We’ve all died is the latest Korean series that seems to have gripped the world with the end of the edge-of-the-seat zombie. As soon as it was premiered on January 28, this series rose to the top 10 graphics on the platform in many countries. The Lee Jae-Kyoo show director was recently opened about the show in the middle of a teenager, and how he forced him to think about “what it means to be an adult”.
In the conversation with Tatler Asia, Lee was asked about problems such as teen intimidation and pregnancy that had been handled in the show, and how they were combined with the zombie genre. The director said that this problem was “not only limited to the school room”. “I think this conflict between sexes and different classes and hierarchies, appears everywhere and throughout the world. It is only shown through school because that is the arrangement,” he said.
Lee Jae-Kyoo talks about the expression of survival and saving adolescents, as opposed to adults, and how it affects it in setting this show at school with a young protagonist. “When I was young, we used to swim in the river and if someone starts to sink, all children will only jump to save their friends. But when we become an adult, we choose the safest option – we not just jump but we think about The safest way to save others and ourselves, “he said.
“I think about what it means to be an adult and education and society what we do. When you watch the series, you can see how this teenager makes a decision in this life or death situation. I think it can give adults a lot of food to think about. I think it is a new approach to putting older teenagers against zombies on the school campus so I am very happy to bring you this idea, “he added.
The show might be arranged in South Korea but like a squid game, has found a global audience.