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The film follows a man (Gong Yoo), his estranged daughter and other passengers as they fight their way through a countrywide viral outbreak on a suspense-filled, blood-drenched bullet train ride to Busan.
April 12, 2017
The greatness of a fantastic film is measured in its capacity of delirium and Yeon achieves it in the climatic actions. [Full review in Spanish]August 24, 2016
Really, the result is first-class throughout.August 04, 2016
It may not be something we've never seen before, but it's something we can benefit from seeing again.January 06, 2017
Director Yeon Sang-ho makes smart use of the cramped quarters, and while it's true that his zombies' abilities tend to vary according to the requirements of the moment, it's easy to overlook amid the onslaught of action and emotion.August 04, 2016
In the manner of the most enjoyable horror pictures, every time you think things can't get worse, they do.January 23, 2017
The very definition of a mondo midnight movie!January 19, 2017
Often it's the simplest ideas that are the most ingenious. Get this one: zombies... on a train. That's it. Ingenious. And, amazingly, the South Korean film 'Train to Busan' gets just about everything right with this scenario.January 24, 2017
Train to Busan is undoubtedly a remarkable thriller and a well-assembled film, regardless of whether it works for it to narrate from drama or include political subtexts. [Full review in Spanish]January 24, 2017
A film that has a protagonist with a conventional dramatic arc, but everything that surrounds this predictable characterization is pure imaginative fire, served with devilish dominion of the filmic space. [Full review in Spanish]October 22, 2016
Less effectively, the movie has some rather obvious social comeuppances in mind and you'll groan at the contrivances. Just wait a few minutes and you'll get to the next action sequence, in which Yeon is more confident.May 10, 2017
This top-drawer zombie-apocalypse thriller generated major buzz at Cannes in 2016.