Alors que l'Apocalypse menace la Terre, une lutte à la vie à la mort dans un appartement submergé par les eaux devient rapidement le seul espoir de subsister pour l'humanité.Alors que l'Apocalypse menace la Terre, une lutte à la vie à la mort dans un appartement submergé par les eaux devient rapidement le seul espoir de subsister pour l'humanité.Alors que l'Apocalypse menace la Terre, une lutte à la vie à la mort dans un appartement submergé par les eaux devient rapidement le seul espoir de subsister pour l'humanité.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Stars
Seo Suk-gyu
- Apt. 304 resident
- (as Seo Suk-Kyu)
Avis à la une
The Great Flood begins on a strong note, drawing the viewer in with an engaging and suspenseful opening. The early scenes set up an interesting premise and create real curiosity about where the story is headed. However, as the film progresses, it gradually loses focus. The narrative becomes overly long, unnecessarily complicated, and increasingly confusing. Subplots pile up without clear direction, and the pacing slows down significantly, making the experience feel dragged and cluttered. By the final act, the film struggles to maintain coherence, leaving the audience more puzzled than satisfied. Overall, The Great Flood starts well but fails to deliver a clear, well-structured payoff.
Anna (Kim D-mi) lives in an apartment building with her six-year-old son, Ja In (Kwon Eun-sung). One day, the world begins to flood after a comet collapses into Antarctica, causing water levels to rise everywhere. As the building slowly disappears under water, Anna and her son try to escape. Outside, they are guided by Hee-jo (Park Hae-jo), a man who claims a helicopter is waiting on the roof.
During their desperate climb upward, Anna witnesses fragments of humanity at its most vulnerable: two men looting abandoned homes, an elderly couple calmly waiting for death, a little girl trapped in an elevator and a woman about to give birth with her husband by her side. The water keeps rising, tension escalates and then Anna loses sight of Ja In (she pronounces his name as China, what was confusing). Ironically, Ja In, who dreams of becoming a diver, experiences his dream in the most terrifying way imaginable.
Visually, The Great Flood is stunning. The confined setting of a single apartment complex makes the disaster feel intimate and realistic. The simplicity of the locations works in the film's favor, turning the rising water into a constant, suffocating threat rather than relying on large-scale spectacle.
Where the film becomes challenging is its narrative ambition. Anna, a scientist, is prioritized for evacuation over her own son, a decision that immediately raises uncomfortable moral questions. About halfway through the film, when it feels like the story should be reaching its conclusion, it unexpectedly resets. What began as a survival thriller turns into a search narrative in which Anna relives the same day over and over again with Hee-jo. Every day she gets an other t shirt to wear with the number of the day that passed by. It is not clear who dressed her these t-shirts. After thousands of days she must have been wearing thousands of different t-shirts for every day. Who made these t-shirts and dressed her in her sleep?
This shift, reminiscent of Groundhog Day or Edge of Tomorrow, is intriguing but also confusing. At times, it feels as if Hee-jo might be a future version of Ja In. He shares similar emotional wounds, including abandonment by his mother, which mirrors the fear Anna has of failing her son. The film strongly hints at this connection but never fully commits to it, leaving the audience unsure whether this parallel is symbolic or literal. What made the day reset every time and eventually, what made it stop?
That uncertainty becomes the film's biggest weakness. The repetition of the day, the people Anna keeps encountering and the mechanics behind this time loop are never clearly explained. Were these encounters meant to test her humanity? Her guilt? Her priorities as a mother versus her value to the world? The film raises these questions but doesn't provide satisfying answers.
As a result, The Great Flood feels both beautiful and messy.
The acting is solid across the board and emotionally the film often works on a moment-to-moment basis. The tension, the visuals and the moral dilemmas keep you engaged. But when the credits roll, it's unclear what the film ultimately wanted to say. Is it about motherhood, sacrifice, fate, or humanity in crisis? Perhaps all of them but without focus, the message gets diluted.
Still, despite its narrative confusion, The Great Flood remains an intense and visually impressive experience. It may not fully come together thematically, but it's gripping enough to make the journey worthwhile.
During their desperate climb upward, Anna witnesses fragments of humanity at its most vulnerable: two men looting abandoned homes, an elderly couple calmly waiting for death, a little girl trapped in an elevator and a woman about to give birth with her husband by her side. The water keeps rising, tension escalates and then Anna loses sight of Ja In (she pronounces his name as China, what was confusing). Ironically, Ja In, who dreams of becoming a diver, experiences his dream in the most terrifying way imaginable.
