Blurred lines can be hard to read
This is an interesting story, that brings out a whole lot of aspects making me feel very uncomfortable most of the time as well as thinking what the h*** did that person just say? And trying to figure out how this alines with my personal morals. To be honset I have issues with the leads relationship the age gap 12 years is a real age gap and though he is not under age the whole tutor student part as well as the way she treats him at times like a child other times like a love interest really makes me uncomfortable while at the sam time she has a lot of good to say and parts of me love both of them, as well as their chemistry. So I guess it is complicated in a confusing way.There are a lot of awful just awful characters in this, and the way they talk about hosts, host addiction and power relations makes me guess what yes very, very uncomfortable.
That said the drama is interesting, it kept my attention and told a slightly different story then the usual age gap, boy falls for his teacher... Definitely worth a watch just prepare for moral corruption and ambiguity...
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Learning to live
This drama has all the main elements of a typical romantic comedy, but it covers topics you may not expect to find. Overcoming a learning disability, navigating social norms and when life collides with them, and dealing with difficult family relationships are some of the main themes we get to dive into. Some moments are a bit over-the-top, and some story elements remain underdeveloped, but it's an overall pleasing watch compared to many rom coms out there.At the story's heart are two seemingly very different people from very different walks of life who connect deeply with each other - brought to life by Kimura Fumino and a surprisingly compelling Murakami Raul Maito. Bolstered by a strong soundtrack and a memorable supporting cast, this is one drama to check out this year if you love romantic comedy but with a poignant message (or several) attached to it.
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A Lesson Well Taught
There are countless series that showcase age-gap relationships or that of host culture, however none quite feel as captivating and nuanced as this one. On the surface, Ai no, Gakkou may be your standard Japanese drama, but after unraveling all the layers through each episode, it shows a higher level of depth and complexity that makes the audience feel for the characters, as flawed as they are. Although the main focus of the series revolves around the blossoming relationship/romance between Manami and Kaoru, there are many characters at play with their own agendas to get themselves ahead to achieve their goals.(WILL CONTINUE AFTER SERIES CONCLUDES)
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Some stories earn every word you could give them, and still the words feel like too little.
Quietest dramas are the most honest ones. They don't push. They just show you what it costs to be a person. The way love and harm can live in the same hand. The way being right about something doesn't protect you from losing it. The way time moves through people whether they're ready or not.When a story understands that, really understands it, watching it doesn't feel like watching. It feels like being known.
What stayed with me, after everything, was that it never cheated. It never reached for a feeling before it had earned the right to ask for one. Every hard moment had been built toward honestly. That's rarer than it sounds. Most stories flinch somewhere. This one didn't.
Learning to Love is a masterpiece. Subtle, patient, and completely alive. The kind of art that doesn't ask you to admire it. It just sits with you until you realize it changed something quietly, without asking permission.
Don't miss it.
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A short drama that tackles a lot of stigma and how people accept it
This is the kind of drama where you couldn't be so sure about what will happen next. But I'm happy about how everything turned out. I like the character development of all the cast but I just wished the ending was a bit longer or I hope they showed more of the romance between the leads.Although the encounter of ML and FL was something not usual, and they came from a totally different background, but how their opposite personalities complemented each other made it reasonable as to why they were both drawn to each other and how they overcame social stereotypes.
The ML, even if he is surrounded by so much attention, obviously craved for some genuine care and attention which he was able to receive from FL. The way he shuts off others was also very understandable given the kind of life he grew up into. Also, I really liked how even though he was a host, compared to FL's fiancee, he treats FL way better. He really has a good heart, which is why we shouldn't base a person's worth on the surface but really look deeper into them.
The acting of all the characters was good, and the director was able to capture the emotions and the acting nuances of the actors, especially the ML. I think this show really highlighted the ML more and it's good that he was able to justify the character.
