Netflix revealed its annual slate of Korean films and series on Monday, and 2024 is shaping up to be another strong year of K-content, including returns for some of the streamer’s most popular global shows.
As previously announced, there will be a second season of Netflix’s marquee international show Squid Game coming this year but no release date has been confirmed yet. There will be second seasons for reality survival series Physical 100, the fantasy series Hellbound, the reality show Zombieverse and mystery drama Gyeongseong Creature.
Among the new series, the standout is the period drama Uprising which is co-written and co-produced by famed Korean auteur Park Chan-wook (Oldboy, Decision to Leave). There is also a host of series adaptations of popular webtoons including A Killer Paradox, The 8 Show and Parasyte: The Grey.
Netflix will also debut some intriguing Korean reality shows this year, that have the potential to get people talking.
As previously announced, there will be a second season of Netflix’s marquee international show Squid Game coming this year but no release date has been confirmed yet. There will be second seasons for reality survival series Physical 100, the fantasy series Hellbound, the reality show Zombieverse and mystery drama Gyeongseong Creature.
Among the new series, the standout is the period drama Uprising which is co-written and co-produced by famed Korean auteur Park Chan-wook (Oldboy, Decision to Leave). There is also a host of series adaptations of popular webtoons including A Killer Paradox, The 8 Show and Parasyte: The Grey.
Netflix will also debut some intriguing Korean reality shows this year, that have the potential to get people talking.
- 2/6/2024
- by Abid Rahman
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Netflix’s hit supernatural thriller K-drama Hellbound was announced in September 2022 to return with a second season. Its cliffhanger ending left a lot to explore and many theories to unravel. Based on a webtoon by Yeon Sang-ho, the director has yet to reveal a new storyline. But Hellbound Season 2 has reported actor Kim Sung-cheol will replace Yoo Ah-in as the character Jin-soo due to Yoo’s recent drug scandal.
Yoo Ah-in starred as Jin-soo in ‘Hellbound’ K-drama | via Netflix ‘Hellbound’ Season 2 has dropped Yoo Ah-in as he has tested positive for multiple drugs
In February, news hit that Yoo Ah-in was under investigation for drug use. According to Soompi, Yoo was banned from leaving the country under suspicion of violating the Narcotics Control Act with propofol. The milky white substance is a sleep inducer and anesthetic prohibited in South Korea. While being tested, Yoo was also found positive for marijuana.
Yoo Ah-in starred as Jin-soo in ‘Hellbound’ K-drama | via Netflix ‘Hellbound’ Season 2 has dropped Yoo Ah-in as he has tested positive for multiple drugs
In February, news hit that Yoo Ah-in was under investigation for drug use. According to Soompi, Yoo was banned from leaving the country under suspicion of violating the Narcotics Control Act with propofol. The milky white substance is a sleep inducer and anesthetic prohibited in South Korea. While being tested, Yoo was also found positive for marijuana.
- 3/2/2023
- by Gabriela Silva
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
This JUNG_E article contains spoilers.
From Yeon Sang-ho, the director of Train to Busan, JUNG_E is a sci-fi drama set in a dystopian future where the Earth has been ravaged by climate change and is no longer habitable. Humans are forced to abandon the planet for man-made shelters in space, though not every shelter is on board with their proposed leadership. What remains of humanity becomes engulfed in a civil war between the Allied Forces and the Adrian Republic.
But there’s more to JUNG_E than war games and big CG-laden battles. Deep down, Sang-ho’s newest film is about the ethics of AI bred for war and the commercialization of death. JUNG_E tells the story of Captain Yun Jung-yi, a legendary soldier whose failed final mission leads to her brain being cloned by a military AI development company, Kronoid, in an effort to design the ultimate robotic soldier in her image.
From Yeon Sang-ho, the director of Train to Busan, JUNG_E is a sci-fi drama set in a dystopian future where the Earth has been ravaged by climate change and is no longer habitable. Humans are forced to abandon the planet for man-made shelters in space, though not every shelter is on board with their proposed leadership. What remains of humanity becomes engulfed in a civil war between the Allied Forces and the Adrian Republic.
But there’s more to JUNG_E than war games and big CG-laden battles. Deep down, Sang-ho’s newest film is about the ethics of AI bred for war and the commercialization of death. JUNG_E tells the story of Captain Yun Jung-yi, a legendary soldier whose failed final mission leads to her brain being cloned by a military AI development company, Kronoid, in an effort to design the ultimate robotic soldier in her image.
- 1/23/2023
- by Brynnaarens
- Den of Geek
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