Visually, The Great Flood is stunning. The confined setting of a single apartment complex makes the disaster feel intimate and realistic. The simplicity of the locations works in the film's favor, turning the rising water into a constant, suffocating threat rather than relying on large-scale spectacle.
Where the film becomes challenging is its narrative ambition. Anna, a scientist, is prioritized for evacuation over her own son, a decision that immediately raises uncomfortable moral questions. About halfway through the film, when it feels like the story should be reaching its conclusion, it unexpectedly resets. What began as a survival thriller turns into a search narrative in which Anna relives the same day over and over again with Hee-jo. Every day she gets an other t shirt to wear with the number of the day that passed by. It is not clear who dressed her these t-shirts. After thousands of days she must have been wearing thousands of different t-shirts for every day. Who made these t-shirts and dressed her in her sleep?
This shift, reminiscent of Groundhog Day or Edge of Tomorrow, is intriguing but also confusing. At times, it feels as if Hee-jo might be a future version of Ja In. He shares similar emotional wounds, including abandonment by his mother, which mirrors the fear Anna has of failing her son. The film strongly hints at this connection but never fully commits to it, leaving the audience unsure whether this parallel is symbolic or literal. What made the day reset every time and eventually, what made it stop?
That uncertainty becomes the film's biggest weakness. The repetition of the day, the people Anna keeps encountering and the mechanics behind this time loop are never clearly explained. Were these encounters meant to test her humanity? Her guilt? Her priorities as a mother versus her value to the world? The film raises these questions but doesn't provide satisfying answers.
As a result, The Great Flood feels both beautiful and messy.
The acting is solid across the board and emotionally the film often works on a moment-to-moment basis. The tension, the visuals and the moral dilemmas keep you engaged. But when the credits roll, it's unclear what the film ultimately wanted to say. Is it about motherhood, sacrifice, fate, or humanity in crisis? Perhaps all of them but without focus, the message gets diluted.
Still, despite its narrative confusion, The Great Flood remains an intense and visually impressive experience. It may not fully come together thematically, but it's gripping enough to make the journey worthwhile.
I am not into korean movies or series but this one caught my attention. I was shocked to seing this movie got a very low rating but by reading the reviews i understand that some people hate the characters because of its behavior. While that might not be the actors fault they did a really great acting on the characters they supposed to act. What im shocked most is the editing of the flood and all of the VFX they have put into making this movie. I mean from the water physics, explosion and also IN SPACE. All of them look surreal and not many movie production can do that. The story might be a 6/10 for me but the editing really bumps up my points for this movie.
I read some reviews that talked about the fact that most people reviewed this film negatively because in this film there is a clear change of direction that they didn't like! Ok I didn't like the film for this reason but if the film is well made I still consider it a good film, in this case there is a really interesting idea in the film but really difficult to swallow, why? In this film we're not talking about things that could happen in tens of years or hundreds of years, here we're talking about things that maybe, and I say maybe, will happen in thousands of years and I'm not just talking about AI but I'm also talking about the technical construction sector, in my opinion they've gone too far, here they're talking about an incredible technology that is truly light years away in the present day, this is really difficult for me to swallow perhaps to watch this film you shouldn't be too pretentious because nothing about AI is in the film that rides the wave! What I wonder is what need was there to include this tear-jerking story between mother and son that didn't tear me away, perhaps theirs was just one of many different stories that ultimately have no purpose? To make humanity better, to make us better? Well I don't know, maybe only the person who wrote it knows.
70U
The storytelling is brittle, but there is still enjoyment to be had from this story of a mother and child and rescue from a catastrophic flood in Seoul. It all begins very quickly, as a catastrophic flood is currently sweeping across the world. One woman, An-na (Kim Da-mi) has been targeted as a key person who must be saved. Kim Da-mi serves as the emotional anchor with a force that holds scenes together when the narrative starts pulling in too many directions.
The execution could have been stronger if it were a little shorter.🌊
The execution could have been stronger if it were a little shorter.🌊
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDirector Kim Byung Woo said, "Water is called a 'water demon' in disasters, but it is also the source of life. I also thought that if human emotions were expressed visually, they might take the form of a massive, surging wave."
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Great Flood
- Lieux de tournage
- Séoul, Corée du Sud(location)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 49min(109 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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