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'Squid Game' director says series poses questions on competitive capitalism

Hwang Dong-hyuk, the creator of 'Squid Game', has said the smash-hit Netflix series was intended to pose questions about modern capitalist society that corners people into extreme competition.
By Agencies

SOUL


Hwang Dong-hyuk, the creator of 'Squid Game', has said the smash-hit Netflix series was intended to pose questions about modern capitalist society that corners people into extreme competition.


"I thought capitalism has shown its own limitations in the 21st century," Hwang said in an online speech at a forum organized by SBS TV, reports Yonhap. "Everybody faces fiercely competitive situations and they are dragged down to the rock bottom of society if they fail to survive the competition." In 'Squid Game', Gi-hun, played by Lee Jung-jae, the final winner of the deadly contest of heavily debt-ridden people to win 45.6 billion won (USD 38.9 million) in prize money, is one of the victims of the capitalist society that made him struggle with business failures, a divorce, and heavy indebtedness.


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But he does not lose humanity under the life-and-death pressure and the large sum of money and shows sympathy for weaker participants.


At the end of the ninth and last episode, Gi-hun says by phone to those behind the mysterious competition, "I'm not a horse. I'm a person. That's why I want to know who you people are and how you can commit such atrocities against people." Then, he doesn't get on the plane to see his daughter in the United States but turns around to leave the airport.


"Through Gi-hun, I kept asking questions, like who made this competition system in our society, who drives us into a corner," the 50-year-old director said. "This is the question that I want to ask everybody living in the midst of the pandemic in the 21st century." In line with his intention to depict capitalism in a realistic way, Hwang said violent scenes that the camera doesn't shy away from, displaying pink soldiers shooting people dead, reflecting failures or losers in the competition in dramatic language.


"Violence in the show looks very lifelike, but it is figurative and allegorical," Hwang said. "It mirrors people who run into a dead end after failing to survive in a competitive society." But the violence in 'Squid Game', which is rated as an adult-only series on Netflix, has mattered, as the show has become one of the most talked about series in the world. Many underage students have viewed the show via multiple channels such as YouTube and mimicked some of the violent challenges.


Some schools in the U.S. have warned parents about its potentially harmful effects or asked them to keep children away from accessing the R-rated show.


Hwang admitted he was aware of the controversy, asking parents of the children to explain carefully the meaning of the death and violence to their children.


"If there are teenagers who watched this show, we can discuss current issues of our society with them," Hwang said, citing one of his friends, who has complained of the same trouble. "I hope parents tell their children that the violent scenes have their own message in the show." 'Squid Game' became the most-watched Netflix content of all time, with an aggregate of 1.65 billion hours of streaming in the first four weeks of release on September 17.

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