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Loving Someone Doesn't Mean Looking For Happiness
A romance drama with unique premise. Centered on a woman who's a teacher of girl's school. Once, her student get in a trouble, her student caught in a bar, named The Joker, and she spent almost a hundred million yen through her parent's card. The teacher was asked by her parents to solve the problem. But, she was trapped by one of the host on there.The tale of forbidden love also the different shape of every love that every single person has on their own life. The true love that beyond the normal norms and social justice. Everyone could describe the love as it was a something strange, but the one who fell for it will always have an excuse of their own stuff.
Honestly, I barely enjoyed the age-gap themed. But, surprisingly, I enjoying this more than I expected. The premise was indeed unique, but how they crafted it as a natural and realistic one have already mesmerized me. It seize me up through the show as far as it runs.
The mature romance that nothing cringe left behind, the problem solving that too-far realistic, the dynamic chemistry that natural. Oh I guess, I just watched the romance documentary, instead a dorama, by how far the naturality they served for. Japan always have the best realistic plot I've ever seen. Too realistic that somehow sick, yet addicted.
I love the way they don't make an excuse of "exploitating woman" or "womanizer" in this dorama. Also the main topic of "night's club" was barely got the right excuse. They serving the very make sense reason, the way they have almost many negative perspective towards it. But, they also serving their positive one too, with nothing exaggerate. Just giving both point of view, and let the audience choose which one they'd take out to.
The cinematography, the back song, even the scenery, they looks so simple. Nothing spectacular at all. But indeed some shot looks pretty eye pleasing. It's not a bad tho, at least for me.
All in all, this dorama was stunned by the unique plot and how they crafted it with well enough. Don't expect something "Wow" technical visual or sound design, but the screenplay itself was enough to make you sit since the very first second it played. Just give it a try, if you love a mature romance!
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This review may contain spoilers
A female lead with a bad attitude that leaves a trail of destruction in her path.. Yikes!
So the story started off setting the scene of how pathetic and weak the female lead was, she stalked her ex fiance and tried to kill herself when he rejected her. We then moved onto the arranged marriage bit with her rascal of a new fiance who was a bit of a scumbag but had a decent redemption arc and showed growth. I’m really not sure why people think this is so good because the female lead was horrendous, she had a bad attitude towards everybody, including her best friend who was always trying to help her. I get her father was overbearing but she literally couldn’t give a crap about anybody but her own feelings and the dodgy host who was the male lead. I get people like to see flawed characters but she was just too selfish and self absorbed and she didn’t give a crap about anybody else apart from our own feelings. I’m glad I fast forwarded through most of it because it was rubbish.Was this review helpful to you?
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Interesting Themes, Unconvincing Romance
This drama had a great start, but towards the end it completely lost me. When it finished, I felt nothing. There wasn't a single character I truly liked, nor was there any conclusion or character development that stayed with me afterward. I didn't even want to write a review because there wasn't a single thing on my mind worth discussing. I almost skipped reviewing it entirely, but then decided to just write down my random thoughts.One thing I did appreciate was the effort put into contrasting the struggles of the two leads. The FL's desire to break free from expectations and the way the drama visually contrasted the ML's personality at home versus his persona in the club were well done. I also liked how both leads were shown gradually confronting their personal issues and growing from them.
The drama tackled several interesting topics, including dyslexia, social stigma, class differences, overprotective parenting, emotional vulnerability, and the struggles of adulthood. It deserves credit for addressing these themes in a relatively accessible and engaging way. The discussions surrounding literacy and learning difficulties were particularly interesting and felt different from what is usually seen in romance dramas.
That said, I found almost every character problematic. The FL was engaged while developing feelings for the ML, who was also her student. The fiancé was cheating yet somehow spent more time talking to the FL's best friend than communicating with his own fiancée. The friend continuously entertained those conversations instead of encouraging direct communication. The FL's parents were another red flag, with an overprotective and controlling father and a mother who enabled much of that behavior.
