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#Alive (Korean: #살아있다; RR: #Saraitda) is a 2020 South Korean post-apocalyptic action horror film directed by Cho Il-hyung. [2] Starring Yoo Ah-in and Park Shin-hye, it is based on the 2019 script Alone by Matt Naylor (itself becoming another film), who co-adapted his script with Cho.
An English professor and the form teacher of Class 2–5. Yoon Byung-hee as Kang Jin-goo [32] A sports teacher. Ahn Si-ha as Kim Kyung-mi [33] The school's nurse. Yoon Kyung-ho as Jung Yong-nam [34] A Korean teacher and the school's dean. Um Hyo-sup as the school's principal. [13] Park Jae-chul as Jeon Ho-chul [35] An auxiliary police officer ...
Chul-min narrowly saves Jung-seok from a zombie bite but is shot dead by Hwang, much to Jung-seok's dismay. Min-jung fends off Seo and escapes in the truck with Jung-seok, but their route is blocked by a horde of zombies. Joon, Yu-jin, and Elder Kim arrive and distract the zombies on a chase to their car.
The Train to Busan film series consists of South Korean action-horror zombie films, created by Park Joo-suk and produced by Next Entertainment World.The installments include a theatrical movie, an animated prequel that was released in theaters in the international market, and a standalone sequel that had a limited theatrical release.
Zombie films have roared back in popularity since 'The Walking Dead' premiered in 2010. Here, we look at the best zombie movies on Netflix to stream now.
Zombies are fictional creatures usually portrayed as reanimated corpses or virally infected human beings. They are commonly portrayed as anthropophagous in nature—labeling them as cannibals would imply zombies are still members of the human species, and expert opinions quoted in some of the films below, e.g. Dawn of the Dead, specifically state this is not the case.
As of Dec. 13, Disney will test the waters for the show in the U.S. as English-dubbed episodes of “Moving” premiere on Hulu. Episodes is also available on Hulu with English-language subtitles ...
Whispering Corridors (1998) is seen as the film to have sparked the explosion of the Korean horror genre. It centers on the theme of school girls and the mysterious "other side", but also offered criticism of the Korean school system. Four more distinct horror films set in all-girls schools were made as part of Whispering Corridors (film series).