Where are my Action movie lovers 🥹. Mercy for None is indeed a valuable addition to my watchlist. I call it “Korea's John Wick" 😎. Well, I'm hardly drawn to emotional Korean movies I'm more drawn to the merciless ones 😁
This is one of the best action movies of the year, the cast was amazing. You have blood, guts and true bone crushing moments.
Imagine taking yrs to find out the truth behind your brother's death 💀😱. Everything began when Nam Gi-jun found out the truth about his brother's death. He swore to get to the root of everything.
When Netflix recommended Mercy for None—showing So Ji-sub, a brooding, scarred man, wielding a baseball bat—I paused. The teaser called it “John Wick meets brutal noir,” and a few clicks later, I was hooked. I needed something raw and intense, and this series promised exactly that.
Okay here's the thing, if you want a movie that shows merciless revenge then you can probably start with this 🤗
Watching Mercy for None isn't just a gang revenge tale. It’s a dark portrait of systemic corruption. The power struggle between the Juwoon and Bongsan groups, a crooked prosecutor, even dirty cops—it’s a network of betrayal. Watching Gi-jun tear through the pieces, I felt angry at the hidden cards dealt by those in power.
The initial episode is a shocker. Nam Gi-jun (So Ji-sub), is in exile--limping, isolated, quiet. Eleven years ago, he severed his Achilles tendon to enter the world of gangs and save his younger brother Gi-seok. The very thought of giving a piece of yourself to the family caused me a shudder in my chest. All of a sudden, Gi-jun is living his peaceful life ruined because his brother has been killed. He goes back to Seoul, not because he wants the power or money, but because he wants blood pounding justice.
The originality of this is not in the violence itself but how lifelike it is. Gi-jun does not spray bullets but swings a baseball bat. Intimate, violent, imperfect. It falls when he hits. I cringed at every bone crushing blow. It is basic, carnal.
There’s a moment in episode one where two gangster families collide in a run-down building. The tension is thick, almost claustrophobic. You can almost taste the stale air, hear every distant footstep, see every anxious eye dart.
The reason Mercy for None sticks around even after the shootouts is the emotional aspect of it. This is not random violence. It is a man who suffers over anguish, guilt and betrayal. During silent moments, when I heard the sound of one breath next to a dying companion, when I watched the rain fall on his scarred face, I felt all of the loss.
The eyes of So Ji-sub turned out to be the key of the story. They spoke of regret, exhaustion, and steel. You experience his loneliness when the camera focuses on him after a fight. He is not a superhero; he is a man who is shattered, just collecting the pieces with bloody hands.
One of the most notable is episode four in the so-called Death Hallway when dozens of people are killed in a cruel slow motion. You do not only watch it, you feel every impact.
Despite the fact that it is revenge as fuel, Mercy for None invests in people. Ju-woon and Bong-san are not cardboard villains, the two gang patriarchs. The son of the heir Gu Jun-mo is shrewd, ambivalent, and frighteningly human. Even the prosecutor's son Lee Geum-son who pursues the power of the law turns out to be terrifyingly realistic.
If you want a Realistic, hard-hitting action with no bullet ballet then Mercy for None is a must-watch.
It’s a short ride, seven episodes—but it lands heavy. Think John Wick grit, Korean noir soul, and the sad reality that some revenge stories end in ashes, not cheers.
Observing the path of Gi-jun, I perceived that vengeance is a mirror, which makes us look at our suffering, rage, and decisions. Everyone suffers. Burden is on us all. And not always is the desire of revenge nothing but terror in a uniform.
However, this show made me remember-
The true courage is to turn your back in times when you want to stay and to stand when all the things want to break you.
Violence cannot bring real redemption, it comes with acknowledgment.
Scars that are real are not symbols of shame instead they are insignia of survival.
Mercy For None is not comforting. It confronts. It is not a hopeful movie, it is a demonstration of how easily hope can be lost. And it reminds us that healing is not through victory, but starts by ceasing to fight the wrong battles.