The Match ~ Korea’s Legendary Go (Baduk) Master–Student Rivalry

cmoneyspinner

What does the Fox say?
Staff member
Lee Byung-hun plays Jo Hun-hyun like he's carrying the whole country's pride on his shoulders, you can feel the pressure in every stare. Yoo Ah-In as Lee Chang-ho is so calm it's scary, like he already knows the next 50 moves. The way the film shows their games without fancy effects, just stones and silence, makes you hold your breath. I never played Go seriously but now I want to try a few games. Solid watch if you like real stories over action
 
Is it this the villain guy from Squid Game? Like the Front Man or whatever his name was? I saw Lee Byung-hun in the trailer and my brain went straight to that creepy mask guy lol. He looks so different here as the old Go master, all serious and intense but not evil. Does he pull off the mentor role good or is it too weird seeing him without the suit? Thinking of watching now just because of him. Yoo Ah-In as the student sounds interesting too. Anyone else get Squid Game flashbacks?
 
Watched it last night and honestly the rivalry is more interesting than most sports movies. Mentor vs student turning into real enemies on the board, but still respect underneath. The contrast in styles—Jo aggressive and loud in his plays, Lee super precise and patient—makes every match feel personal. Not a lot of dialogue but you don't need it. The ending left me thinking about legacy and when to let go. Pretty good for a Netflix sports biopic.
 
Short and sweet: great acting, tense matches, true story bonus. Lee Byung-hun carries the emotional weight, Yoo Ah-In brings the eerie calm. The Go scenes are shot beautifully, you can almost hear the stones click. Not super exciting if you want fast action, but if you enjoy character-driven stuff it's worth your time.
 
I went in knowing nothing about Go or these players and still got hooked. The film explains enough without boring you with rules. It's really about pride, aging, and watching your replacement show up. That one line about needing two people for a good game stuck with me. Solid Korean cinema, better than a lot of the flashy stuff coming out now.
 
Lee Byung-hun plays Jo Hun-hyun like he's carrying the whole country's pride on his shoulders, you can feel the pressure in every stare. Yoo Ah-In as Lee Chang-ho is so calm it's scary, like he already knows the next 50 moves. The way the film shows their games without fancy effects, just stones and silence, makes you hold your breath. I never played Go seriously but now I want to try a few games. Solid watch if you like real stories over action
Could you have paired two better actors for this movie? Whoever was in charge of casting did a good job!
 

how to help support popgeeks, popgeeks, pop geeks

Latest News & Videos

Latest News

Back
Top