Netflix’s Korean Zombie Show With 89% On Rotten Tomatoes Is The Train To Busan Sequel We Never Got


Train to Busan never got a worthy sequel, but Netflix’s acclaimed zombie drama comes off as its perfect spiritual successor. Directed by Yeon Sang-ho, Train to Busan remains one of the most popular Korean action movies nearly a decade after its release. With a relatively low budget of $8.5 million, the film went on to earn $98.5 million globally, paving the way for two follow-up films. While one of these follow-ups was an animated prequel, titled Seoul Station, the other was a standalone sequel, Peninsula.

Like the original film, Seoul Station was received fairly well by critics. However, when Peninsula came out, it almost felt like a forced expansion of the original film’s lore because of its inability to capture its predecessor’s emotional intensity and recreate its immersive action. Owing to this, it is hard to call Peninsula a worthy sequel to Train to Busan. A closer look at a highly acclaimed Netflix Korean zombie show reveals how it deserves to be labeled as an unofficial Train to Busan successor because of how perfectly it combines brutal zombie action with grounded themes.

All Of Us Are Dead Is A Better Spiritual Successor To Train To Busan Than Peninsula

Peninsula Felt Like A Rushed Sequel

After Train to Busan‘s success, it seemed like the people behind the film rushed into making a sequel. As a result, the film’s official follow-up, Peninsula, came off as an unnecessary extension of the original universe, lacking the emotional and thematic depth that made Train to Busan successful. For the most part, Peninsula seemingly prioritized spectacle over relatable character-driven drama and eventually failed to deliver both. Many critics complained how its CGI-fueled set pieces felt one-dimensional and dull, without the narrative heft that drove the original flick.

Netflix’s All of Us Are Dead, in contrast, took the same approach as Train to Busan. Instead of solely being about humanity’s survival in the wake of a zombie apocalypse, the series did an incredible job of humanizing its teenage characters by showing how their day-to-day snags affected them. While Peninsula seemingly lacked the heart and soul of the original, All of Us Are Dead overcame many clichés of the genre and left its mark by simply spinning a coming-of-age yarn in its familiar narrative. This makes the Netflix show an unofficial but worthy Train to Busan sequel.

All Of Us Are Dead Has Everything That Made Train To Busan So Great (Including Fast Zombies)

The Show Is Also Thematically Rich Like The Movie

Zombies are often portrayed as highly resilient but incredibly slow creatures. This allows humans to outrun them in most situations or kill them by hitting them in their heads. However, some movies, like 28 Days Later, World War Z, and Train to Busan, have defied the norm by portraying fast zombies. By showing how their versions of the living dead are not sluggish and slow, the movies have given the creatures a scarier spin. Interestingly, even the zombies in All of Us Are Dead are terrifyingly quick.

All of Us Are Dead, like Train to Busan, dares to rise above the regular fare of zombie shows and movies by being a lot more than an action-packed survival thriller.

Similar to Train to Busan, All of Us Are Dead also presents grounded social commentary on relatable subjects. While Train to Busan tries to capture themes of class struggles, government corruption, and human selfishness in the face of danger, All of Us Are Dead uses its zombie apocalypse as a narrative device to highlight the impact of bullying, social mistrust, and institutional failure on young minds in a school. Put simply, All of Us Are Dead, like Train to Busan, dares to rise above the regular fare of zombie shows and movies by being a lot more than an action-packed survival thriller.

All Of Us Are Dead And Train To Busan Are Not Connected But Make For A Great Combo

They Seem To Perfectly Complement Each Other

Train to Busan and All of Us Are Dead have no established narrative overlaps or connections. The two zombie franchises do not unfold in the same universe, and none of their characters cross over between the two stories. Despite this, their tonal and thematic similarities and ability to become way more than one-dimensional zombie stories make them perfect companion pieces. Train to Busan‘s original sequel failed to live up to the high expectations set by it.

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Fortunately, All of Us Are Dead comes close to being as good as the Korean movie and arguably also manages to do some things better. Because of this, it would be fair to call the Netflix show a worthy spiritual follow-up to Train to Busan. Viewers who have watched either of the two should certainly check out the other.

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