Netflix’s biggest series reaches a conclusion, but it doesn’t really feel like the end.
Netflix’s biggest series reaches a conclusion, but it doesn’t really feel like the end.
The third and final season of the industry-defining Squid Game confidently delivers each new round of the deathly games with spectacularly brutal aplomb — but its attempts at worldbuilding are disappointingly tired and uneven.
Some of Squid Game’s most interesting dynamics from the first two seasons — the politics among the masked guards, the organ-harvesting operation, the relationship between Front Man/In-ho (played by Lee Byung-hun) and brother Jun-ho (Wi Ha-jun), the crew of burly men led by Jun-ho trying to uncover and infiltrate
→ Continue reading at The Verge