When Netflix's hit Korean survival drama returns for season 2, Seong Gi-hun, a.k.a. Player 456 (Lee Jung-jae) is ditching the questionable trauma-response hair color he debuted in the season 1 finale after winning $4.56 billion in the

Squid Game director and star reveal ‘heavier, darker’ season 2 will be ‘a game-within-a-game’

“I can assure you it’s going to keep all of you at the edge of your seats,” Lee Jung-jae tells Entertainment Weekly.

When Netflix’s hit Korean survival drama returns for season 2, Seong Gi-hun, a.k.a. Player 456 (Lee Jung-jae), is ditching the questionable trauma-response hair color he debuted in the season 1 finale after winning $4.56 billion in the competition featuring deadly children’s games. But it wasn’t soon enough for the actor, who tells Entertainment Weekly that he still had to “come back and shoot in my red hair” at the beginning of season 2. “It felt very strange, to say the least,” he adds with a laugh.

Gi-hun’s hair won’t be the only thing that’s changed when Squid Game finally returns Dec. 26, more than three years after sparking an increase in green tracksuit sales. The director reveals that Gi-hun is “a different person” entirely after the events of season 1—not just surviving the games but also learning his mother died while he was away and his daughter moved to the States. “In season 2, you will not be getting the foolish and clumsy or childish at times Gi-hun that you saw in the beginning,” Hwang says. “You will get to see a much heavier, darker side of Gi-hun.”

Squid Game Season 2
Lee Jung-jae on ‘Squid Game’. Netflix

Lee adds that due to Gi-hun’s “huge amount of survivor’s guilt” from being the sole survivor out of the 456 players, he’s spent the past three years planning his revenge.  “He spent that time believing that these games must not continue, and he must put an end to it,” Lee says. “He spent that time trying to track down those who are behind the game.”

The new season begins after that extended time jump, and Gi-hun has a new mission “of wanting to put an end to these games ever being held in the first place,” Hwang reveals. After using his new fortune to try and do that from the outside world only to continually fail, he realizes the only way to accomplish his goal is by re-entering the game to take it down from the inside.

“Gi-hun is back again in his green tracksuit,” Lee confirms, but warns that viewers shouldn’t expect to see a replay of season 1 as Gi-hun returns to the dorms. “Gi-hun’s purpose is not to play the game but to go after those who have created the game and put a stop to it. Compared to every other participant within the game and also himself in season 1, the approach that he takes is going to be very different this time around. It could almost be described as a game within a-game for Gi-hun.”

And just because Gi-hun has experienced the games before doesn’t mean he’ll have a leg up on his competition to make it through each round. “Most of the games will be new this time around,” Lee reveals. “They are once again simple children’s games that a lot of kids in Korea grew up playing. I remember being on set and being reminded of my childhood days.”

While the director is reluctant to reveal what kinds of new games fans will see this season—or if there will be another epic bloodbath like Red Light, Green Light — he explains that he wanted to open up the games to be more universally recognized this time. “In many different countries around the world, there will be some kind of version similar to these games that you probably have played as a child,” Hwang says. “They’re going to be both very easy to understand and play, and very fun.”

Squid Game Season 2
Lee Byung-hun on ‘Squid Game’. Netflix

Gi-hun won’t be as invested in winning again as he focuses instead on getting to the creators of the game, but he’ll still be playing to survive each round. So what are the chances that he could make it to the end and win again? “When I was reading the scripts, that was at the top of mind for me,” Lee says. “That was what I wanted to find out and was most curious about—how far will Gi-hun be able to make it in the games? And when will he be eliminated—if ever? And if he’s eliminated, will he really die? There are so many twists and turns.”

There will be a few more familiar faces this season, along with Gi-hun: Lee Byung-hun returns as Front Man, and Detective Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-jun) is back after learning in the season 1 finale that the mysteriously masked leader who shot him is actually his missing brother and a former winner of the game. Gong Yoo will also reprise his role as the recruiter. “You’re going to get to see some characters who were just fleeting characters or made very brief appearances in season 1 that actually carry a lot of weight and play an important role in season 2,” Hwang says.

