Netflix K-Content

Netflix is taking K-Content to new heights with 34 upcoming titles, including eye-popping original productions and returning fan favorites. Image Supplied

Netflix is bringing a wider variety of K-Content this 2023 [watch]

Netflix is taking K-Content to new heights with 34 upcoming titles, including eye-popping original productions and returning fan favorites.

Netflix K-Content

Netflix is taking K-Content to new heights with 34 upcoming titles, including eye-popping original productions and returning fan favorites. Image Supplied

The global fandom for K-content is continuing to grow, with over 60 percent of all Netflix members watching Korean titles last year. Looking ahead at 2023, Netflix is debuting a diverse array of Korean TV series, films and unscripted shows.

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NEW SERIES AND RETURNING FAVOURITES ON NETFLIX

Survival has become a recurring theme across some of the top series, whether it’s battling monsters during the dark days of 1945 in Gyeongseong Creature, struggling to breathe in the dystopian future of sci-fi series Black Knight, or fighting to protect Joseon during Japanese colonial rule in action drama Song of the Bandits.

Fans are set to rejoice with the return of highly anticipated series Sweet HomeD.P., and The Glory this year. Part 2 of revenge drama The Glory will be released in March, with Part 1 being the most-watched non-English TV show during the week of January 2 with 82.48 million viewing hours.

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Sweet Home, which set new benchmarks for the creature genre in Korea, will return with an expanded world and story while D.P. brings back the cast from the first season to continue chasing after deserters.

Other new series this year run the gamut of romance (A Time Called YouBehind Your Touch (WT), Crash Course in Romance, Destined With YouDoona!King the Land, Love to Hate YouSee You In My 19th Life), social commentary and intrigue (BloodhoundsCelebrity, Mask Girl), drama (Daily Dose of SunshineQueenmakerThe Good Bad Mother), and apocalyptic (Goodbye Earth).

MORE FILMS, MORE UNSCRIPTED SHOWS

This year, Netflix is expanding its film offering with six Korean movies, kicking off with sci-fi thriller JUNG-E on January 20, followed by Kill Boksoon which depicts a professional killer with conflicting maternal instincts, and Believer 2, a sequel to a crime action thriller revolving around drug gangs. Other films explore the topics of revenge (Ballerina), teacher-student rivalry (The Match), and hacking (Unlocked).

Meanwhile those who love living vicariously will be spoilt for choice with a dazzling lineup of reality shows, spanning endurance (Physical:100Siren: Survive the Island), zombie survival (Zombieverse) coming of age (Nineteen to Twenty), and mind games (The Devil’s Plan).

There are also two new documentaries coming out. Yellow Door: Looking for Director Bong’s Unreleased Short Film (working title) traces the quest for Oscar-winning director Bong Joon-Ho’s debut film while true-crime documentary In the Name of God: A Holy Betrayal explores the self-proclaimed ‘messiahs’ in modern Korean history.