Tidal Wave (Korean: 해운대; RR: Haeundae) is a 2009 South Korean disaster film directed by Yoon Je-kyoon and starring Sol Kyung-gu, Ha Ji-won, Park Joong-hoon and Uhm Jung-hwa. Billed as South Korea's first disaster film,[1] the film released theatrically on 22 July 2009 and received more than 11 million admissions nationwide.[2]
Tidal Wave | |
---|---|
Korean name | |
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Haeundae |
McCune–Reischauer | Haeuntae |
Directed by | Yoon Je-kyoon |
Written by | Yoon Je-kyoon Kim Hwi |
Produced by | Yoon Je-kyoon Lee Sang-yong Gil Yeong-min |
Starring | Sol Kyung-gu Ha Ji-won Park Joong-hoon Uhm Jung-hwa |
Cinematography | Kim Young-ho |
Edited by | Shin Min-kyung |
Music by | Lee Byung-woo |
Production companies | Doosaboo Film CJ Entertainment |
Distributed by | CJ Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 120 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Budget | US$16 million |
Box office | US$74.4 million |
Plot
editMan-sik, a local from the Haeundae District of Busan, unexpectedly loses Yeon-hee's father while based on a deep-sea fishing boat in the Indian Ocean during the 2004 tsunami, due to an error in judgement. Because of this, he avoids getting involved with Yeon-hee and his uncle Eok-jo, who was a shipowner for allowing Man-sik and Yeon-hee's father to set sail during the tsunami years prior.
Yeon-hee, who now runs an unlicensed seafood restaurant wants to start a relationship with Man-sik.
Eok-jo, now the head chairman of Busan, is pushing for redevelopment of Haeundae to designate it as a special tourist zone, causing backlash from the locals.
Dong-choon, who is Man-sik's half-brother, teams up with his son, Seung-hyun and get involved in illegal activity to earn money, but are caught by police. Man-sik finally plans to propose to Yeon-hee.
Geologist Kim Hwi runs into his ex-wife Yoo-jin. She has a daughter named Ji-min and a new boyfriend Hae-chan but she and her ex do not tell their daughter that Hwi is her birth father as they are worried about how she might react.
A wealthy college student from Seoul, Hee-mi, accidentally falls into the sea from a yacht. Hyeong-sik, Man-sik's younger brother, is a lifeguard who rescues Hee-mi. Hee-mi is angered by the "violent" rescue and annoys him by following him around, before the two eventually become close.
During the fireworks, Man-sik proposes to Yeon-hee. Yeon-hee says a ribbon hung outside her restaurant the day after means yes. On the day after, Man-sik sees no ribbon and meets Dong-choon, who was nearby. Dong-choon tells Man-sik that he told Yeon-hee why her father died several years ago. Man-sik grows furious, thinking that what Dong-choon told Yeon-hee caused her to snub hanging the ribbon and attacks him. During the fight, they see a flock of birds flying away.
Hwi notices that the Sea of Japan (known as the East Sea in Korea) is displaying similar activity to what was observed in the Indian Ocean five years prior. Despite his warnings, the Disaster Prevention Agency assures him that South Korea is at no risk, but a large megatsunami forms because of a landslide near Japan and starts to travel towards Busan, where millions of beachgoers are vacationing. Calculating the speed of the megatsunami, Hwi concludes that Busan residents have only 10 minutes to escape. A short earthquake (a minor aftershock) hits Busan before the sea starts receding from the shore, causing mass hysteria as people notice an upcoming tsunami. Thousands run for their lives before the wave reaches Haeundae and continues into Busan. Dong-choon, Seung-hyun, his grandmother and others on the Gwangan Bridge are swept away by the sea.
Eok-jo and Dong-choon's mother are in the streets and attempt to escape as they see the wave approaching nearby.
A telephone pole collapses, electrocuting everyone in the water. Yeon-hee escapes, but Man-sik nearly loses his life, until Eok-jo shows up and sacrifices himself to save Man-sik, before being drifted away by the currents. Dong-choon awakens on the bridge, but when he tries and fails to light a cigarette and subsequently discards the lighter out of frustration, it falls into petrol leaking from a tanker, causing an explosion that severs the bridge in half, sending shipping containers flying into buildings on the shore.
Hyeong-sik jumps from a rescue helicopter and saves Hee-mi in the sea. When Hyeong-sik and Joon-ha are together on the rope, Hyeong-sik realizes the rope is about to break, and only one can go up to the helicopter. He cuts the connected rope and falls into the violent sea. The elevator Yoo-jin is trapped in floods with water, and she talks in tears to her daughter Ji-min on her phone. A worker saves Yoo-jin. On the roof, she meets Ji-min and Hwi. The two help their daughter get on a crowded rescue helicopter. Before the helicopter leaves, Hwi reveals to his daughter that he is her biological father. Yoo-jin and Hwi hug each other before another megatsunami kills them.
After the tsunami, a memorial service honors the thousands who died, including Hyeong-sik, Hwi, Yoo-jin, and Eok-jo. Dong-choon finds out that his mother died and breaks into tears. Many help reconstruct Busan. Man-sik, while cleaning the ruins of Yeon-hee's restaurant, finds the red ribbon, meaning she accepted his proposal. The movie ends with a scene of Haeundae in ruins but in a hopeful atmosphere.
