Why watch?

Kim Da-mi and Park Hae-soo are trying to survive as Korea floods, and the tension keeps building because you never know who else made it or where safety actually is. It's personal drama mixed with disaster on a massive scale, not just spectacle and water. It doesn't drag — 107 minutes of constant pressure where every choice could be the last one.

Who is it for?

Watch this when you want a big sci-fi adventure without overthinking it — something for a regular evening. If you liked films like Asteroid City or Oblivion, where visual spectacle mixes with personal character stories, you'll find similar ground here. It has action and dramatic moments, but nothing too intense — you can comfortably watch it with older kids.

Similar titles

If you liked how Wielka powódź pairs a massive natural disaster with intimate human stakes and survival choices, check out Ashfall or Exodus: Gods and Kings — they also use apocalyptic events as backdrops for characters desperately trying to protect the people they care about. The Last Station on Earth builds tension the same way, following ordinary people forced into impossible decisions as everything collapses around them.

  • AshfallAshfall (2019)
  • Exodus: Gods and KingsExodus: Gods and Kings (2014)
  • GeostormGeostorm (2017)
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Plakat — The Great Flood

The Great Flood

대홍수

2025 · 1h 47min6.016
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⚠ Availability may change. Data provided by JustWatch via TMDB.

Classic overview

When a raging flood traps a researcher and her young son, a call to a crucial mission puts their escape — and the future of humanity — on the line.

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The last day of humanity unfolds inside a flooded apartment building where a group of strangers become humanity's only shot at survival. Director Kim Byung-woo traps you in rising water with Kim Da-mi and Park Hae-soo, where every decision about who lives and who drowns becomes impossibly personal. It's claustrophobic and tense, like you're watching the end of everything happen in real time through one building's stairwells and hallways. The film treats this apocalypse not as spectacle but as an intimate, suffocating choice between self-preservation and species survival. If you connected with the pressure-cooker tension of Snowpiercer or the moral weight of Seeking Shelter, this one hits that same nerve.

Why watch?

Kim Da-mi and Park Hae-soo are trying to survive as Korea floods, and the tension keeps building because you never know who else made it or where safety actually is. It's personal…

Who is it for?

Watch this when you want a big sci-fi adventure without overthinking it — something for a regular evening. If you liked films like Asteroid City or Oblivion, where visual spectacle…

Similar titles

If you liked how Wielka powódź pairs a massive natural disaster with intimate human stakes and survival choices, check out Ashfall or Exodus: Gods and Kings — they also use apocaly…

Cast

Creators

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