Watching Korean Films (한국 영화 보기): Where and How to Watch Legally
The streaming platforms, rental services, and cinema options for watching Korean film — wherever you are.

Korean cinema is more accessible than it has ever been. Five years ago, tracking down a specific Korean film often meant hunting through specialty rental shops, grey-market DVD sellers, or unreliable streaming links. Today, the major global platforms carry significant Korean film libraries, and purpose-built services cover the gaps. You have fewer excuses than ever for not watching.
Streaming Platforms
넷플릭스 (Netflix)
Netflix has become the most important single platform for Korean cinema globally — both as a distributor of existing Korean films and as a major producer of new Korean content.
What Netflix carries: A large rotating library of Korean films across genres, including most major commercial releases, significant arthouse works, and Netflix's own Korean originals. 기생충 (Parasite), 부산행 (Train to Busan), 옥자 (Okja), 곡성 (The Wailing), 택시운전사 (A Taxi Driver), and many others have been available on Netflix in various markets.
The caveat: Netflix's Korean film library varies significantly by country. A film available in Korea or the US may not be available in your market due to licensing restrictions. Check your local Netflix catalog — it may be smaller than you expect.
Korean originals: Netflix has invested heavily in Korean original films — 옥자 (Okja, 2017, 봉준호 / Bong Joon-ho), 콜 (The Call, 2020), 카터 (Carter, 2022). These are available globally on Netflix by default.
디즈니 플러스 Disney+
Disney+ has expanded its Korean content significantly, with a mix of Korean original productions and licensed catalog titles. Less comprehensive than Netflix for Korean film, but growing.
애플TV 플러스 (Apple TV+)
Smaller Korean film library, but Apple has co-produced some significant Korean projects. Check for availability of specific titles.
아마존 프라임 비디오 (Amazon Prime Video)
Inconsistent across markets, but carries some Korean titles. Worth checking for specific films not available elsewhere.
Korea-Specific Platforms
These platforms are designed for Korean content and have deeper libraries than global services — but access outside Korea requires some navigation.
웨이브 (Wavve)
The primary Korean domestic streaming platform — a joint venture between KBS, MBC, SBS, and SK Telecom. Has the most comprehensive Korean film and drama library. Available in Korea and to Korean-language diaspora markets in some regions.
왓챠 (Watcha)
Korean streaming service with a strong arthouse and independent film library alongside mainstream titles. More film-focused than 웨이브. Available internationally in some markets, including Japan.
네이버 시리즈온 (Naver Series On)
Primarily drama-focused, but carries some Korean films. Less important for film than for drama.
Tip — Using a VPN to access Korean platforms: Legally, accessing geographically restricted content through a VPN violates most platform terms of service. The practical reality is that many people outside Korea do use VPNs to access 웨이브 and other Korean-exclusive services. Whether you consider this an acceptable trade-off is your decision — just understand that it's a terms-of-service issue, not a legal one in most countries.
Rental and Purchase Platforms
For films not available on subscription services, digital rental or purchase is often the most reliable legal option.
Google Play / YouTube Movies
Available internationally; carries a significant Korean film library for rental and purchase. Subtitles in multiple languages for major releases.
Apple TV (iTunes)
Similar coverage to Google Play. Good for major releases; less comprehensive for older or arthouse titles.
Amazon Video
Some Korean titles available for digital rental/purchase outside the subscription library.
Vudu (US)
Carries Korean film titles for rental; useful for US-based viewers.
Specialty and Arthouse Options
For older, less mainstream, or documentary Korean films, dedicated specialty platforms and physical media remain relevant.
MUBI
A curated streaming platform specializing in arthouse and world cinema. MUBI regularly features Korean films — particularly the work of directors like 이창동 (Lee Chang-dong), 홍상수 (Hong Sang-soo), and 김기덕 (Kim Ki-duk). Available internationally. Subscription-based with a rotating catalog.
The Criterion Channel (US/Canada)
Criterion has released Korean films in its physical collection and on its streaming channel — including seminal works not widely available elsewhere. US and Canada only.
Physical Media (DVD / Blu-ray)
For certain Korean films — particularly older classics, restored versions, or films from directors with dedicated followings — physical media may be the only reliable option:
Criterion Collection releases Korean films with supplementary materials
Well Go USA is a US distributor specializing in Asian cinema, including Korean
Korean DVDs purchased from Korea ship internationally and include English subtitles on most major releases
Watching in Theaters
In Korea
Korea has an excellent theatrical exhibition infrastructure. CGV, 롯데시네마 (Lotte Cinema), and 메가박스 (Megabox) are the three major chains. Major arthouse venues include:
시네마테크KOFA (Cinematheque KOFA, Seoul) — 한국영상자료원 (Korea Film Archive)'s theatrical venue; retrospectives and classics
인디스페이스 (Indie Space, Seoul, 홍대 area) — independent and arthouse films
아트하우스 모모 (Art House MoMo, Seoul) — curated arthouse programming
서울국제영화제 (Seoul International Film Festival, SIFF) and 전주국제영화제 (Jeonju International Film Festival) are major events; 부산국제영화제 (Busan International Film Festival, BIFF) is the largest and most prestigious Korean film festival, held annually in October.
Outside Korea
Korean films receive increasing theatrical distribution internationally:
Film festivals — Toronto, Cannes, Venice, Sundance, Berlin, and BIFF all regularly feature Korean films
Art house cinemas — in major cities in North America, Europe, and Australia
한국문화원 (Korean Cultural Centers) — many major cities have Korean Cultural Centers that screen Korean films as part of their cultural programming, often for free
Subtitle Quality
Korean films released through major global platforms typically have professional English subtitles. A few considerations:
Theatrical vs. streaming subtitles sometimes differ. The subtitles created for theatrical distribution may handle nuance differently from those created for streaming. Occasionally, streaming subtitles are more literal and less culturally adapted.
Fan subtitles exist for films not officially available internationally. Quality varies enormously. For historically significant films not commercially available, this may be the only option.
Understanding what's lost in translation. Korean-to-English subtitle translation involves real loss — particularly around 존댓말/반말 (formal/informal speech), 문화적 참조 (cultural references), and wordplay.
Tip — Subtitle settings: On most streaming platforms, Korean films default to the subtitle language matching your interface language. If you want to read the Korean subtitles alongside English (useful for language learning), many platforms support dual-language subtitle display — either natively or through browser extensions like Language Reactor.
Quick Reference: Best Platform by Goal
Goal | Best option |
|---|---|
Major commercial Korean films | Netflix (check your market) |
Deep arthouse catalog | MUBI or 왓챠 |
Classic and restored films | Criterion Channel (US/CA) or physical media |
Korean theatrical experience | CGV / 롯데시네마 / 메가박스 in Korea |
Films not streaming anywhere | Google Play or Apple TV rental |
Festival-quality programming | BIFF (October), local film festivals |
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