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Colony becomes 2026's fastest Korean film to hit 1 million moviegoers
Colony hit 1,089,996 admissions in under four days, turning Yeon Sang-ho's Cannes zombie thriller into Korea's fastest 2026 million-seller.
May 25, 2026
Yeon Sang-ho's Colony (군체) is already the fastest Korean film released in 2026 to reach 1 million moviegoers, hitting 1,089,996 admissions by the morning of May 24 after opening on May 21, according to Korean Film Council data cited by Soompi. That came two days after Korean Film Council figures cited by Korea JoongAng Daily showed 199,768 opening-day admissions, the biggest first-day result of the year. For Jun Ji-hyun, Showbox, and a market that has spent the past year looking for a real event title, that is the moment Cannes heat turns into hard commercial proof. The film arrived with festival attention, premium-format marketing, and a cast audiences already knew. Colony is no longer just a prestige zombie play. It is a live box office story with speed, scale, and a clean mainstream hook.
Colony opened like an event before the million mark even landed
Colony looked like a breakout before the weekend total arrived. Korea JoongAng Daily reported that the film pulled 199,768 admissions on opening day, enough to set the biggest first-day number of 2026, while the same Korean Film Council data put its reservation rate at 49.3 percent by 9 a.m. on May 22. Those are not niche genre numbers. Those are event-movie numbers. They also matter because this run is happening on top of the film's earlier Cannes conversation and Jun Ji-hyun's return-to-cinema narrative, which gave the release a ready-made spotlight before tickets were even counted. We have seen Korean genre titles open hot before, but Colony had to prove it could convert curiosity into paid demand at scale. It just did that faster than any local 2026 release so far.
Colony is translating Cannes credibility into commercial traction
Colony is not taking the usual path where a Cannes Midnight title earns headlines first and real local urgency later. According to Deadline, Showbox had already sold the film to more than 124 territories before this domestic surge, and the trade also confirmed its Cannes Midnight Screenings slot and upcoming New York Asian Film Festival opening-night berth. That matters because Korea's 2026 Cannes cycle has already been unusually strong, from Na Hong-jin's Hope in competition to Colony in the midnight lane. What Colony is adding now is harder to fake. It is proving that overseas sales momentum and domestic audience appetite can hit at the same time, which is exactly what distributors want when they talk about a theatrical event. In a soft theatrical climate, that overlap is the difference between a respected festival title and a real market mover.
Yeon Sang-ho's zombie name still moves real audiences
Yeon Sang-ho still has one of the clearest signatures in Korean genre filmmaking, and this run shows the market knows it. Soompi's May 24 recap positioned Colony ahead of The King's Warden in the race to 1 million, while Deadline framed the film as another major theatrical swing from the director who turned Train to Busan into a global benchmark for Korean zombie cinema. That combination matters. Colony is not selling just on infected bodies and festival laurels. It is selling on the idea that Yeon can still build crowd-scale tension with recognizable stars like Jun Ji-hyun, Ji Chang-wook, Koo Kyo-hwan, and Go Soo. For a theatrical market that has needed cleaner wins, that is a big signal.
The next test is whether Colony can move from fast start to real staying power
The first weekend story is already locked. The next one is hold. If Colony keeps turning that early reservation dominance into weekday stability, the conversation will move from fastest 2026 million-seller to whether it can become the year's defining Korean commercial hit. Early online reaction suggests the hook is working. Reddit threads in r/Koreanfilm and r/zombies have been leaning into Yeon's hive-mind infected concept and the film's ensemble panic energy, which lines up with the movie's strongest sell: this is familiar zombie territory sharpened with a new systems-horror twist. According to Deadline, the film is also set for a North American theatrical release on August 28 after opening New York Asian Film Festival. Domestic momentum is what gives that overseas rollout extra weight. Right now, Colony looks like the rare Cannes launch that came home hotter.







