
Hiroyuki Yoshihara, Stepan Burnashev and Emmanuelle Faucilhon, courtesy of Saidam Baryl.
Initially intriguing before it spirals into repetitive claptrap, Yeon Sang-ho’s “Gun-Che (Colony)” is one of those horror films that is propelled solely by the ineptitude of its characters. If you’ve come for carnage, particularly action with a grounded feel, you’ll get that in spades here.
Working with an impressive array of stunt performers, contortionists, make-up artists and production designers, Yeon has added another exciting new wrinkle to zombie lore.
His zombie filmography, from “Train to Busan” to “Hellbound” can be traced as a series of ways he’s transformed shambling monsters into creatures of terror. (To date, I’ve never seen zombies move quite as fast in other media as they do in “Train to Busan.”) And, with “Gun-Che (Colony),” he reimagines them as creatures that can communicate with each other, able to work as teams that can channel their force rather than just be mindless consumers. It’s an interesting idea, and while the action sequences deliver, there isn’t enough meat on the bone to feel invested in any of the characters we see — in spite of the ways Yeon clearly tries to mine the same pathos of his more elevated undead fare.
Zombie projects can be smart, but this project seems too unsure of its own identity to fully commit to the zany ideas Yeon has in store. It would have been better to stick to being brainless.
Thankfully, he wastes no time throwing us right into the heart of the action. A movie like this needs to draw blood fast instead of poking around for a vein, and we learn that Seo Young-cheol (Koo Kyo-hwan), a disgruntled employee of a biotech company, plans to unleash a biological virus he was working on before having his ideas stolen by his superiors at a biotech conference.
We meet various characters before Seo infects patient zero, most of whom we know exist as red shirts for the horde of zombies to devour. There’s Kwon Se-jeong (Jun Ji-hyun), a biotechnology professor who agrees to meet with her ex-husband, Han Gyu-seong (Go Soo), as he tries to offer his wife a job at the same biotech company Seo was let go from. We meet Choi Hyun-seok (Ji Chang-wook), a security guard at the facility where the conference is taking place. There’s a handful of others we meet, from sushi chefs to students, who get brief hints of backstory before we jump to the next target.
It’s clear we’re not meant to be invested in these characters, save for Kwon, which would be fine if Yeon didn’t try to carve emotional beats around these people’s deaths.
Once Seo unleashes the virus, it doesn’t take long for the facility to go on lockdown, and only a handful of survivors are left unaffected. The zombies are terrifying because of the ways they’re willing to contort and often break their bodies in pursuit of their targets. The sound department, particularly Julien Paschal, the sound mixer, does immersive work by making each bone snap, jaw crack and lurch feel stomach-churning. We get plenty of close-ups of the zombies, and we can tell these are real actors making these twisted expressions. It’s impressive just from a choreography standpoint alone.
In theory, a chamber piece where survivors have to try and fight their way to the top of the facility to escape should be thrilling, but Yeon undermines the homerun of a premise by making the path to that escape more convoluted than it needs to be.
As previously mentioned, what separates these zombies is their ability to instantly communicate new information to the rest of the horde, like a massive spasm of AirDrop. This makes the survivors’ escape trickier because they can’t use the same tricks twice, as the zombies will adapt to them. It feels like Yeon couldn’t find a way for his characters to beat such powerful antagonists, and so he resolves it by making the protagonists slip up.
Take a sequence where, after Kwon and her crew have captured Seo, they all agree not to speak openly about their escape plan since Seo, who has bonded with the zombies, is able to control them, conducting the undead the way a maestro might an orchestra. In the next scene, two of the characters bicker about their intentions, with Seo immediately commanding the zombies to thwart their plan. We all make mistakes, and I imagine the pressure of a zombie outbreak only exacerbates the potential for slip-ups, but these developments happen more than once and feel less born out of the situation itself and more like bad writing.
Whenever Yeon Sang-ho has a new project, his films are usually marketed as being from “the director of Train to Busan.” That was ten years ago, and while Yeon has directed projects since, it’s evident he hasn’t been able to reach the highs of his breakout hit.
