Maker's Mark
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2024
Thank God for this thread. It seems to have saved me from wasting my time watching the last season and I was already on the fence because of my dislike for season 2.
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I wouldn't say I watch a lot of Korean action movies (I'm more of a Korean slice-of-life enjoyer) but the first shows/movies that came to mind were Vigilante, I Saw The Devil, and Oldboy, all vigilante/revenge plots, and the protagonists don't go to jail or die in the end.Despite that, Asian culture always had an anti-vigilante angle. That's why you never see the protagonist get revenge without dying or going to jail for doing so.
333, like with many didn't even get to develop. Everything felt rushed about the characters, and I couldn't feel much about them. His characterization kept changing back and forth, so he's cold killer risky bastard one moment, then he wants to protect Jun-hee, then he doesn't give a shit about the baby, and then he does? I know I criticize Jo Yuri's acting, but the guy who played him wasn't any better.-333 didn’t bother me too much, though i guess it wasn’t very interesting. Early on 222 said something like “you don’t care about me you’re just pretending because you want my share of the money.” and we never really saw anything to the contrary.
That's good to know! The Korean movies I've seen that had that "crime doesn't pay" message were Bedeviled and No Mercy. Both are movies where the women are either killed by police or sent to jail for taking revenge on their tormentors. I forgot about the movies Kim Ki-Duk made; those are always depressing and have horrible characters in them. How was Vigilante? I heard it dramatized that fucked up case of the old man that assaulted a young girl and got off on a technicality since he was drunk, despite having a criminal record.I wouldn't say I watch a lot of Korean action movies (I'm more of a Korean slice-of-life enjoyer) but the first shows/movies that came to mind were Vigilante, I Saw The Devil, and Oldboy, all vigilante/revenge plots, and the protagonists don't go to jail or die in the end.
'white knight'Things progressed so Writer-ssi could white knight Gihun for the last leg of the story and get paid to be done with this season.
One frustrating thing about the ending is how little closure there is regarding the game's secrecy or its origins. There are a lot of things that don't make sense in the show's world, but a viewer can suspend their disbelief at the prospect of the organization being able to recruit contestants and staff from the civilian population while also going under the radar. The detective's storyline makes it seem as though his investigation is the first one of its kind despite the games having been run for decades. It's difficult to believe that the games could really be hidden for so long, and it's disappointing that we don't even get to see what revelations are made in the wake of their discovery and the impact it would have on the public consciousness. In the final scenes it seems like the world is pretty much the exact same as it was before.With all the evidence that has been accumulated, including hard physical evidence there is no longer a doubt that these games happened
Barely any of the characters had depth, for how everyone wailed about Young-mi's death in season 2, I mixed her up at times with the pregnant girl because they made the same facial expressions. Even though Se-mi was a clone of Sae-byeok in personality, minus the North Korean, I wish they showed her personality more and allowed her to develop, even though she's good as dead in Hide and Seek if she was the hider. MG had no personality besides shittier Sang-woo, which I already bitched about along with Jo Yuri unable to act for shit as the pregnant girl.S3 had no redeeming features. The boat subplot was a waste of time, they discovered nothing, learnt nothing and he didn't get the confrontation he wanted. The meeting Gi had with the front man was dumb. The baby was retarded and made everyone retarded. Any depth the characters did have disappeared. I get he was gonna die, but he died for nothing. The Epstein VIPs were awful to watch and will have learnt nothing, the games still exist, we still don't know why the front man is in charge or what he's about. None of it mattered, but in the least satisfying way
Just pretend the last episode ends like 10 minutes earlier than it does and you will have a solid, standalone series loldammit right when i started on the first season![]()
It really highlights how poorly constructed this was as a story, first and foremost, rather than something to spread a 'message' or some bullshit. By the type you got to the final games in S1, you were left with the three characters the show had spent the most time with developing on-screen. Essayists and the Enlightened reviewers might whine about plot armor but if the story gives a plausible reason as to why their main characters make it through dangerous situations, it does not fucking matter that your MAIN CHARACTERS make it to the end of the story. That's good writing at its most basic level.The finale was where I felt the most dissapointed and frustrated. Besides 100, MG, Min-su and Gi-hun, I couldn't give a shit about the other finalists. (Even though I did find Min-su's death a little sad now when I rewatched it, and how he sought Se-mi's forgiveness). Some do say it shows how greedy the finalists were, but I'm honestly apathetic to them, and annoyed how they killed have so many major characters during hide and seek.
It's a very solid standalone series and didn't need a sequel at all. Don't let the unnecessary follow-ups cuck you out of an enjoyable experience.dammit right when i started on the first season![]()
MG Coin was one of my biggest disappointments this season. I thought that by leaving him as the last surviving new character they were gonna do something with him but no he's just another greedy bastard. Even the "reveal" that he's the father of the baby felt extremely underwhelming.333, like with many didn't even get to develop. Everything felt rushed about the characters, and I couldn't feel much about them. His characterization kept changing back and forth, so he's cold killer risky bastard one moment, then he wants to protect Jun-hee, then he doesn't give a shit about the baby, and then he does? I know I criticize Jo Yuri's acting, but the guy who played him wasn't any better.
There's definitely a reason why the scene of In-Ho giving Gi-Hun the knife is spliced with flashbacks of the old dude from the first season (and organizer of the games) giving In-Ho the knife. The people who run the games operate on the idea that people are inherently selfish and cruel so this is In-Ho testing Gi-Hun's morality, to see if he would kill the others to rig the game. Also this is my theory but In-Ho could be trying to groom Gi-Hun to take his place as the organizer of the games. We've seen Gi-Hun completely broken spiritually and mentally so this would complete his transformation. But he defied all attempts at turning him and sacrificed his life to save the baby, while he lost, in a way he won ideologically.Also how is giving out knives to contestants that are under the "violence against other players is no longer tolerated" rules and encouraging them to cheat and murder other competitors not rigging the contest?
the only problem is that his motivation is not in line with the rest; all of them are either on the run of may as well be dead without the money.everyone seems to hate the tranny character but i really didnt mind them,
i think them being a actual real man playing a transgender woman was what really made the performance for me, the awkward way they interact with people is something only a man pretending to be a woman can pull off and i actually liked that,
the actual character was not offensive and i thought their motivations to continue the games were not downright evil, this is the only character who is like this and thus stands out.