The rapid spread of an unknown infection has left an entire city in ungovernable chaos, but one survivor remains alive in isolation. It is his story.The rapid spread of an unknown infection has left an entire city in ungovernable chaos, but one survivor remains alive in isolation. It is his story.The rapid spread of an unknown infection has left an entire city in ungovernable chaos, but one survivor remains alive in isolation. It is his story.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Lee Hyun-wook
- Lee Sang-cheol
- (as Hyun-Wook Lee)
Oh Hye-won
- Police officer
- (as Hye-Won Oh)
Jeon Woon-jong
- Infected fireman
- (as Woon Jong Jeon)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBears a striking resemblance to the "Kondo Tatsumi" story in Max Brooks' World War Z - An Oral History of the Zombie War (Complete Edition). Both stories concern an online gamer who finds himself caught in a zombie apocalypse with limited to no skills to survive. This movie is set in Korea and Brooks' story is set in Japan.
- GoofsJust before the power goes off in Joon-woo's apartment, he looks out the window to see a missile hitting part of the city. There's a bridge between where he is and the explosion, with cars running at normal speed in both directions, as if there's no emergency whatsoever.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Kill Count: #Alive (2020) Kill Count (2020)
- SoundtracksSail
Performed by Inni
[Played during the end credits]
Featured review
Oddly enough I hadn't even heard about "#Alive" before getting the opportunity to sit down and watch it. And even more surprising is that I am a huge fan of zombie movies, so the fact that "Alive" had eluded me was odd.
Nevertheless, this being the year that the highly anticipated "Peninsula" - the sequel to "Train to Busan" - also coming out, it was a little bit strange to find another zombie movie from the South Korean cinema. Not that I mind that, no, no, no. Not at all. In fact "#Alive" (aka "#Saraitda") actually turned out to be more enjoyable and entertaining than "Peninsula" was. Yeah, I know, right...
Anyway, I will say that "#Alive" is not your average run-of-the-mill zombie movie. And I love the way that the movie starts out and just throws the audience right into the action. That was just glorious. I liked that so much, because the zombie action is what is enjoyable, not the things leading up to it.
The acting in "#Alive" was good, and the lead actor and actress managed to carry the movie quite well, especially since there were hardly any other performers in the movie with dialogue.
The zombie make-up and effects were good, and taking into consideration that this was in the beginning of an outbreak, you shouldn't expect to see fully decomposed shambling corpses. Normally I am not overly keen on running and agile zombies, but I will say that it actually worked out well enough in "#Alive", for some reason.
If you enjoy zombie movies, then you definitely should take the time to sit down and watch the 2020 movie "#Alive" from writer and director Il Cho, because it does bring new contents to the zombie genre.
I am rating "#Alive" a six out of ten star. Quite worth the time, money and effort, and a well-worthy addition to the zombie genre. So it seems that 2020 did end up with a proper zombie movie after all.
Nevertheless, this being the year that the highly anticipated "Peninsula" - the sequel to "Train to Busan" - also coming out, it was a little bit strange to find another zombie movie from the South Korean cinema. Not that I mind that, no, no, no. Not at all. In fact "#Alive" (aka "#Saraitda") actually turned out to be more enjoyable and entertaining than "Peninsula" was. Yeah, I know, right...
Anyway, I will say that "#Alive" is not your average run-of-the-mill zombie movie. And I love the way that the movie starts out and just throws the audience right into the action. That was just glorious. I liked that so much, because the zombie action is what is enjoyable, not the things leading up to it.
The acting in "#Alive" was good, and the lead actor and actress managed to carry the movie quite well, especially since there were hardly any other performers in the movie with dialogue.
The zombie make-up and effects were good, and taking into consideration that this was in the beginning of an outbreak, you shouldn't expect to see fully decomposed shambling corpses. Normally I am not overly keen on running and agile zombies, but I will say that it actually worked out well enough in "#Alive", for some reason.
If you enjoy zombie movies, then you definitely should take the time to sit down and watch the 2020 movie "#Alive" from writer and director Il Cho, because it does bring new contents to the zombie genre.
I am rating "#Alive" a six out of ten star. Quite worth the time, money and effort, and a well-worthy addition to the zombie genre. So it seems that 2020 did end up with a proper zombie movie after all.
- paul_haakonsen
- Aug 26, 2020
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $13,432,212
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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