Death's Game Movie Review (When death teaches you how to live)
I don't even know how to start this without sighing. The kind of sigh that equal parts "wow, that was good" and "Why did I do this to myself" It's been days since I finished Death's Game and my chest still feels like someone folded it like laundry and forgot to unfold it back.
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I started it because of Seo In-guk -Let me be honest. That man knows how to carry pain on his face like a full-time job. I didn't even think I was signing up for emotional squats though. But yeah, I pressed play, and boom
The Story
So, the story? It's wild. Seo In-guk plays Choi Yi Jae, a man who's just.... done with life. Broke, jobless, hopeless and at his lowest. And when he finally decides to end it all, Death -yes, an actual woman who is Death, played by Park So-dam with this eerie calmness- basically goes, "Oh, you thought it was that easy?"
His punishment? He has to die 12 times, in 12 different bodies, living 12 different lives. And if in any one of them, he learns the value of life, he gets another shot. If not? Bye forever
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And from there, it just spirals. Every new episode is a different life. One moment he's a rich dude, next he's a soldier, a death-row inmate, a woman, a teenager. Some lives lasted hours, some felt like years, some were beautiful, some were brutal. But every single one was real. And in every life, he's just trying to stay alive long enough to figure out why it even matters. Spoiler: sometimes it doesn't. And in those episodes? Pain. Just pain
I think the one that broke me was the prison arc. Or the teenager one. Or when he lived as his mom
Okay, never mind -they all broke me
I don't even know how they managed it -but every death got heavier. Not because it was sad, but because I was seeing. Seeing the layers of people's pain, the burdens strangers carry, the injustice that some folks are just born into. There was this one episode where he was just begging -not for himself, but for someone else- and I swear, I had to pause and breathe. That was when I knew: this wasn't the same man who gave up I episode one
The writers? No notes. The way they connected all the stories, the way each life tied into the bigger picture -it wasn't just clever, it was respectful. At one point, I paused the episode, stared at the screen and asked myself, "who even wrote this?" Because, wow.
And the acting? My God. Seo In-guk? That man didn't just act -he became. Every character. Every version of himself. There were moments where he didn't even speak and I was still there crying like I knew the man. Like he was my cousin or neighbour or something. His eyes did the heavy lifting, and my emotions did not stand a chance
When it finally ended, I wasn't even crying -I was just sitting there like someone who missed their stop on the emotional bus.
And I wish I could say it gave closure. It didn't. It gave vibes. It gave thoughts. It gave *"Maybe I need to go touch grass and appreciate my life before I get reincarnated into chaos.
Final Thoughts
I'd rate the movie a 9/10 🌟
10/10. Acting? Phenomenal. Rewatchable? Yes. Would I recommend? Also, yes.
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I had never heard of this movie, and now I wanna watch it.
You definitely should. You'll enjoy it😊😊
Just make sure I got a box of tissues when I do right :)
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Regressive hypnologist Michael Newton talks about his patients in his books. They talk about what they saw in past lives. There is a possibility that this is true.
It could be. Thanks for reading 😊