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The Last Day

Original title: Haeundae
  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
Ha Ji-Won, Park Joong-hoon, Sul Kyung-gu, and Uhm Junghwa in The Last Day (2009)
Man-sik, a native of a popular vacation spot Haeundae beach is preparing to propose to his longtime girlfriend, Yeon-hee. In the meantime, geologist KIM Hwi discovers signs of tsunami. Eventually, a mega-tsunami is headed straight for Haeundae at 500 miles per hour.
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
99+ Photos
ActionDramaSci-FiThriller

A woman named Yeon-hee (Ha Ji-won) lives in Busan with her boyfriend Man-sik (Sol Kyung-gu) near Haeundae Beach. But, when they find out a tsunami will hit the city, They realize they only h... Read allA woman named Yeon-hee (Ha Ji-won) lives in Busan with her boyfriend Man-sik (Sol Kyung-gu) near Haeundae Beach. But, when they find out a tsunami will hit the city, They realize they only have 10 minutes to escape!A woman named Yeon-hee (Ha Ji-won) lives in Busan with her boyfriend Man-sik (Sol Kyung-gu) near Haeundae Beach. But, when they find out a tsunami will hit the city, They realize they only have 10 minutes to escape!

  • Director
    • JK Youn
  • Writers
    • Hae-sim Jung
    • JK Youn
  • Stars
    • Kim Yoo-jung
    • Ha Ji-Won
    • Lee Min-ki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    5.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • JK Youn
    • Writers
      • Hae-sim Jung
      • JK Youn
    • Stars
      • Kim Yoo-jung
      • Ha Ji-Won
      • Lee Min-ki
    • 46User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos1

    Main
    Trailer 1:59
    Main

    Photos112

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Kim Yoo-jung
    Kim Yoo-jung
    • Ji-Min
    Ha Ji-Won
    Ha Ji-Won
    • Gang Yeon-hee
    Lee Min-ki
    Lee Min-ki
    • Hyeong-shik
    Sul Kyung-gu
    Sul Kyung-gu
    • Choi Man-shik
    Lee Briggs
    Lee Briggs
    • Helicopter Pilot
    Uhm Junghwa
    Uhm Junghwa
    • Lee Yu-jin
    Park Myeong-hoon
    Park Myeong-hoon
    • Emergency Room Intern
    Nicole Dionne
    Nicole Dionne
    • Yeon-Hee
    • (voice)
    Kim In-kwon
    Kim In-kwon
    • Dong-chun
    Kang Ye-won
    Kang Ye-won
    • Hee-mee
    Song Jae-ho
    Song Jae-ho
    • Choi's uncle
    Kim Hye-hwa
    Kim Hye-hwa
    • Woman with parasol
    Sung Byoung-sook
    Sung Byoung-sook
    • Dong-chun's mother
    Park Joong-hoon
    Park Joong-hoon
    • Kim Hwi
    Sean House
    • Helicopter Crew Chief
    Choi Jae-sup
    Choi Jae-sup
    • Dong-soo
    Kim Ji-Yeong
    • Geum Ryeon
    Yeo Ho-min
    • Jun-ha
    • Director
      • JK Youn
    • Writers
      • Hae-sim Jung
      • JK Youn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    5.55.4K
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    Featured reviews

    alienworlds

    Surprisingly Rotten Movie

    I have seen quite a few Asian films from many different countries in Asia and this one was by far the worst one I have ever seen. Seriously marred by bad acting over 75 percent of the time, the concept of a Tsunami movie was buried beneath ten feet of choppy unrelated inconsequential events. I was not sure if it really was about a Tsunami until near the end-it seemed to be mostly about nothing but a raving alcoholic imbecile with a little boy. I would not recommend this film to anyone.Compared to The Host, a recent Korean horror-Sf film, Heaundea, comes off like a terrible commercial for international travel, as in, this is one vacation you would not want to take.
    4jameszxcvbn

    It was alright I guess..

    I watched this film with such excitement. but I'm quite disappointed of what I saw after expecting so much from the trailer.

    First I'm Korean myself and was surprised to see such high CGI effect movie from a Korean director.

    Although D-war had quite great CGI , haeundae was the first disaster movie from Korea.

    The first part is just drama style comedy plot, which is not that great. It get's boring, and I tend to forget that I was watching a disaster movie. About hour later the movie past, first real disaster occurs. When the tsunami hit Haeundae, it was quite something, the effects were well done, and outlined the problems that would occur well. But I'm disaspointted to see only one disaster occurring. After all this wait in the movie, there's only about 10 minutes of the tsunami. Rest is just back to normal drama plot.
    4Leofwine_draca

    Silly and melodramatic in equal measure

    This lacklustre disaster flick should have been so good: it features tremendously good special effects scenes of 100-metre high waves tearing through a city, laying waste to anything and everything in their path. These scenes alone are among some of the best bits I've ever watched in the whole disaster genre; destruction and mayhem on a massive scale, with carefully-crafted CGI bringing the chaos to full and authentic life.

