The filmmakers of South Korea are among the best in the world. Movie fans saw the great Bong Joon-ho make history by not only winning Best International Film at the Oscars for Parasite but Best Picture as well, something that has never happened before.

RELATED: Parasite: Every Character Ranked By Intelligence

But Bong Joon-ho is not alone. His Korean contemporaries like Kim Jee-woon, Park Chan-wook, and others have been turning in world-famous for years and may follow Bong Joon-ho's footsteps at the Oscars one day. To give you an idea of the high caliber of their work, check out the 15 best South Korean thrillers from the 2010s!

Updated on October 3rd, 2020 by Mark Birrell: The 2010s were a truly incredible decade for South Korean cinema and we couldn't limit our list to just 10 examples given the incredible body of work to choose from. So, here are 5 extra thrillers from South Korea that will blow you away. 

Veteran (2015)

hwang jung-min yoo ah-in face off street veteran 2015 south korean movie

Stars Hwang Jung-min and Yoo Ah-in tower in this comedic cop thriller as a hard as nails detective and the diabolically arrogant businessman that he butts heads with.

Veteran has plenty of exhilarating bare-knuckle action to keep the audience on the edge of their seats but it's the feel-good quality of the movie that makes it such essential viewing in these harsh times.

The Outlaws (2017)

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When a brutal gang of Chinese gangsters moves into Seoul, the city's toughest cop has to take them down with pure muscle. Luckily, he's exactly the man for the job.

RELATED: The 10 Toughest Crime Movies Of The 2010s, Ranked By Grittiness

Ma Dong-seok truly comes into his own as one of the decade's biggest breakout stars from the world of movies and The Outlaws deftly balances laughs with thrills via some lovable heroes and some seriously intimidating villains.

A Hard Day (2014)

Sun-kyun Lee and Jin-woong Cho in Hard Day

A corrupt cop goes through a grueling ordeal when, on the evening of his mother's funeral and a simultaneous raid on his office by internal affairs, he accidentally hits and kills a man with his car.

Covering up the crime is nerve-wracking enough as it is, but he soon discovers that he was witnessed in the act and must find a way to somehow outsmart his ruthless blackmailer before whatever luck he has left finally runs out.

The Spy Gone North (2018) 

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A dramatization of a real-life South Korean intelligence operation to place a spy within the North Korean nuclear program, The Spy Gone North is an unexpectedly emotional rollercoaster of tense standoffs and secret identities.

Hwang Jun-min leads the terrific cast as the infiltrating agent and, with a ceaselessly compelling performance, makes this thriller one that steadily sucks you in further and further, right until the final moments.

Nameless Gangster: Rules of the Time (2012)

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World-renowned actor Choi Min-sik leads this impressive crime saga as an unscrupulous customs agent who steadily crimes the ranks of the South Korean organized crime world, building his own empire and even forming bonds with the Japanese Yakuza.

Steeped in South Korean history and culture, Nameless Gangster is a wildly unpredictable movie thanks to its relatably bumbling (yet deceptively intelligent) protagonist and the endless scrapes that he has to think his way out of.

The Yellow Sea (2010)

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In the gory and hyper-violent Yellow Sea, a simple taxi driver is hired to travel from China to South Korea to assassinate an unknown target. Yet through unforeseen circumstances, the job goes terribly wrong and the taxi driver must run for his life.

Directed by Na Hong-jin, The Yellow Sea blends big, broad action with personal drama in ways rarely seen. As the taxi driver evades a series of violent attacks, he tries to track down his estranged wife. With a hair-raising finale, few Korean thrillers of the past decade have been this effective!

The Housemaid (2010)

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For a torrid and thrilling romantic melodrama, look no further than Sang-soo Im's lusty Housemaid!

Aside from the slick direction and convincing performances, what makes the movie so great is the twisty premise. When a young housemaid, named Eun-yi, is hired by a wealthy couple, things look bright. But when the father of the family seduces Eun-yi, the matriarch of the family finds out. Tables turn and allegiances shift as the women in the family plot to ruin Eun-yi's life.

The Age Of Shadows (2016)

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Kim Jee-woon is among the top Korean filmmakers working today, ed by the likes of Park Chan-wook and Bong Joon-ho. As such, his period-thriller The Age of Shadows is a cut above the rest!

RELATED: Parasite: 10 Most WTF Moments

Starring Parasite's Song Kang-ho, the movie centers on a group of Korean resistors who, in retaliation to the Japanese government's severe oppression, conducts a bombing campaign with stolen explosives. The resistors seek to raze the Japanese properties that threaten to squeeze local Koreans out of business in this taut thriller.

The Man From Nowhere (2010)

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Not to be confused with the 1966 Spaghetti Western of the same name, Lee Jeong-beom's The Man from Nowhere is one of the most thrilling action movies to come out in recent years, regardless of the country of origin!

The premise finds a Korean mother involved in a drug-smuggling operation. When she is caught stealing from her bosses, the woman's young daughter, So-mi, is kidnapped. So-mi happens to be the only human connection to Cha Tae-sik, a gruff former special agent who takes it upon himself to find the girl and deliver her home safely.

The Handmaiden (2016)

The Handmaiden

While most famous for shaking up the world with his 2003 revenge tale Oldboy, in 2016, Park Chan-wook turned in a sultry and deeply duplicitous romantic thriller in The Handmaiden!

Set in 1930s Korea, the movie tracks Soo-kee, a hired handmaiden, to look after a rich Japanese heiress named Hideko. However, Soo-kee is really a cunning thief who has been hired by a man to help seduce Hideko and bilk her fortune. Soo-kee enlists her boss, posing as a Japanese Count, to do the seducing. Of course, nothing goes as planned!