever.
OMG Cameron! I LOVE Welcome to Dong Mak Gol! Why can’t we all just get along? I hope it’s in the top 5!
I’m okay with My sassy girl being overrated! i still love it! haha ^__^
wow I am glad that someone recognizes my correctness. ejwave54 we should be Email buddies for korean movie talk. I like your taste as well. Dong Mak Gol was so overshadowed by lady vengeance and king of the clown. Another overrated movie I think was the host too. All action and no plot makes me a sad viewer.
Taegukgi will be number 1 for sure. It was the first Korean movie I ever watched and that’s when I fell in love with Korean entertainment.
This article inspired me to watch My Sassy Girl and review it on my blog, what a film!
http://japancinema.net/2009/07/06/my-sassy-girl-review/
I am very honored to have this article inspire people! I read your My Sassy Girl review and it is very interesting. Is it your first time watching it?
yes it was, its not often i get turned onto a good film nowadays, I haven’t felt this pleasantely surprised from a film in sometime, many thanks!
after reading this i did actually did go watch 3-iron and it was so worth it! it was a strange and beautiful movie. really enjoyed it and had me thinking for a day or two =). too bad i habnt seen it ealrier since it came out in like 2004? and..WHERE ARE THE REST OF THE top 10 LIST!??
My Sassy Girl is definitely overrated! I saw it and It’s a good movie, but not worthy of all the hype it’s been getting. I don’t think it should be on the Top 10. The Host shouldn’t even be mentioned as a actual movie!
lol I agree with you on The Host, I remember it was such a big thing in Singapore back then, posters and everything. we all went to watch it and I was sitting there going wtf
I hate how hollywood remakes korean movie classics. Nothing can be better than the original. BLAHHH
So very true. I just watched “Mirrors” with Kiefer Sutherland and it was an unattributed South Korean remake of “Into the Mirror.” It annoys me to no end how Hollywood steals stuff from Asia and does not attribute it. People who put out the originals deserve to be credited. (You can tell how miffed I get when people do not get the recognition they deserved)
I still need to find a copy of 3-Iron and Oldboy. Everyone who can stomach it should watch Nabbeun namja/ Bad Guy, a 2001 South Korean film by director Kim Ki-duk. In my humble opinion, this movie should deserve a top 5 spot. It has been 5 or so years and I still remember this movie vividly.
Nabbeun namja is not a nice film at all. It depicts revenge, gangsters, sexual slavery, and prostitution. It is a dark film that examines obsession, class, voyeurism, and violence. Nabbeun namja won the Grand Bell Award, Orient Express Award, and was nominated for a Golden Berlin Bear in 2002.
Jangta, if you have time to watch this before releasing your top 5, this movie deserves a top spot.
If hollywood thinks remaking korean movies are great then they are really mistaken. Even watching trailer of the american remake of sassy girl disgusted me. Becoz I really do think nothing can beat the originals. And I really wonder the need of remaking them into hollywood movies, because language is not a barrier really.
You should really see 3 iron and oldboy. Park Chan Wook’s vengeance trilogy is a must see. And I love most of Kim Ki Duk’s films.
I hope to see Taegukki in the Top 5. Yeah, the Host and My Sassy Girl are definitely overrated. Christmas in August is also a very good movie, although some people might think it’s boring. For horror movies…I’m thinking of A Tale of Two Sisters or something? The Chaser is also a very good movie, but I wonder why it got a lower rating than The Attack on the Pin-Up Boys on Mysoju. Heck, I’m actually waiting to see some SuJu fangirls recommending The Attack on the Pin-Up Boys here.
Since I live in America and I never watch this kind of movies.
I’ve seen IRON and it’s ridanculously weird movie.
A Tale of Two Sisters definitely needs to be in top 3 at the most! If it ’s not on this list, I’ve lost all hope. LOL
C’mon guys I’m dying to see the rest of them… with Oldboy hitting 6 and Silmido at 10… I only have two Korean movies I’ve ever watched that I can rate higher than Oldboy.
Welcome to Dongmakgol and Marathon.
So… hoping there is a gem out there I’ve somehow missed.
A tale of two sisters was FUREEEKYYY.
My Sassy Girl is overrated indeed. Can’t see the “awesomeness” in it, though it sure is funny as hell.
I’m surprised Jae Hee did not win any award for Bin-Jip, hmmm…
oldboy is no.6 ? WTH…!? it shud be no.1
i know all of those movies are interesting but nothing of those i had seen!!!!!! maybe i will find it on youtube…..
Joint Security Area
Old boy should be #1 ^^
It’s unbelievable that 3-Iron and My Sassy Girl are better than the movie “Friend” which should be at least in the top 5.
3-Iron is the best romance I have ever seen, The Chaser is the best thriller I’ve seen since Se7en, and Oldboy is one of the most well made movies ever made. Korean movies rock!
Ey, memories of murder is awesome!!
taeguki is no. 1
I’ve never seen all the other ones..lol
But..saw Old Boy here at my University in the states…awesome plot!
3 thumbs up to the director!
Bichunmoo.
Hello dears,
Great movies. I like to see Korean movies.
I like Shilmido best.
God bless you
The Classic, for me still the best..
where’s winter sonata?
thay movie “my sessy girl” it was really a wonderful movie,i had not saw such a movie in my life.it is an appealing and marvellous movie for me,ireally like it verry much.