The 25 Best South Korean Movies to Watch Online

The 25 Best South Korean Movies to Watch Online

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With hallyu, or the Korean pop culture wave, taking the world by storm thanks to global media phenomena like Parasite and Squid Game, South Korea has become an even greater premier destination for art and entertainment. Korean cinema and television has always been a popular export from the country, but now the trademarks of its movies and shows have become eminently recognizable. Be it their emotionally powerful romances and melodramas, their oddball comedies, or their vicious and violent thrillers, Korean filmmakers have found their own expressive language that resonates across all demographics.

And with the sea of Korean content available to us today, some of their great films might be buried under the algorithms. So here we’ve selected 10 movies to help keep your hallyu fixation fresh.

21. The Bacchus Lady (2016)

7.6

Country

South Korea

Director

E J-yong, Je-yong Lee

Actors

Chon Moo-song, Hyun-jun Choi, Jeon Moo-song, Jo Sang-gun

Moods

Lighthearted, Quirky, Slice-of-Life

Before her triumphant Oscar win for her role in Minari, Youn Yuh-jung starred in The Bacchus Lady as So-young, an aging sex worker strugglin to make ends meet. Youn brings a certain dignity to the role that’s rarely seen in typical depictions of sex work around the world. Her work isn’t framed as something disgusting or immoral, but as something that’s natural and normal. Writer-director E J-yong clearly sides with and respects the people that you don’t normally see in K-dramas—characters that have been pushed aside in favor of the stereotypical “ideal” Korean. While meandering at times, the film’s warm and bittersweet approach to these characters acts as a reprimand to Korean society on how they fail those at the margins.

22. Midnight Runners (2017)

7.6

Country

South Korea

Director

Joo-hwan Kim, Kim Joo-hwan

Actors

Bae Yoo-ram, Byeon Woo-seok, Cha Si-won, Dong-il Sung

Moods

Action-packed, Funny, Intense

Midnight Runners is a hilarious and action-packed buddy comedy that delivers both laughs and thrills in equal measure. The film follows two police cadets who find themselves embroiled in a dangerous conspiracy after witnessing a kidnapping. The chemistry between the two leads is electric, and their banter and antics provide some of the film’s funniest moments. However, it also has its share of intense and suspenseful scenes, as the cadets race against time to save the victim and uncover the truth. Midnight Runners is a highly entertaining and enjoyable film that will keep you on the edge of your seat.

23. Jaane Jaan (2023)

7.6

Country

India, South Korea, United States of America

Director

Sujoy Ghosh

Actors

Jaideep Ahlawat, Kareena Kapoor Khan, Karma Takapa, Saurabh Sachdeva

Moods

Gripping, Intense, Suspenseful

Jaane Jaan is one of those thrillers where you hope that the main characters would get away with murder. Based on the 2005 Japanese novel, the Hindi adaptation still has the cat-and-mouse dynamic between the relentless detective and math genius protecting the suspect, along with their elaborate chess-like mind games. However, the film changes a major plot point from the novel, and without spoiling too much, it turns the math teacher, now named Naren, into a less sympathetic character. Given today’s sensibilities, it’s easy to understand why the change was made. After all, just because someone’s a genius, it doesn’t mean that they’re someone to be admired. Jaane Jaan still keeps up the exciting thrills and suspense of the original novel, but in making its changes, it becomes unclear who the film is rooting for.

24. Extreme Job (2019)

7.5

Country

South Korea

Director

Lee Byeong-heon, Lee Byoung-heon

Actors

Gong Myoung, Han Jun-woo, Heo Joon-seok, Jang Jin-hee

Moods

Easy, Feel-Good, Funny

A Korean police comedy built on a premise so dumb it’s brilliant: a group of bumbling cops who are so bad at their job that they accidentally start an amazing fried chicken restaurant while undercover. All of the suspense and excitement that should be going into their actual mission is spent on this new job that actually begins to give them coordination and a greater sense of purpose. There may not be much of a deeper meaning to be found here, but the characters are lovable enough—and the filmmaking sharp enough—to get you invested in their personal happiness, and to get you to appreciate how strong editing and performances can make even the smallest throwaway line spit-take hilarious.

25. Aloners (2023)

7.5

Country

South Korea

Director

Female director, Hong Sung-eun

Actors

Gong Seung-yeon, Jeong Da-eun, Ju Seok-tae, Kim Hae-na

Moods

Slow, Thought-provoking

The emotional sterility of modern life comes under the microscope of this understated Korean drama in which a young woman who has built self-preserving walls around her lonely existence begins to wonder if the trade-off is worth it. Outside of the soul-sucking call center job at which Jina (Gong Seung-Yeon) excels, her interactions with others are purely parasocial: she streams mukbangs on her phone as she eats alone, wakes up to the blare of her always-on TV, and checks in on her aging father via the security camera she’s surreptitiously installed in his home. When she reluctantly agrees to train the chatty, warm newbie (Jeong Da-eun) at work, Jina is confronted with a direct challenge to her aloofness, but the provocation is easily ignored until a similarly withdrawn neighbor is discovered long after his death.

This triggers a quarter-life crisis for Jina that’s predictably resolved, but Aloners transcends the neatness of this arc thanks to its quietly persistent challenging of the instinct to contort oneself to fit an inhumane world. Hong Sung-eun’s thoughtful first-time direction and Gong’s nuanced performance as a young woman waking up to the creeping dehumanization of herself make Aloners a genuinely thought-provoking reflection on 21st-century life.

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

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