    It's a shame, then, that the surrounding movie is so poor. Tidal Wave takes an hour to get to the disaster stuff, and until that time we're treated to…Korean comedy. Now, I don't mind a bit of comedy, the quirkier the better; THE HOST had a lot of fun moments. But this comedy is something else, the comedy of ridiculous characters behaving ridiculously, almost on a sub-slapstick standard. The over-the-top acting is absolutely appalling; I avoid American comedies on principle but this is even worse than those.

    Of course, disaster movies always have to build up to the disaster, and I fully understand the need to develop the characters before dropping them in the clag. But, in my mind, the film should always be about the disaster, even before it occurs: have characters making warnings that are unheeded, or build suspense and foreboding with minor events preceding it. DANTE'S PEAK is a case in point of how to achieve this. TIDAL WAVE sits in a completely different, and entirely superfluous, genre until the actual disaster occurs.

    Once the chaos gets underway, things get a lot better, although there's a reliance on overwrought melodrama which will test the patience of even the most hardened viewer, I imagine. Endless scenes of characters facing death, drawn out in painful slow-motion and with maximum crying, screaming, sobbing and telling each other they love them. Such scenes are a personal pet hate of mine, and they threaten to overwhelm the film even when the going gets good. It's a real shame, as with access to those special effects TIDAL WAVE could have, and should have, been a true great.
    3Siamois

    Cheese overload!

    Disaster movies have been fine-tuned by Hollywood into a fairly reliable and polished formula. One of the ingredient is usually a good dose of melodrama. Now, Asian cinema as well, is known to spice movies with melodramatic bits.

    It therefore doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what an Asian take on disaster movies is gonna end up looking like: A melodramatic extravaganza.

    The first hour of Haeundae (also known as Tidal Wave in English) consists of setting up the table by presenting the cookie-cutter characters (played by a rather weak cast which tends to overact) and their clichés relationships. The script and story is pretty standard for the genre (you've seen all of this in Twister, Armageddon, many of Emmerich's movies and so on) but the writing is just... immature. As if the script came straight from a high school play. I must still praise some of the comedy bits, which are indeed funny and make certain characters more likable. Unfortunately, the dramatic bits are as (unintentionally) funny as the comedic ones and that is a problem.

    The final part of the film is where the disaster unleashes and ends up being a poor payoff. The special effects, cinematography, editing are uninspired. This film suffers from poor direction and you immediately feel like you'd rather catch an old disaster flick on cable TV. But what absolutely kills the disaster scenes are the tear-jerking attempts. It's like the director is trying to squeeze a dehydrated fruit and fill a glass with orange juice.

    It still deserves a 3 because there is some heart to it and it maintains your interest with some of the quirky characters. Plus a few comedic bits are also worth it. But if you're not a fan of the genre, expect a big waste of time.
    Michael_Elliott

    The Tsunami Effects Were Great

    Tidal Wave (2009)

    ** (out of 4)

    This South Korean disaster picture deals with a wide range of people who at first are trying to deal with their personal lives but this all changes when a tsunami hits and they must fight for their lives. Apparently this film had the biggest budget for anything to come from South Korean and in fact I thought the special effects of the disaster looked pretty good but more on that in a bit. What really kills TIDAL WAVE is the first eighty-minutes, which is the time spent with the characters. It's clear that this film is just like so many American films in that we spend the majority of the running time getting to know the characters so that when the disaster does hit we care for them and want to see them survive. The problem here is that the majority of this is built around a bunch of comedy bits that simply aren't funny and in fact they really take you out of the movie. I'm really not sure what the purpose of these comedy scenes were but they should have been in a Laurel and Hardy movie and not something like this. Even the personal drama was pretty predictable as we are given the same stereotypes and same clichés that every disaster movie has followed since the 1970s. The film certainly does come alive once the tsunami hits and I thought the special effects were extremely good on the whole. Yes, there are some shots that are obviously fake but I enjoyed the imagination that went into them and we do get some pretty intense scenes. Still, after these scenes we fall back into the cliché routine with way too many scenes where someone is giving their live for someone else's and it just gets a bit repetitive after a while. TIDAL WAVE, on the whole, is a disappointment but fans of the genre will still want to check out the actual disaster bit.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The CGI tsunami sequences had been shot at Kerner Optical's stages using water-dump tanks left over from special effects sequences of Indiana Jones et le Royaume du crâne de cristal (2008) in San Rafael, California in November and December 2008, months before any principal photography began in South Korea
    • Goofs
      When the grandmother is watching the wave come in on the bridge, an aerial point-of-view shot shows the wave yet the height of the water around the footings remains constant.
    • Quotes

      Helicopter Pilot: We need to adjust those settings, this doesn't look right.

      Emergency Room Intern: James, James! James! We need to look at this. Something strange.

      [He shows the man the paper]

      Helicopter Pilot: Oh my god!

      Emergency Room Intern: Why am I jumping to this? Just listen up! Move the people somewhere higher okay! It's the Tsunami!

    • Connections
      References Matrix (1999)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Tidal Wave?Powered by Alexa
    • What are the differences between the International Version and the Korean Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 22, 2009 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Official sites
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Official site (South Korea)
    • Languages
      • Korean
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tsunami
    • Filming locations
      • San Rafael, California, USA(CGI sequences)
    • Production companies
      • CJ Entertainment
      • Doosabu Film
      • Polygon Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • ₩10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $71,283,278
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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