Squid Game – Full Review

 

Welcome to Squid Game -Full Review.  A group of financially desperate players compete in children’s games for a chance to win billions.  If you haven’t watched this drama yet, I recommend checking out my unspoiled review here.

Squid Game

Aired:  September 17, 2021

# of Episodes:  9

Where to Watch:  Netflix

Genre:  Action Drama

Starring:  Lee Jung Jae and Park Hae Soo

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Squid Game - Unspoiled Review

The Story

 

Squid Game - Full Review

A group of people deep in debt and on the brink of financial ruin are recruited to play a dangerous series of games.  Sponsored by the overly rich and bored, each contestant stands to earn billions if they can survive a series of children’s playground games;  each with a deadly twist.  The group grows smaller as the games go on, and the competition becomes more brutal, as greed wins out over compassion.  But a few will fight desperately to maintain some semblance of humanity in the face of temptation.  Who will take home the fortune and what will the victory cost?

Squid Game - Unspoiled Review

The Leads

 

Squid Game - Full Review
Squid Game - Full Review

Lee Jung Jae as Seong Gi Hoon (#456)

Seong Gi Hoon is just an average guy with a life full of wrong choices.  When a mysterious man approaches him in the subway and offers him a way to make a huge amount of money, Gi Hoon can’t resist.  But when the first game begins, he realizes that the stakes are more than just money;   this is a game of life and death.  He and his team members, including an old friend from his elementary school days, walk a thin line between helping each other and fighting for their own ultimate victory.  As their numbers slowly dwindle, their humanity continues to be tested.  Gi Hoon has come too far to give up now, but can he really win everything?

Squid Game - Full Review

Seong Gi Hoon has a broken marriage, a failed career, and a mother he can’t afford to take care of.  With no income of his own, he steals from his mother and gambles away everything they have.  He is far from the perfect hero.  But when it really counts, Gi Hoon finds compassion and perserverance.  Seldom does Gi Hoon win based on his own skill.  Usually it is more a mixture of good luck and wise alliances.  Lee Jung Jae was great in this role.  There is nothing remarkable about Gi Hoon, but his support and encouragement lead him and his teammates to victory time and again.  Gi Hoon is an “everyman” and it is easy to identify with his struggles, as he fights to do the right thing in impossible circumstances.

Park Hae Soo as Cho Sang Woo (#218)

Cho Sang Woo is deep in debt because of a string of poor investment choices.  He teams up with Gi Hoon and the others because it is obvious that no one can survive on their own.  As the games go on, Sang Woo becomes more greedy and competitive.  Eventually Gi Hoon realizes that Sang Woo can’t be trusted and they begin to drift apart.  In the end, when faced with a way out that would forfeit the prize money, Sang Woo sacrfices everything to save his own pride.

Squid Game - Full Review

While Cho Sang Woo isn’t always a likeable character, you can’t exactly fault him either.  He, like all the others, is in an impossible situation.  That is how the games are designed.  When Sang Woo betrays Ali to win the marble game, we see his grief and anguish.  And Sang Woo isn’t the only one who had to cheat his way out of that particular game.  Gi Hoon also tricks Il Nam.  Sang Woo’s biggest fault is that he tries to justify his choices instead of admitting that the situation is hard and showing some empathy to the players around him.  I love Park Hae Soo as an actor and I think he fits this role well.  I felt the inner turmoil of Sang Woo and my heart broke for him.

Squid Game - Full Review

Supporting Characters

 

Squid Game - Full Review
Squid Game - Full Review

Jung Ho Yeon as Kang Sae Byeok (#067)

Kang Sae Byeok is from North Korea.  Her mother was caught trying to sneak out of the country and sent home.  Her little brother is in an orphanage in Seoul.  She came to South Korea to make enough money to support her family, but she has struggled on her own.  Sae Byeok is a loner who doesn’t trust anyway, but Gi Hoon convinces her to join their team for her own good.

Wi Ha Joon as Hwang Joon Ho

Hwang Joon Ho is a police officer who heard about the games when Gi Hoon made a police report, but no one believed him.  Joon Ho believes that his brother may be among the players.  So he stows away in one of their vans and poses as a guard.  While investigating the case he learns that his brother is involved, but it is not what he had originally thought.  

Squid Game - Full Review
Squid Game - Full Review

Oh Young Soo as Oh Il Nam (#001)

Oh Il Nam is the very first player.  He is an old man who is suffering from a terminal brain tumor.  Gi Hoon befriends him when they first arrive, and Gi Hoon tries to protect the man whenever possible.  Il Nam actually comes up with one of the strategies that help them win their tug-of-war match.  But Il Nam loses during the marbles round.  However, he makes another surprising appearance at the end of the series.