One of my favorite scenes was where we witness one of the characters on the titular train, caught on one side by zombies and on the other side by terrified survivors who would betray their fellow man to survive. It was a clever way to denote how dissimilar we were from the monsters that haunt us. Yeon occasionally scrapes at the kind of thematic provocations with his new creations, but these moments are too far in between, with Yeon not knowing how to fill the gaps of time left between each of his impressively built set pieces.
A line from the film summarizes this problem best: imperfect communication is the source of all tragedy, and the many parts of “Gun-Che (Colony),” though stellar in isolation, tragically never communicate with each other well enough to form a compelling whole.
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EXCLUSIVE: The Dark Knight and Olympus Has Fallen star Aaron Eckhart has begun principal photography in Bulgaria on action-thriller The Walk-In, which Film Bridge International is launching at the Cannes market.
Roel Reiné, who directed Eckhart in 2024 action film Classified with Tim Roth and Abigail Breslin, is directing the movie, which is shooting on location across Sofia and throughout Bulgaria.
Written by Scott Windhauser, the film follows “former CIA operative Hayes (Eckhart), who uncovers a conspiracy connected to an imminent terrorist attack targeting the G7 Summit.”
Film Bridge has secured a host of international distribution partners on the film, including Eagle Pictures (Italy), Vertigo Films (Australia), Wildbunch (Germany, France), Mediasquad (Poland), Falcon Films (Middle East), Kinolights (South Korea), ADS Services (Hungary), Paradise/MGN (CIS&Baltics), AKC Sinema Televizyon (Turkey), Scanbox Entertainment (Scandinavia), Cinesky (Airlines), Karpat Media (Romania), Foxx Media (Czech Rep & Slovakia), Vertical (UK) and YouPlanet Pictures (Spain).
Producers include Film Bridge International’s Ellen Wander (Spinning Man), Gabriel Georgiev (Savage Hunt) of Midwest, Choice Film’s Summer Crockett Moore (Killing Faith) and Zori Davidkova (Killing Faith).
The Film is funded by Calgary-based Orogen Entertainment where Blair Ward, Anders Erdén, Lauren Case, and Jeremy Gilman will act as executive producers on the film.
Reiné, whose credits include Halo, Black Sails and Knightfall, stated: “After the success of Classified, working with Aaron again felt like the perfect next step. He brings a grounded intensity and emotional depth that elevates every scene. The Walk-In is bigger, darker, and even more ambitious — a character-driven action thriller with real scale and tension.”
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Japan’s Cloud11 Studios, France’s Les films du Sillon and Hong Kong’s Saidam Baryl Ltd. have joined forces on Almost There, a new feature project from Sakha filmmaker Stepan Burnashev. The collaboration was unveiled on the sidelines of the Cannes Film Festival‘s Marché du Film.
The partnership brings together producers from Japan, France and Sakha, a republic of Russia that is also known as Yakutia, around what is being described as “an intimate, character-driven road movie” that is currently in development and positioned as an international arthouse feature with cross-cultural reach. A completed script and production are targeted for 2027.
Burnashev has become a key voice of Sakha’s film scene with his previous features Aita, Our Winter, Black Snow and The Penthouse.
Set in Japan, Almost There follows “an unexpected encounter between a Japanese man and a man from the Sakha Republic who, despite their vastly different backgrounds, find themselves in a similar emotional state,” according to a description of the project. “Both are unable to let go of their past and set out on a journey toward a place where they hope to finally confront it. Their chance meeting gradually evolves into a shared journey, as emotional distance gives way to an increasingly profound human connection. As they move closer to their destination, the journey itself begins to change them – and the very reasons that brought them there start to shift.”
The project, designed to combine “cultural specificity with universal resonance,” explores such themes as memory and isolation. Burnashev also said that the film would dive into “male vulnerability, inner conflict and what often remains unspoken.”

