South Korean horror-action film Colony crossed the 5 million admissions threshold over the weekend of June 12–14, cementing director Yeon Sang-ho’s return to the genre as the commercial event of the Korean cinema year. The film earned $2 million from 301,049 ticket buyers in its fourth weekend, bringing its domestic total to $36.3 million — a figure that places it among the most significant local box office performers in years.
The film launched in spectacular fashion on May 21, seizing 71.85% of total market revenue during its opening weekend with $9.4 million. Within five days of release, Colony had already attracted over 2 million moviegoers — the fastest any 2026 film reached that benchmark, surpassing earlier contenders and achieving the milestone one day faster than the 2025 hit My Daughter Is a Zombie.
Written and directed by Yeon alongside co-writer Choi Gyu-seok, the film stars Jun Ji-hyun as Se-jeong, a biotechnology professor trapped inside a quarantined building after a deliberate virus injection triggers a cascade of mutation among those infected. Ji Chang-wook, Koo Kyo-hwan, Kim Shin-rok, Shin Hyun-been, and Go Soo round out the ensemble cast. The return of Jun Ji-hyun to Korean cinema — her first major film role in eleven years, since the 2015 action picture Assassination — generated considerable anticipation ahead of release.
The film had its world premiere in the Midnight Screenings section at Cannes before opening wide across South Korea. For Yeon, the project represents a homecoming to the zombie survival architecture that made his international reputation. His 2016 breakthrough Train to Busan remains one of the defining Korean genre films of the decade, and Colony clearly benefits from audience loyalty to that lineage.
The weekend chart showed the overall Korean market generating $5.4 million across all titles — down sharply from the prior week’s $9.1 million — suggesting Colony’s continued hold is carrying what would otherwise be a soft summer session. Retro music comedy Wild Sing held second place while Steven Spielberg’s sci-fi thriller Disclosure Day debuted third. Japanese auteur Kore-eda Hirokazu’s Cannes competition title Sheep in the Box opened in seventh with $98,878, adding arthouse interest to what remains a market still orbiting one dominant domestic film.





















































