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In an interview with Deadline, Park reflects on Guard 011’s real name, which is No-eul, and explained how it impacted her performance. Park claims that learning her character’s name means “sunset” in Korean added more weight to the character, since sunsets mean that darkness is coming. Since No-eul enters the games as a soldier, Park focuses on the heavy emotions associated with taking innocent lives. Read her full quote below:
I remember the director telling me that the character’s name literally means sunset in Korean, so it refers to a time when darkness starts to seep in and you feel heavier. Going beyond just the facial expressions and having a lower voice, the director talked about how it means more than that, how I had to carry a sense of this very heavy, weighted emotion, especially when entering the games as the soldier.
What Park’s Comments About Guard 011 Mean For Squid Game
No-eul Is A Very Interesting Character In Squid Game










No-eul’s introduction in Squid Game season 2 made it seem like she was going to enter the games as a player, just like most of the show’s characters. Therefore, No-eul being a guard was one of Squid Game season 2’s biggest twists. Jun-ho disguised himself as a guard in Squid Game season 1, but following No-eul in season 2 is the first time viewers of the show have truly been able to see the perspective of a guard.
Even though Gyeong-seok was shot at the end of Squid Game season 2, it has been theorized that No-eul will end up saving him.
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Our Take On Park Gyu-young’s Comments About Guard 011 In Squid Game
Hopefully No-eul Gets More Screen Time In Squid Game Season 3

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