Cast
edit- Sol Kyung-gu as Man-sik
- Ha Ji-won as Yeon-hee
- Park Joong-hoon as Kim-hwi
- Uhm Jung-hwa as Yoo-jin
- Lee Min-ki as Hyung-sik
- Kang Ye-won as Hi-mi
- Kim In-kwon as Dong-choon
- Song Jae-ho as Eok-jo
- Kim Ji-yeong as Geum-ryeon
- Yeo Ho-min as Joon-ha
- Seong Byeong-suk as Dong-choon's mother
- Chun Bo-geun as Seung-hyun
- Kim Yoo-jung as Ji-min
- Kim Yoo-bin as Jin-soo
- Kim Jeong-woon as Hyeong-cheol
- Son Chae-bin as Eun-so
- Lee Si-on as Gong-joo
- Seong Yoo-kyeong as You-kyung
- Kim In-gyoo as You-kyung's dad
- Hwang In-joon as You-kyung's dad
- Tae In-ho
Release
editDistribution rights for Haeundae was sold to Hong Kong, Taiwan, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Russia, Germany, Hungary, France, Quebec, Brazil, the United Kingdom, Australia and Turkey.[3][4][5][6] The film was released in South Korea on 22 July 2009. As of 20 September 2009, Haeundae had received a total of 11,301,649 admissions in South Korean theatres.[7]
In English-speaking countries, the film was released as Tidal Wave (an incorrect term as such types of waves are actually caused by gravitational influences, not displacement of water). In the United Kingdom, the DVD was released on October 12, 2009 from Entertainment One.[8]
Awards and nominations
editAward ceremony | Category | Recipients | Result |
---|---|---|---|
30th Blue Dragon Film Awards | Best Film | Tidal Wave | Nominated |
Best Director | Yoon Je-kyoon | Nominated | |
Best Supporting Actor | Kim In-kwon | Nominated | |
Lee Min-ki | Nominated | ||
Best New Actress | Kang Ye-won | Nominated | |
Best Cinematography | Kim Yeong-ho | Nominated | |
Technical Award | Hans Uhlig, Jang Seong-ho (CG) | Won | |
Audience Choice Award for Most Popular Film | Tidal Wave | Won | |
18th Buil Film Awards | Best Director | Yoon Je-kyoon | Won |
Best Supporting Actor | Kim In-kwon | Won | |
12th Director's Cut Awards | Best Producer | Yoon Je-kyoon | Won |
46th Grand Bell Awards | Best Film | Tidal Wave | Nominated |
Best Director | Yoon Je-kyoon | Nominated | |
Best Actor | Sol Kyung-gu | Nominated | |
Best Supporting Actor | Kim In-kwon | Nominated | |
Best Supporting Actress | Uhm Jung-hwa | Nominated | |
Best Cinematography | Kim Yeong-ho | Nominated | |
Best Visual Effects | Hans Uhlig, Jang Seong-ho | Nominated | |
Best Sound Effects | Eun Hee-soo | Nominated | |
Best Planning | Yoon Je-kyoon | Won | |
29th Korean Association of Film Critics Awards | Best Cinematography | Kim Young-ho | Won |
2009 Mnet 20's Choice Awards | Female Movie Star | Ha Ji-won | Won |
46th Baeksang Arts Awards | Grand Prize | Yoon Je-kyoon | Won |
Best Film | Tidal Wave | Nominated | |
Best New Actor | Lee Min-ki | Won | |
Best Director | Yoon Je-kyoon | Nominated |
References
edit- ^ "Principal Photography Begins on Korean Tsunami Movie HAEUNDAE Archived 2008-09-04 at the Wayback Machine". SciFi Japan, 24 August 2009. Retrieved on 26 May 2009.
- ^ "Haeundae". Daum. Archived from the original on 2020-03-11. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
- ^ "Đương đầu với trận sóng thần Haeundae". Vietbao.vn. Archived from the original on 29 December 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ Noh, Jean. "CJ scores Singapore, Malaysia presales on Haeundae Archived 2009-08-27 at the Wayback Machine". Screendaily.com, 24 March 2009. Retrieved on 25 May 2009.
- ^ Noh, Jean. "CJ seals further deals on disaster movie Haeundae Archived 2009-05-23 at the Wayback Machine". Screendaily.com, 30 March 2009. Retrieved on 25 May 2009.
- ^ Shackleton, Liz. "Korea's CJ closes deals on Thirst and Mother Archived 2009-05-23 at the Wayback Machine". Screendaily.com, 20 May 2009. Retrieved on 25 May 2009.
- ^ "Haeundae (Movie – 2009) Archived 2021-09-28 at the Wayback Machine". HanCinema. Retrieved on 27 September 2009.
- ^ "UK release of Haeundae Archived 2010-07-03 at the Wayback Machine". 24framespersecond. Retrieved on 8 October 2009.
External links
edit- Official website (in Korean)
- Haeundae at HanCinema
- Haeundae at the Korean Movie Database (in Korean)
- Haeundae at IMDb
- Tidal Wave at Rotten Tomatoes
- ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› Tidal Wave at AllMovie