Close Menu
  • Support Us
  • Newsletter
  • News
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Video Games
      • Previews
      • PC
      • PS5
      • Xbox Series X/S
      • Nintendo Switch
      • Xbox One
      • PS4
      • Tabletop
    • Film
    • TV
    • Anime
    • Comics
      • BOOM! Studios
      • Dark Horse Comics
      • DC Comics
      • IDW Publishing
      • Image Comics
      • Indie Comics
      • Marvel Comics
      • Oni-Lion Forge
      • Valiant Comics
      • Vault Comics
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Event Coverage
    • BWT Recommends
    • RSS Feeds
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Support Us
But Why Tho?
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Trending:
  • Features
    The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart

    The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

    05/11/2025
    Mafia: The Old Country promotional still

    Everything We Know About ‘Mafia: The Old Country’

    05/08/2025
    Sunderfolk Phone Players

    10 ‘Sunderfolk’ Tips To Help You And Your Party Thrive

    05/02/2025
    Bob in Thunderbolts But Why Tho

    ‘Thunderbolts*’ Visualizes Depression As Only A Superhero Movie Can

    05/02/2025
    Games to Play After Expedition 33

    5 Games to Play After Beating ‘Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’

    05/01/2025
  • Star Wars
  • K-Dramas
  • Netflix
  • Blood of Zeus
  • MCU
But Why Tho?
Home » TV » REVIEW: Pachinko Season 2 Showcases The Importance Television As A Medium

REVIEW: Pachinko Season 2 Showcases The Importance Television As A Medium

Kate SánchezBy Kate Sánchez08/16/20246 Mins ReadUpdated:11/26/2024
Pachinko Season 2 - Apple TV Plus
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

Based on the New York Times bestselling novel of the same name by Min Jin Lee, Pachinko became a standout series for AppleTV+ when it was first released in 2022. Creator Soo Hugh has worked to adapt the beloved novel by using  the television medium to the fullest, allowing each episode to become a chapter in the story. The series began with as a story of forbidden love and crescendoed into a sweeping saga that journeys between Korea, Japan and, America — and that continues in Pachinko Season 2.

In Pachinko Season 2 the stories resume in 1945 Osaka, WWII hanging over the season with all of the depth and complexity it brings. We watch Sunja (Minha Kim) as she is forced to make dangerous decisions for her family’s survival during World War II, with her husband Isak in custody and only her sister-in-law for support and two young children to take care of. In Tokyo 1989, we follow Solomon (Jin Ha) as he strikes out on his own, tries to support his family, and carries the weight of his career and his future.

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Pachinko Season 2 is intimate. Every character’s life, relationships, and desires are laid bare. And, of course, so are their circumstances. Resiliency remains the cornerstone of the narrative’s impact and focus, but much like last season, the characters we see just want to stop having to endure. Through each generation, the weight the Baek family carries may lessen, but it’s never gone. Instead, the weight shifts, taking new forms, and what it means to survive changes.

Pachinko Season 2

Where the series’ debut season looked at the beginning of difficulties and the compounding effect of bigotry and imperialism that Sunja is thrust into, Pachinko Season 2 is about what happens as you move forward. How do you survive the horrors of war? How do you survive nationalist bigotry? How do you swallow your pride to help your family, or in multiple cases, receive help from your family? Watching the Baek family navigate these questions throughout the generations is gutting. But watching them stand tall even as the world tries to shake their foundation is cathartic.

Pachinko is a Korean story that hones in on the generational trauma that imperialism has left on the Baeks. But it’s also a universal story that many of us with legacies of tragedy and not trust funds can see ourselves in. Pachinko Season 2 opens the story wider and explores the pressures that particularly affect the men of the family.

The trauma from 1945 reverberates from the past and into the present and is something that Sunja can’t escape even in her old age. But that’s the reality of living through imperialism. Seeing how the same forces impact and push Solomon but with a different burden of success and masculinity is heartfelt. It also runs parallel to what Noa experienced in the family’s past.

In Pachinko Season 2, Soo Hugh understands that people contain multitudes.

Pachinko Season 2

Pachinko Season 2 delicately captures the multitudes of our identities and how we navigate the world through them. For Sunja, she is a widower in a world that doesn’t help women succeed on their own. She’s a mother who just wants something better for her sons. She’s a woman who was hurt by the love she carried for a man who refused to disrupt respectability.

Sunja has lost so much in her life, and still, she only allows the world to see her smiles. Her story is heartbreak after heartbreak and being forced into surviving it. Watching Sunja through the years is painful. Her resiliency is heartbreaking.

On the other hand, we have Lee Min-ho‘s Koh Hansu. He’s a man who has seen great success but sold himself off in pieces. His name and his Korean identity are masked as much as he can muster, only to be reminded that he will never be Japanese in every room he enters. He has wealth and power, but when it comes to his son Noa, he is utterly powerless.

Noa is caught between the child he believes his mother deserves, honoring the man he calls father, and accepting the help and advice to leave his home and go to university. As his parentage becomes central, he’s tackling the very idea of who he is while also having to navigate a world that keeps forcing him to say he isn’t Korean.