But that’s it for returning cast members—season 2 will introduce many more new characters played by Yim Si-wan, Kang Ha-neul, Park Gyu-young, Lee Jin-uk, Park Sung-hoon, Yang Dong-geun, Kang Ae-sim, Lee David, Choi, Seung-hyun, Roh Jae-won, Jo Yuri, and Won Ji-an.

“Compared to season 1, you’re going to get to meet more characters, just in terms of the sheer number,” Hwang says. “And they’re going to be so much more three-dimensional and very complex. Some of them will be allies, comrades, and friends to Gi-hun, and then there are going to be some enemies. The dynamics and relationships between the characters will be a lot more intense and intertwined with one another.”

After delivering a searing exploration of “the unlimited competition in a capitalist society and the way the losers of that competition are treated in our society” in the first season, the director was excited to return to that same idea in season 2 “from a larger perspective.”

“I’ll also ask questions about, Do we really have the ability to solve those problems?” Hwang adds. “And is that what we are at the end of the day? Is that what humanity is?”

The answers won’t be as simple as the games themselves, and that’s the whole point. “I can assure you it’s going to keep all of you at the edge of your seats,” Lee promises.

Let the games begin.

Squid Game season 2 premieres Thursday, Dec. 26 on Netflix.

Squid Game director and star reveal ‘heavier, darker’ season 2 will be ‘a game-within-a-game’ Read More
"Despite the difficulties," the embattled reality star wrote on Instagram, "I’m filled with gratitude for the learning experience."

Tom Sandoval bids farewell to Vanderpump Rules after Bravo scraps cast for season 12

“Despite the difficulties,” the embattled reality star wrote on Instagram, “I’m filled with gratitude for the learning experience.”

That’s a wrap on the Vanderpump Rules we used to know, and the series new archvillain Tom Sandoval along with it.

Last week, Bravo announced that the hit reality series and Real Housewives of Beverly Hills spinoff will do a complete cast swap-out, a la Real Housewives of New York, following the earth-shaking drama of season 11. Tom Sandoval, the hunky SUR bartender who’d been a series regular since season 1, was at the epicenter of the drama and has finally addressed the show moving forward without him or any of his former castmates.

“Where do I begin… I’m overwhelmed with so many emotions right now,” he wrote on a Nov. 30 Instagram post. “The unbelievable series of events that brought this group together still blows my mind to this day. From a random meeting with [Jax Taylor] while modeling in Miami to responding to a Craigslist ad for another Tom looking for a roommate. Who would’ve thought that a stop along the way while chasing our dreams would turn into the cultural phenomenon that is Vanderpump Rules.”

Tom Sandoval
Tom Sandoval. Phillip Faraone/Getty Images

Sandoval continued, “We were unaware as to the effect this show would have on our lives. The foundation of Vanderpump Rules was built on pure honest raw emotions… triumphs, struggles, and love that happen between a group of real friends and our relationships. As soon as we started filming, s— got real and never turned back. It’s been a roller coaster ride, and you’ve been with us through every step of the way.”

The reality star thanked the network, Lisa Vanderpump, the former RHOBH cast member around whose West Hollywood restaurant the spinoff revolves, and the crew “who busted their asses with us in the trenches.” Most of all, Sandoval expressed thanks: “To each and every fan, THANK YOU ALL for believing us and being part of this 12-year journey… Despite the difficulties, I’m filled with gratitude for the learning experience and forever grateful for all of the memories.”

Between production on seasons 10 and 11, news leaked that Sandoval and girlfriend Ariana Madix, another Vanderpump Rules main cast member, had broken up. It turned out that Madix discovered a years-long affair between Sandoval and another cast member, Rachel “Raquel” Leviss. Dubbed “Scandoval,” the cheating storyline catapulted the show to the center of national attention for months, transforming the personal and professional lives of each member of the tortured love triangle.

Leviss filed a lawsuit against Madix and Sandoval; Sandoval filed his own lawsuit against Madix, then dropped it, and Madix experienced a whirlwind career evolution, landing roles on season 32 of Dancing With the Stars, in Broadway’s Chicago, and as the host of Love Island USA. Leviss already departed Vanderpump Rules before season 11, but now, the rest have got to move on, whether they want to or not.

