Wall-e Korean Vhs Apr 2026

Here’s a full, realistic review of the fictional concept — since the film was released in 2008, long after VHS was discontinued in most markets, but Korea did have a unique late VHS culture. ★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) A nostalgic oddity for collectors only

For the story itself — yes, the heart survives the crop. The loneliness of Wall-E on Earth still lands. But the Korean dub changes a few lines: “EVE” is consistently called “Eve-ah,” and the cockroach has a satoori (regional dialect) accent. The famous “Define dancing” scene is slightly sped up to match Korean lip movements. wall-e korean vhs

By 2008, when Wall-E hit theaters, Korean home video had mostly moved to DVD. However, a small Seoul-based distributor — Daewon Media — produced a limited-run VHS for rental stores in rural areas where DVD players hadn’t fully penetrated. Fewer than 5,000 copies exist. What you’re buying today is a bootleg-like relic with surprisingly official packaging. Here’s a full, realistic review of the fictional

The clamshell case is a treat: Korean text vertically down the spine, Romanized title “Wal-E” (월-E), and a slightly off-model Wall-E holding a Korean flag-colored fire extinguisher. The back cover has broken Konglish: “로봇의 감동 여행” (“Robot’s touching journey”) and a plot summary that mistakenly calls EVE “Eva.” Art is recycled from theatrical posters but cropped poorly. But the Korean dub changes a few lines: