Game, Season 3
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From his radical weight loss to intense emotional turmoil, Lee Jung-jae reflects on the costs — and meaning — of closing out 'Squid Game.'
In a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Hwang said he originally wrote an ending where Player 456, Seong Gi-hun, leaves the deadly games behind for good. That's a sharp contrast to the version that made it to screen, where Gi-hun sacrifices his life in the end for the new Player 222.
Just when you thought the scenes of sadistic violence couldn’t get any worse, Squid Game season 3 upped the ante again. The return of the hit Korean dystopian thriller has fully crossed over into horror for this final season, with one twist that is particularly blood-curdling. Think David Aronofsky's Mother!, and you’re in the same ballpark.
The Korean star breaks down the psyche of his enigmatic character, the meaning behind the show’s final scenes and why he’d return for a spinoff.
Continuing the narrative as essentially the second part of Season 2, the new episodes offer more of what makes the show work, but also its downsides.
Squid Game Season 2 has finally arrived, and it's more addictive than ever! With even more twists and turns than before, we're hooked all over again. One of the most thrilling events in the new ...
“Squid Game” returns for a second season and so does Seong Gi-hun, a.k.a. Player 456 (Lee Jung-jae), who is on a mission to end the game.