The series is based on a manhwa of the same name by Huh Young-man and Kim Se-yeong, which was also made into the 2006 live-action film Tazza: The High Rollers. It aired on SBS from September 16 to Novemon Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 18 episodes. Paraphrasing rule four: "Your friends are not forever, neither are your enemies.Tazza ( Korean: 타짜 RR: Tajja) is a 2008 South Korean television series starring Jang Hyuk, Han Ye-seul, Kim Min-jun, Kang Sung-yeon, Son Hyun-joo and Kim Kap-soo. If you do see this, pay attention to the four rules of the master. If gambling and blood fests are your cup of tea, then you should be satiated, otherwise you have been warned. It's no longer a question of winning but one of not losing, of humiliating and debasing your opponent psychologically but, more perversely, physically. Limbs - in the form of fingers, ears and hands - are bet. Mounds of money on the table are insufficient to pump adrenaline into the veins of underworld figures with plenty of blood in their hands.
The high rollers culture of illegal gambling filled with trickery and treachery but also with a retributive code of honor is a perfect breeding ground for that kind of violence. Tazza: The High Rollers (Korean: RR: Tajja) is a 2006 South Korean crime film directed by Choi Dong-hoon and based on. It is not the aseptic, blazing-guns style of violence so dear to the American psyche, but the intimate violence of the sharp blade more to the liking of orientals. There is plenty of it, though the gore is contained. This is the kind of film whose central premise is that violence is entertaining. It would help but it is not strictly necessary. There is a fair amount of hwatu gambling and it would help to know some about the game, in particular the ability to recognize card faces. It is also an environment of strongmen and women with its own violent rules. As Go Ni rises through the ranks, he eventually reaches the rarefied heights of the high rollers, where more money is bet than you can shake a stick at.
And there lies the rub, for the small size of the cards allows conjuring professional gamblers to win consistently over innocent suckers. The game is no-limit hwatu, a sort of Korean poker, played with thumb sized cards, any of which easily hidden in the palm of your hand. Go Ni is a young man who gets involved in gambling, first as a perpetual loser, then as an apprentice to a master gambler, and finally as an accomplished high roller that is heavily compromised with its violent milieu. An overarching story does develop eventually even though the particulars pile up like a plate of noodles.
A scrambled time-line leads to an initial sense of an impressionistic, messy plot that the viewer will have to try to put back together at the end.