Going into Season 2 of “Squid Game,” stunt coordinator Park Young-sick was less concerned with upping the ante of Season 1’s action work (which won an Emmy for Outstanding Stunt Performance) than with aligning the fight sequences with the characters’ more desperate emotional states. The first time around, all the players went into the competition as blank slates, unaware of just how brutal a fight to the death they were entering. And most of them, including the winner, Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae), were inexperienced brawlers. Not so for round two.
“I think everyone came into the games already knowing what’s going to happen — people are going to be dying. This is a cruel game that they’re playing,” Park said through a translator. “Gi-hun comes in in a very solemn and determined manner, where he vows to save other people. He’s had those years of training. So we wanted to...
“I think everyone came into the games already knowing what’s going to happen — people are going to be dying. This is a cruel game that they’re playing,” Park said through a translator. “Gi-hun comes in in a very solemn and determined manner, where he vows to save other people. He’s had those years of training. So we wanted to...
- 13/06/2025
- di Missy Schwartz
- The Wrap
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