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ReviewApple TV+ K-drama Pachinko season 2 review: intimacy amid the misery in historical epic

  • The gripping, multi-year story of a Korean emigrant family’s hardships in Japan is back – and it’s so good a third season must be baked in

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Kim Min-ha as the younger Sunja in a still from Pachinko. The drama about a Korean emigrant family’s hardships and heartbreak in Japan returns for a second season that’s just as gripping as the first. Photo: Apple TV+
James Marsh

5/5 stars

Lead cast: Kim Min-ha, Youn Yuh-jung, Jin Ha, Anna Sawai, Lee Min-ho

Min Jin Lee’s 2017 novel Pachinko is a historical epic about four generations of a Korean family that emigrated to Japan.

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A tale of prejudice, hardship and self-sacrifice leavened with moments of incredible intimacy, it spans the Japanese occupation of Korea, the second world war, the Korean war and the economic boom of the 1980s.

In 2022, the novel was adapted for Apple TV+ by American writer Soo Hugh, with directors Kogonada (After Yang) and Justin Chon (Gook) helming four episodes apiece.

Following the overwhelmingly positive response to season one, season two has arrived, again drawing from Lee’s novel and and this time helmed by Arvin Chen (Au Revoir, Taipei) and Korean-Japanese filmmaker Lee Sang-il (Wandering).

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