The Borneo Post

‘Squid Game’ exposes social realities, much like ‘Parasite’

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SEOUL: The popularity of the new Netflix Korean series, ‘Squid Game’, can be attributed in large part to its exposure of social and capitalist realities, critics said Thursday.

In that regard, the nine-part thriller, which revolves around a group of people taking part in a series of deadly games to win 45.6 billion won (US$38.5 million) in prize money, is drawing comparison­s to the Oscarwinni­ng black comedy ‘Parasite’.

Both ‘Squid Game’ and ‘Parasite’ are premised on an unequal, winner-takes-it-all society where deception and violence are rampant, according to Yonhap.

And while the Bong Joon-ho directed movie made history as the first Korean film to win an Academy Award – in fact, it won four – the Netflix drama has already reached a milestone by becoming, on Tuesday, the first Korean series to top the streaming giant’s US chart.

“The series uses games as a subject matter, but through the games, it examines society and capitalism,” Jeong Deok-hyeon, a pop culture critic, said.

“The reason Gi-hun (played by Lee Jung-jae) keeps surviving is not because he made wellmeanin­g choices, but because of luck, which is our reality.”

Lee plays a divorced single father who is struggling under a mountain of debt and is one day transporte­d to a game where he must risk his life to survive.

“There are people who say the games are too simple for a survival game, but I believe this was in order to highlight the brutality resulting from the games, rather than the games themselves,” Jeong said.

“In our own society, the rules are simple, and there are winners and losers. But the problem is not who wins or loses, it’s the environmen­t in which the winner takes all and the loser is left with nothing,” he said.

 ?? ?? Netflix Korean series ‘Squid Game’.
Netflix Korean series ‘Squid Game’.

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