Kingdom Kingdom- Ashin Of The North · Must Try
Known for romantic comedies ( My Sassy Girl ) and action ( Assassination ), Jun Ji-hyun reinvents herself here. She has almost no dialogue in the second half. Her performance is entirely physical—the way she walks, stares, and handles a bow. She is a ghost. She is terrifying. She is heartbreaking.
By the time you finish the film, you realize: the zombies were never the real monsters. The real monster is the Joseon commander, the Jurchen raiders, the indifferent kingdom—and finally, the girl who had to become a ghost to survive. Kingdom Kingdom- Ashin Of The North
But she’s not done. Her main target is the Joseon garrison. She poisons the well with ground resurrection plant. One by one, the soldiers die—and rise again. The garrison falls into chaos. Min Chi-rok barely escapes. Years later, an adult Ashin (Jun Ji-hyun) lives as a wraith in the ruins of the garrison, tending to her zombie family—her own mother, grandmother, and neighbors—whom she deliberately resurrected and keeps chained in a pit. They are her only "companions." Known for romantic comedies ( My Sassy Girl
Instead, the moment Tae-hyub leaves, Min Chi-rok orders his entire garrison to massacre the defenseless Pajeowi village—men, women, children, and elderly. The reason? Pragmatic cruelty: by eliminating the Pajeowi, the Joseon commander can blame the Jurchen murders on them, avoiding a war. Ashin, returning from foraging, watches in horror as her mother, grandmother, and neighbors are slaughtered. She survives only because she hides in a pile of corpses. Ashin makes her way to the Joseon garrison. Min Chi-rok, seeing a useful tool, lies to her. He claims the Jurchen attacked the village. He then "adopts" her as a lowly servant, keeping her in a pigsty. For years, Ashin serves the soldiers, washing clothes, enduring abuse—all while secretly training her body and mind for revenge. She is a ghost