And then, in the present, Solomon is carrying the weight of his family’s debt. He is also carrying his own insecurities as microaggressions and bigotry with partners pile up inch by inch, threatening to crush him. He has what he needs to succeed; he speaks perfect Japanese and English, but he has to betray history and his connection to his community to keep advancing. He knows what he is giving up, and the resentment it builds when he says that he can not pity his grandmother Sunja or father anymore brings his sense of self crashing down. Solomon doesn’t want to fail, but more importantly, he doesn’t want to be a disappointing son.

Pachinko Season 2 continues to do right by its female characters.

Pachinko Season 2 - Apple TV Plus

Even with a larger focus on the men of Pachinko in Season 2, Sunja is beautifully explored. With two actresses bridging her story in the past and the present, Kim Minha and Youn Yuh-jung, are breathtaking actresses. Both women are able to move mountains with subtle expressions. Sunja reacts to the world around her, but she is never consumed by it. She is stalwart, curious, and she has learned to live with her shadow. Both actresses Kim and Youn give audiences performances that deserve to be talked about as the best on television.

Additionally, it’s not just the primary characters that get nuanced and delicate explorations of relationships and survival. Sanju’s son in the future, played by Soji Arai, adds mystery and depth to the familial troubles and hesitations. Jung Eun-chae and Kim Sung-kyu as Kyung Hee and Mr. Kim, respectively, add even more complexity, grief, and yearning. In 1989, Naomi (Anna Sawai) adds the feminine perspective to the workplace that runs analogous to Solomon’s difficulties.

Ultimately, Pachinko Season 2 is encapsulated in its last moments. Sunja asks herself, “Why do some people survive when others do not?” That is the crux of the series. It’s about what we carry, what we break under, and those who have been lost. By tracing the ripples of trauma through one family, Pachinko offers a salient and intimate understanding of resiliency without disregarding your sorrow or grief. Pachinko Season 2 is a masterpiece that showcases the importance of television as a medium to tell stories. Each episode progresses and builds into a somber crescendo that reflects on the journey.

Pachinko Season 2 premieres on AppleTV+ August 23, 2024.

Pachinko Season 2
  • 10/10
    Rating - 10/10
10/10

TL;DR

Pachinko Season 2 is encapsulated in its last moments. Sunja asks herself, “Why do some people survive when others do not?” That is the crux of the series. It’s about what we carry, what we break under, and those who have been lost.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Previous Article‘The Plucky Squire’ Aims to Obliterate the Fourth Wall
Next Article REVIEW: ‘Are You Sure?’ Episode 3
Kate Sánchez
  • Website
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram

Kate Sánchez is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of But Why Tho? A Geek Community. There, she coordinates film, television, anime, and manga coverage. Kate is also a freelance journalist writing features on video games, anime, and film. Her focus as a critic is championing animation and international films and television series for inclusion in awards cycles. Find her on Bluesky @ohmymithrandir.bsky.social

Related Posts

Murderbot Season 1 keyart from Apple TV Plus
9.0

REVIEW: ‘Murderbot’ Continues Apple TV+’s Sci-Fi Winning Streak

05/12/2025
The Last of Us Season 2 Episode 5 But Why Tho 4
6.0

REVIEW: ‘The Last Of Us’ Season 2 Episode 5 — “Feel Her Love”

05/11/2025
Ncuti Gatwa in Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 5
7.5

REVIEW: ‘Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 5 — “The Story and the Engine”

05/11/2025
Judy Blume's Forever (2025) promotional image from Netflix
9.0

REVIEW: ‘Forever’ Is A New Essential YA Series

05/10/2025
Eddie in 9-1-1 Season 8 Episode 17
7.5

RECAP: ‘9-1-1’ Season 8 Episode 17 — “Don’t Drink The Water”

05/10/2025
Heron in Blood of Zeus from Netflix and Powerhouse animation
9.5

REVIEW: ‘Blood of Zeus’ Season 3 Completes An Epic Story

05/08/2025
TRENDING POSTS
Serena Keyart from The First Descendant Season 3 Interviews

Developers Are Dedicated To Improving Balance & Co-Op Play in The First Descendant Season 3

By Kate Sánchez03/27/2025Updated:03/30/2025

We spoke with Nexon developers about The First Descendant Season 3, tackling balance, feedback, and expanding co-op possibility.

The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart Features

The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/11/2025

At PAX East 2025, NEXON previewed the groundbreaking mega-update for The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough.

Razer Joro product image
9.0
Product Review

PRODUCT REVIEW: The Portable Razer Joro Is A Travel Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/08/2025Updated:05/08/2025

Reliable and uncompromising in its gaming features on the go, the portable Razer Joro is a travel gamechanger.

The Devil's Plan Season 2 key art
4.5
TV

REVIEW: ‘The Devil’s Plan’ Season 2 Is Off To A Rough Start

By Charles Hartford05/07/2025Updated:05/07/2025

The Devil’s Plan Season 2 challenges its contestants to outsmart and outmaneuver each other. Unfortunately, it does so in pace grinding ways

But Why Tho?
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest RSS YouTube Twitch
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Review Score Guide
Sometimes we include links to online retail stores. If you click on one and make a purchase we may receive a small contribution.
Written Content is Copyright © 2025 But Why Tho? A Geek Community

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

But Why Tho Logo

Support Us!

We're able to keep making content thanks to readers like YOU!
Support independent media today with
Click Here