
‘The Glory’ Part 2 review: Razor-sharp writing elevates this disturbing tale of bullying and revenge
The Hindu
Part 2 of ‘The Glory’, goes above and beyond, with its razor-sharp writing, compelling narrative, and impressive performances
There’s a certain amount of trepidation one has going into the second part of a solid and compelling show like Netflix’s South Korean original, The Glory. Especially since a lot of the pressure is for it to be just as compelling and explosive as the first part, which released earlier this year to much acclaim.
Part 2 of The Glory, goes above and beyond, with its razor-sharp writing, compelling narrative, and impressive performances. And this is no easy feat, given that the story here has its focus trained on a rather complicated plan of revenge coming to fruition.
After being incessantly bullied in high school, Moon Dong-eun (Song Hye-kyo) comes back after nearly two decades to set in motion a complicated plan of revenge that she hopes will bring about the ruin of her high school bullies who are now unrepentant and depraved adults.
In an early scene, there’s even a barbed reference to how easy revenge movies make it all seem when Dong-Eun tells chief bully, heiress and weather forecaster Park Yeon-jin (Lim Ji-yeon) how challenging it is to make a living while working on her plans. While much of the first part focussed on Dong-eun’s careful planning, we see it all unravel slowly and steadily as it impacts Yeon-jin and her cronies, rich heir Jae-joon (Park Sung-hoon), his lackey Myeong-oh (Kim Gun-woo), artist Sa-ra (Kim Hi-eora) and flight attendant Hye-jeong (Cha Joo-young) in the newer episodes.
Dong-eun has by her side, affable plastic surgeon Joo Yeo-jeong (Lee Do-hyun) and housekeeper and amateur investigator Kang Hyeon-nam (Yeom Hye-ran), both of whom prove to be invaluable with regard to how her plans take shape. These two are a breath of fresh air in Dong-eun’s world, which has been cruel and unforgiving to her as a teen. She reserves her smiles for them, and we see her thawing, even if ever so slightly, under the warmth they infuse into her life.
The stage has already been set. We go into the newer episodes having seen just how distressing the bullying was, and how it has impacted Dong-Eun’s life thus far. There’s a very evident class hierarchy at play here, not just with regard to how the bullies pick on girls who are from the other end of the class spectrum in high school, but also within the depraved group itself which sows the seeds for betrayal, distrust and their ultimate unraveling. “Why do the poor believe in things like poetic justice and karma?” Yeon-jin wonders out loud initially in the show. As viewers, we’re left as invested as Dong-eun is, for this poetic justice and her ultimate salvation.
Unlike Part 1 which had several graphic scenes depicting the gruesome high school bullying Dong-Eun is subject to, the newer episodes are a lot more toned down despite the show delving into the life of another victim of bullying. The scenes however depicting domestic violence are extremely triggering, and some of it could have been done away with.













