Hwang Dong-hyuk: "We are living in a
Squid Game world"

Il boom di questa serie scritta e diretta da Hwang Dong-hyuk ha fruttato a Netflix milioni di dollari ma per il suo creatore non è stata così redditizia. Scopriamo la storia familiare che ha ispirato questa rappresentazione iperviolenta del capitalismo.

Stuart Jeffries

Bandera UK
Rachel Roberts

Speaker (UK accent)

Aggiornato il giorno

442 The Guardian Squid Game Netflix

Ascolta questo articolo

Stampare

Hwang Dong-hyuk is laughing at me from his office in Seoul. I’ve just asked the creator of Squid Game, Netflix’s smash hit show, if its astonishing success has made him rich. In the dystopian survival drama, a mysterious organisation challenges 456 players from all walks of life —each deeply in debt— to play a series of children’s games. Win and they go home with 4.6bn won (around £28m). Lose and they get a bullet in the head Perhaps Hwang is now as rich as the contestant who wins the top prize? “I’m not that rich,” he says. “But I do have enough. I have enough to put food on the table. And it’s not like Netflix is paying me a bonus. Netflix paid me according to the original contract.” That seems unfair. After all, the fifty-year-old South Korean film-maker has made hundreds of millions for his paymasters. According to leaked documents, the nine episodes run cost £15.5m to produce, which works out at £1.75m per instalment. Its return on that has been extraordinary. The series —which Netflix estimates has been watched by 142m households and boosted its subscriber figures by 4.4m— is thought to be worth £650m to the streaming service.

Perhaps Hwang should have negotiated a performance-related clause, particularly as creating, writing and directing it caused him so much stress that he lost six teeth in the process. “It was physically, mentally and emotionally draining. I kept having new ideas and revising the episodes as we were filming so the amount of work multiplied.”

The idea for Squid Game came out of Hwang’s own family situation in 2009, after the global financial crisis that hit his homeland hard. “I was financially straitened because my mother retired from the company she was working for. There was a film I was working on but we failed to get finance. So I couldn’t work for about a year. We had to take out loans ­—my mother, myself and my grandmother.”

Are you making a profound point about capitalism? “It’s not profound! It’s very simple! I do believe that the overall global economic order is unequal and that around 90 per cent of the people believe that it’s unfair. During the pandemic, poorer countries can’t get their people vaccinated. They’re contracting viruses on the streets and even dying. So I did try to convey a message about modern capitalism. As I said, it’s not profound.”

442 The Guardian Squid Game b Netflix

But isn’t there a contradiction in that, without money from an international corporation, i.e Netflix, your critique of global capitalism would never have been seen? Hwang laughs at me again and says: “Oh, the Guardian, asking profound questions! Well, Netflix is a global corporation but I don’t think it is aggravating inequalities. I don’t think there is a contradiction. When I was working on the project, the goal was to rank number 1 on the Netflix US chart for at least a day. But it ended up being much more successful, the most watched show on Netflix ever. 

It’s very surprising. It shows that the global audience is resonating with the message I wanted to reflect.”

But Squid Game is hardly just a snapshot of his South Korea. “I wanted to create something that would resonate not just for Korean people but globally. This was my dream.” In this life and death struggle, social norms are torn away and the contestants are trapped in a war of all against all, in which human life is nasty, brutish and short. “We are living in a Squid Game world,” says Hwang, but he says not everybody in his drama is selfishly looking after number one, climbing over losers’ faces to win the money.

Some viewers have found the denouement —in which the winner makes two surprise decisions to do with family and prize money— exasperating. But surely there is another reason for that ending: it’s teed up nicely for a sequel, with the winner able to take on the diabolical secret organisation that runs Squid Game.” 

More in C1 Advanced

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep
iStock

Current Affairs

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep

Il sonno, secondo la saggezza popolare, è riparatore. Tuttavia, nonostante la sua importanza per il nostro benessere, ancora ignoriamo molte cose su disturbi come l’insonnia o la narcolessia. Un paio di libri fanno luce sulla scienza del sonno.

Alex Phillips

Prepare for a Meeting in English: How The British Do Business
iStock

Language

Prepare for a Meeting in English: How The British Do Business

Ogni popolo ha le sue abitudini, basta conoscerle per evitare di fare brutte figure. Dal saluto alla correttezza e la proprietà linguistica, ecco gli utili consigli di un’esperta per affrontare le principali differenze culturali e riuscire a stringere dei buoni rapporti d’affari con i britannici.

Mariam Khan

More in Explore

Yuval Noah Harari: 10 Warnings on Artificial Intelligence
AdobeStock

World

Yuval Noah Harari: 10 Warnings on Artificial Intelligence

Lo storico e divulgatore bestseller torna con un ampio saggio sull'evoluzione e l'influenza dell'informazione nella struttura delle società fin dall'età della pietra. Critico nei confronti degli effetti tossici dei social, l'autore israeliano sviluppa interessanti riflessioni sulle potenzialità e i pericoli dell'intelligenza artificiale.

Ruben Pujol

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep
iStock

Current Affairs

Sweet and Healthy Dreams: the Science of Sleep

Il sonno, secondo la saggezza popolare, è riparatore. Tuttavia, nonostante la sua importanza per il nostro benessere, ancora ignoriamo molte cose su disturbi come l’insonnia o la narcolessia. Un paio di libri fanno luce sulla scienza del sonno.

Alex Phillips