Things I Liked

 

♥ Visual Playground

“Squid Game” has amazing sets full of lights and bright colors.  The backgrounds help to highlight the stark contrast between the innocence of the children’s games and the brutal violence of this new version.  From giant dolls who play Red Light, Green Light to a glass bridge lit with colorful twinkle lights, every stage is decorated to the extreme.  And that colorful staircase they lead the players through looks straight out of Dr. Seuss.  It’s hard not to be impressed with this visual wonderland of props and colors.  

 ♥ A Mom and an Orphan

I expected Gi Hoon to use the prize money to help the families of his fallen teammates, but this was so much more poignant than just dropping off an envelope of money.  Now that Sang Woo’s mother has lost her only son and Sae Byeok’s brother is left alone in the orphanage, it is so fitting that Gi Hoon would bring them together.  It proves that it isn’t just about the money for him.  He is emotionally invested in the lives of those who sacrificed so he could live.  

♥ Sae Byeok and Yeong

Being single young girls in this physically competitve environment can’t have been easy.  It’s no wonder that Sae Byeok and Yeong originally kept to themselves.  And that makes it all the more heartwarming in their final scene, when they just spend time talking together.  It’s one of those scenes that is so beautiful as you are watching it, even though you know you are about to be emotionally kicked it the gut.  

Squid Game - Full Review

Things I Didn’t Like

 

Big Takeaway

From the scenes with the awful VIP’s, we have already seen that the point of the game is solely for the rich to use the poor and financially desperate for their own entertainment.  So, when Il Nam mysteriously reappears, I was hoping for some bigger message.  But instead, he really just reiterated what we already knew, from a more personal perspective.  Somehow, I was just hoping for something more.

 

Blood and Gore

I just have to mention this, because it was really the only complaint I had with this unique series.  I’m not even saying there should have been no violence or bloodshed, but, in my opinion, it was over the top.  And honestly, the story could have been just as thrilling and edgy without resorting to “slasher” levels.  The popularity of this drama tells me I am probably in the minority on this, but I wish they would have left a little more to our imaginations.

Joon Ho’s Story

Joon Ho’s story is a weird one for me.  Obviously, as the only non-player, he is different from the rest of the characters.  But I feel like his whole story left us with loose ends.  What is the story behind how his brother became the Frontman?  And after being shot, is Joon Ho really dead?  Sure, it seemed like a pretty direct hit, but that doesn’t necessarily mean he died.  Is all of this just crumbs for a second season?  They certainly have left the door open for that.

Squid Game- Full Review

The Ending

 

In many ways, the end of “Squid Game” is obvious.  Joon Ho has a face off with the Frontman, who turns out to be his brother.  After removing his mask, his brother shoots Joon Ho in the chest and he falls off a cliff.  The final game comes down to Sae Byeok, Sang Woo, and Gi Hoon, but Sae Byeok is injured with a shard of glass from game five and dies before the last competiton.  Game six is, of course, squid game, which was easily predictable.  Sang Woo ends up losing and kills himself.  When Gi Hoon returns home, he finds his mother has died.  One year later, Gi Hoon hasn’t touched the money from his winnings.   He takes Sae Byeok’s brother to Sang Woo’s mom and leaves her with the boy and a suitcase stuffed with cash.  Gi Hoon is summons by Il Nam, who is still alive, but on his deathbed.  He confesses to starting the games and then dies.  The final scene shows Gi Hoon on his way to the airport to visit his daughter.  He sees a man being recruited for the games and steals the card.  When he calls, the Frontman tells Gi Hoon to just get on the plane, but instead, Gi Hoon gets out of line at the last minute and heads back out of the airport.  The end.

Squid Game - Full Review

Should I Watch

 

Squid Game - Unspoiled Review

This is a difficult review to write because “Squid Game” is definitely not your usual kdrama.  For many kdrama fans, the emphasis on violence, vulgarity, and sexual explicitness are the things that turned us away from other mainstream tv shows in the first place.  But while this drama is full of those elements, it also contains the complex characters and thought-provoking themes that make kdrama special.  If you are sensitive to gory violence, this isn’t your drama.  It is raw and unapologetically edgy. But it is also an exciting story with characters that remind us of the best and worst of what humanity has to offer.  This is an intense and shocking drama that is perfect for all you adrenaline junkies out there.  But if you are looking for something sweet and uplifting, please pass this one up!  I give “Squid Game” a 7 out of 10 ramen.

🍜🍜🍜🍜🍜🍜🍜

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