This review may contain spoilers
Short but sweet
The title says it all, Act or Real, indeed. Nice work.It's a story about 2 actors playing a BL drama and practicing.
Even though only 2 episodes of 6 minutes, they managed to relay the story and the performance was great for the short time.
It will leave you wanting more, as their chemistry was off the charts.
Some shows get full shows and don't get to have such chemistry on screan, not to mention we got a proper kiss scene.
I hope they make it a mini series at the very least, they deserve it.
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Really interesting idea but unfortunately not enough time to exploit it
This really short mini series of about 9 minutes has an interesting concept as it follows the repetition of 2 BLs actors as they workshop a quite passionate scene.I love the idea and the acting was quite good with some very believable chemistry. Despite the lack of meaningful dialogs, the actors manage to pass on a lot of feelings to the viewers who are left wondering about them.
Of course, filmmaking is relatively low value (which is kind of expected for that type of production). The music did clearly not leave a lasting impression on me at all.
I would recommend this to people looking for a short BL, as it manages to express a lot in a small amount of time. I wish it would have been longer and I like the questioning that the drama opens and on which the viewer can only ponder: is it acting or it it real ?
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well done short movie
Overall: wish this could have had more episodes because the actors had great chemistry. 8 minutes long https://youtu.be/A-0hx6lKIM0?si=FVx55QsQpfWI3KhkWhat I Liked
- great way to start, hooked me right away
- chemistry/tension
- clever title
- production value for an indie project
Room For Improvement
- wish it was a bit longer, could definitely use more screen time with the leads
- would have liked a slightly less open ending
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This review may contain spoilers
Too short
I don’t know what this was but I need more of it. The actors are giving ridiculous chemistry you cannot buy with money. Trust me. GMMTV have tried and we know a lot of their ship either have chemistry but cannot act or can act but have very little to nonexistent chemistry.Really this is an acting class owith two actors who are doing workshop to practice kissing. Where were this tutorial when BrightWin needed it for 2gether.
I wish there were more episodes than these two or this was made into a fleshed out series. But if it did, maybe I wouldn’t be such a thirty ho for more episode.
As for the rating. I mean there was nonexistent story. While the acting and chemistry is good there was little else. No music to speak of. I am not sure what the rewatch salute is other than to see two pretty boys kiss. Hey if that’s your thing. Knock yourself out with this. Even with the nonexistent story and music, I gave it a 8 so the 7.9 sounds right to me.
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Between fiction and reality
Seung Woo Park (played by Jeon Yu Bin) is dragged by Sangyoon Park (played by Minjin Kim) to a corner of the room and, cornered, listens, annoyed, as he is accused of having had sex with someone else.Sangyoon attacks him and hurts him with his words. Both young people argue heatedly. At any moment they could come to blows. They are not a couple. They are just two friends who…
The victim cannot understand why he is treated that way. That's why he asks her insistently: "What does that have to do with you? Why do you keep interfering in my life? Are we lovers? Are you jealous of other people? Do you like me?" The response he receives from Sangyoon is a kiss on the lips. But when he realizes his act, he nervously turns away and asks for forgiveness.
Thoughtful, Seung Woo Park lowers his head and sighs. He feels a shudder run through his entire body. The question still hangs in the air: "Do you like me?" He looks at him again, and understands that he was not wrong: his partner loves him, most likely with the same strength that he loves him.
Looking up, Seung Woo Park meets his eyes and holds his gaze. Only then, for the first time, he sees Sangyoon Park. He sees it not only with his eyes, but with that inner gaze, through which one is able to see what is deep inside each person, and understands that both are drawn to each other like an abyss to the suicidal person. Yes, he loves the person who has been standing in front of him for months, when they met at the beginning of filming. But the most happy thing he is to discover is... that it is reciprocated.
What intoxicating delight to feel for the first time in one's life the pulsation of the blood in the veins and the pulsation of all the fibers of the body. I was learning what it is to love and be loved.
The order: "Cut!" brings Seung Woo Park back to reality.
It may be that, carried away by emotions, he has strayed from the script. That's why he looks, surreptitiously, at the director of the romantic drama in which both he and Sangyoon Park are protagonists. But she, a few centimeters away from them, camera in hand, does not correct them and has let them do it, understanding that improvisation could allow the characters to flow freely, resulting in genuine, organic, authentic performances.
By then, they were no longer two actors performing a love scene in a romantic drama while being filmed. They have become two people who, through gestures, silence and words, many of them coming from a written text to be interpreted by them, have expressed their true feelings during filming... without anyone on the crew noticing. of it.
And Jui Kim, the director of 'Actor: eal' ('Act or Real'), the two-episode South Korean miniseries from 2024, is aware that love can surprise us anywhere. The same on an ocean liner about to sink, on a desolate mountain where two cowboys discover their sexuality... or on a film set.
The direction and cinematography contribute to the artistic and visually attractive quality of the audiovisual. This work, whose centrality is its love plot, grows around love and the evident desire between its characters.
As it progresses, the miniseries captures the tender moments of their interaction. Through silence, abstract soundscapes and textured cuts, the discovery, acceptance of sexuality and the birth of love between the two young people are conveyed in a visually striking way.
Jeon Yu Bin, the actor who plays Seung Woo Park, and previously known for his leading roles in the series 'Blue of Winter', and the short film 'His, Ice Cream', both from 2022, manages, together with his co-star, to infect us that sexual tension, palpable during the almost 9 minutes of footage.
It's nice to see how in such a short time, the love between the two characters develops honestly, authentic and tender. And together they discover their own homosexuality and give themselves over to it freely, although with obvious shyness, perhaps because other people are present... or perhaps because of the obvious: they are two boys, and South Korean society would not accept them. But they take risks. Love is much stronger.
Music makes everything much more romantic.
Both the director and Jihye Woo, the screenwriter, are aware that one of the most important aspects of an audiovisual is to ensure that the trust and connection between the characters—especially those in love—is very good. That is why they selected two very convincing actors as a couple who acted together in several intense scenes..., like the one with the fast-paced kiss almost at the end, and it surprises us, not because it was not expected by the viewer, but because of its unusual nature. to see the passion represented in it in Asian BL series.
The chemistry between the actors is palpable, allowing the depth of their relationship to shine on screen.
Full of emotions, 'Actor: eal' is a work with love as the central theme, with a kiss and a happy ending. Another added value is that the heteronormative nuclear family (boy-girl) is also questioned on this occasion.
And the creators are also consistent with the logic that few feelings are more universal than love. Any human being could have their own definition and all of them would be valid, even more so if we understand that there are many types of love. The fraternal one, the one you consider a friend, the one you profess to your family... But of course, few things are equal to romantic love, whether between a boy and a girl, between a girl and a girl or a boy and a boy.
They also understand that if there is something that comes close to the authentic perception of romance, it is its representation in literature, theater and, of course, in film and television.
Both one and the other, since their invention, have been much more than simple entertainment. They have been a window to the world, a door to the imagination and an inexhaustible source of emotions. Movies, television series and short films are not only a way to escape from reality, but a way to connect with the stories, characters and emotions that touch our hearts.
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