Bloodhounds is Netflix’s latest Korean mini-series, joining the successful list including All Of Us Are Dead, Move To Heaven, and more shows, all of which are ten or fewer episodes long and perfect for a weekend binge. Read our full review here if you haven’t seen the show yet! Based on a webtoon of the same name that takes place in the time of COVID-19, Bloodhounds shows us another dark side of a pandemic while simultaneously making it entertaining through action and humor.Bloodhounds Season 1 Download
Bloodhounds follows Gun-Woo, who lives with his single mother. She owns a cafe, and Gun-Woo is a successful rookie boxer. After winning the rookie championship, Gun-Woo befriends his opponent, Woo-Jin, and immediately they become thick as thieves. Gun-Woo is excited to have won the award and gives his mother some money to pay back part of her loans. Because of COVID, people don’t eat out, so her cafe isn’t doing very well. Gun-Woo has no problem giving his mother the money, though, but he has to wait for the pandemic to end because the next championship has been postponed. One day a man comes over to the cafe and tells Gun-Woo’s mother that they will pay back the loan for her if she signs a contract with them. The benefit is that they have a 5% interest rate in comparison to the bank’s 7%. Gun-Woo’s gullible mother ends up signing the paper but doesn’t realize that there’s a clause that says she needs to pay a certain amount back within 24 hours. Gun-Woo isn’t home when all this goes down, and when he returns, the man has brought some goons over to cause mayhem in the cafe. Gun-Woo fights them all using his boxer fists to save his mother, but one of the men, the boss’s right-hand man, is too strong for Gun-Woo, and he ends up on the floor. The boss, Myeong-Gil, is impressed by Gun-Woo’s strength and asks him to work for him, but Gun-Woo spits on him in return, so Myeong-Gil carves a scar on his face, matching one similar to his, to make sure Gun-Woo knows who he’s up against