Hiroyuki Yoshihara, Stepan Burnashev and Emmanuelle Faucilhon, courtesy of Saidam Baryl.
To provide lightness and humor, the movie is set to also feature cultural misunderstandings and comedic moments, while the Japanese landscapes are set to add an “almost meditative quality,” according to the producers. “Rather than pushing toward heaviness, the film approaches its characters with openness and compassion, allowing intimacy and human connection to emerge gradually.”
The producers are Hiroyuki Yoshihara for Cloud11 Studios, Emmanuelle Faucilhon for Les films du Sillon and Burnashev’s Saidam Baryl. They are currently focused on further development and financing on Almost There.
“Almost There is a restrained yet emotionally intense male drama,” Burnashev said. “It’s a story about two men who seem very different on the surface, but are both carrying something they have never really learned how to express. They come from entirely different worlds, yet share a sense of isolation and unspoken inner conflict that allows them to recognize each other beyond language or culture. As their journey unfolds, they begin to understand one another on a deeply human level – a connection that transcends borders and gives the film a universal resonance. One hides himself behind movement, confidence and the habit of always going forward, while the other lives with silence, hesitation and the weight of unresolved things.”
Yoshihara said about the project: “What drew us in was its confidence. The film does not try to overstate itself. It trusts rhythm, character and silence, and that gives it a strong cinematic identity. We believe that kind of precision can travel internationally.”
Faucilhon shared: “We were struck by the film’s emotional precision and its quiet strength. As the war [by Russia in Ukraine] rages on, Sakha culture is increasingly reaching beyond its borders and building new connections with the East. One can only applaud the director’s determination to keep creating whilst forces of destruction are at work.”
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Japanese newcomer Rimu Kuwaki makes his debut as a savvy robot child surrogate.
Japanese auteur Hirokazu Koreeda is a regular at the Cannes Film Festival, largely returning to present films that deal with issues of life, death and parenting, both good and bad. This year his Competition entry Sheep in the Box, offers a sci-fi twist on those familiar themes, marking the acting debut of Kuwaki, who will turn 10 years old during the festival. Haruka Ayase and Daigo Yamamoto play his parents. And Kuwaki? “I play a humanoid who looks exactly like their child, who died in an accident,” he explains, “and continues living in their place.”
Kuwaki was chosen from more than 200 contenders, despite having next to no acting experience. “I’ve never really had any acting lessons — almost none, to be honest — but I have appeared in one drama series. The lines were basically just me being myself, so I’m not sure if you could really call it acting.”
Nevertheless, Kuwaki took to the challenge, and praises Koreeda for helping him ease into the role. “Director Koreeda Hirokazu is very kind,” he says. “He would encourage me by saying, ‘Let’s do our best,’ so any feelings of fear or embarrassment just disappear. Every time after shooting a take, he would also say to me, ‘That was really great,’ which made me so happy and motivated me to do my best again the next day. The atmosphere on set was fun and relaxed.”

Read the digital edition of Deadline’s Disruptors/Cannes magazine here.
Not every take was perfect, however. “Sometimes I got a bit too excited and started running around,” he recalls, “and I was told, ‘Robots aren’t supposed to sweat.’ And when I had a little bit food around my mouth, the crew said, ‘Robots don’t eat sweets, right?’ So I realized I had to be more careful.”
Kuwaki also learned a lot from his screen parents. “They’re kind, beautiful, and cool — I love them very much,” he says. Did he hang out with them to prepare for the role? “Yes, I did. We spent time together having meals, looking at photos of me as a baby, and even giving each other shoulder massages! It was a really fun time. As for what I learned, I was really moved by their facial expressions and movements during the acting, and it made my heart ache at times. It made me realize how amazing acting can be.”
Any plans to act again? “I like both watching movies and acting in them, and I hope to continue acting in the future. I’ve already told my family about my decision, and I’m going to do my best to appear in three more films.” And in the meantime, what else keeps him busy? “I like baseball, soccer, video games, golf, dancing and fishing. I’m currently practicing golf and dancing so I can get better at them.”
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