Katie Maloney, Ariana Madix, Tom Sandoval, Lisa Vanderpump, James Kennedy, Lala Kent, Tom Schwartz, Scheana Shay
The cast of ‘Vanderpump Rules’ season 11.Gizelle Hernandez/Bravo

Many of Sandoval’s coworkers already reacted to the reboot, including LVP herself, who said in a statement, “The last 12 years of filming have been an extraordinary run full of laughter, tears, and everything in between… In the restaurant business, one shift always gives way to another. Cheers to the next generation of Vanderpump Rules.”

In a Nov. 26 Instagram post, Madix wrote, “I’m feeling at peace with closing this chapter, and I’m excited for everything that is to come. I don’t know that these were the best days of our lives, but they were definitely something special.”

Sandoval, meanwhile, is closing another huge chapter in his life with the announcement that Scwartz & Sandy’s, his cocktail bar with castmate Tom Schwartz, is closing its doors.

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The ‘90s classic is dragged into the present with sex, drugs and a hint of political scandal

‘Cruel Intentions’ review: low-stakes remake doesn’t chime with the times

The ‘90s classic is dragged into the present with sex, drugs and a hint of political scandal

There have been attempts to turn Cruel Intentions into a TV series before. Shortly after the deliciously wicked 1999 film starring Sarah Michelle Gellar and Ryan Phillippe, Fox ordered a 13-episode prequel featuring a pre-fame Amy Adams. This idea was quickly scrapped, and the two episodes they had filmed were cobbled together to make the shoddy, direct-to-video Cruel Intentions 2.

Then in 2015, NBC made a pilot for a sequel series starring Gellar, but this was also abandoned. So this new, eight-part Cruel Intentions reboot from Amazon Prime Video is very much a case of “third time’s a charm,” even if it doesn’t have quite as much dark, depraved charm as it needs.

Co-showrunners Sara Goodman and Phoebe Fisher, who previously worked on another movie-to-TV adaptation, 2021’s I Know What You Did Last Summer, have tentatively brought Cruel Intentions into 2024. The students at Manchester College, the fictional Washington, DC, university where the series is set, are more debauched than the Manhattan high schoolers of the 1999 film. Here, there are bumps of coke at the frat house, the odd C-bomb, and lots of sex getting filmed on smartphones.

Zac Burgess and Sarah Catherine Hook in Amazon Prime Video's 'Cruel Intentions'.
Zac Burgess and Sarah Catherine Hook in Amazon Prime Video’s ‘Cruel Intentions’. CREDIT: Prime Video

There’s also more male nudity than female, which feels fitting given that a brief glimpse of Phillippe’s derrière went down in ’90s teen movie history. But in other ways, this Cruel Intentions feels retrogressive compared to many contemporary teen series. It’s predicated on a boringly binary idea of gender, and casual body-shaming seems to be de rigueur. One character is told to eat “less salt” to improve the appearance of her “cankle.”.

Of course, the entire point of Cruel Intentions is that it’s set in a heightened, hyper-stylised world where pretty and unbelievably privileged rich kids plot to get what they want. The 1999 film was a fiendishly clever riff on Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’ 18th century novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses, which was scandalous at the time. The problem is that it’s hard to care about this series’ low-stakes machinations in the current, incredibly fractious political climate.

Concerned that negative publicity could threaten Delta Phi, her super-luxe sorority house, serene queen bee Caroline Merteuil (Sarah Catherine Hook, stepping into the Gellar role) challenges her louche stepbrother Lucien Belmont (Zac Burgess) to seduce Annie Grover (Savannah Lee Smith). Sweet but naive Annie is the daughter of the Vice President of the United States, so if she joins Delta Phi, Caroline believes positive press will follow and the sorority’s future will be assured.

This flimsy premise wouldn’t matter if Cruel Intentions offered a bit more shameless escapism. But for the most part, the dialogue is crisp and brittle without being particularly witty, and the performances are self-assured without sparkling like Delta Phi’s bottomless supply of champagne. Still, this series is stylish and sprightly enough for a lazy binge-watch, even if it never fully lives up to its spicy source material.

‘Cruel Intentions’ is out now on Amazon Prime Video

‘Cruel Intentions’ review: low-stakes remake doesn’t chime with the times Read More