The ML's family situation was equally uncomfortable. His relationship with his mother was toxic, and although the story eventually addressed it, the resolution felt abrupt and underdeveloped. In fact, many character resolutions suffered from this problem. Several people changed their behavior far too quickly, especially the parents, making their growth feel rushed rather than earned.
The biggest issue for me was the romance itself. I could see the emotional connection between the leads, but I never felt the romantic chemistry. Their tutoring relationship was touching and believable, but the transition into romance never fully convinced me. If someone goes into this expecting a strong romance, they may end up disappointed because the story spends far more time dealing with personal and social issues than developing the couple romantically.
Ironically, the character I liked most was the number one host. He was not explored in great depth, but whenever he appeared, he brought energy to the screen. I also wished the drama had done more with Minami's friend and the number one host because there seemed to be potential there.
The acting was generally strong, especially from the ML, who carried much of the emotional weight of the series. The production quality was solid as well, and I enjoyed the soundtrack. The story itself remained engaging because of its unique premise and moral ambiguity. It made me uncomfortable at times, but intentionally so, as it explored complicated relationships and flawed people.
I also appreciated that the drama portrayed two flawed individuals who challenge and influence each other's growth rather than magically fixing one another. Their journey was more about vulnerability, self-discovery, and understanding than romance. Unfortunately, while I could appreciate what the story was trying to do, I never became emotionally invested in the relationship itself.
The ending left me unsatisfied. I would have liked to see a more complete resolution for the ML, whether passing his exams or taking the next step in his career. Instead, the finale felt rushed and somewhat inconclusive. By the end, I respected some of the themes and ideas the drama explored, but emotionally it never landed for me. It started strong, remained interesting throughout, but ultimately failed to leave a lasting impression.
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Learning to Love? More like, Learning to Leave.
I usually have a soft spot for noona romances — something about older-woman-younger-man dynamics hits that sweet mix of maturity and yearning. But this one just didn’t click. I made it past the halfway mark hoping the emotional core would finally show up, but the pacing and editing made it impossible to stay invested. Every scene faded out like it was afraid to commit, and the constant cuts made the story feel like someone stitched together a bunch of half-scenes and called it a drama.Now, about the male lead — I’m not saying he’s unattractive. He’s got that clean, polished “Smart-from-Top Form” appeal. But there’s a certain aesthetic — the ultra-smooth, almost lip-filler-adjacent kind — that just doesn’t resonate with me. It’s purely a matter of taste, of course, but I tend to connect more with performances than symmetry — and here, neither the prettiness nor the chemistry filled that gap.
And don’t even get me started on the fiancé. Why is this man spending more time talking to Manami’s friend than to Manami herself? It felt bizarrely misplaced, like the show forgot who his fiancée actually was.
Manami ended up being the least likeable for me. Her arc had potential, but the way she handled the breakup—absolutely not. The guy was already struggling, and instead of respecting Kaoru’s space, she bulldozed right over it. What made it worse was how the show framed it like some grand romantic gesture, when really it just made her look emotionally tone-deaf. I actually thought the breakup was a rare moment of mutual clarity—finally, something adult. But then she immediately backtracks, ignoring everything they’d just agreed on. She’s the older one here, supposedly the more grounded one, yet she completely disregards Kaoru’s boundaries like they were optional. At that point, I was out. I couldn’t root for them anymore, and I definitely wasn’t going to stick around to watch the show pretend that was growth.
By the time I dropped it, it wasn’t out of anger, just fatigue. The setup had promise, but the execution felt like it was trying to mean something without ever earning it. Sometimes, the most grown-up thing you can do — both in love and in viewing — is just move on.
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DYSLEXIA presented in a different and interesting way. Sweet. Evoking. Maybe even poignant.
Kudos !to the writer(s), creators, producers and investors for making this excellent TV program showing the socio-economic damages and life-long suffering that DYSLEXIA (consequently, other learning disabilities too) can cause in people's lives.
It's amazing that this show managed to be funded, produced, and aired in Japan and be brought internationally (for example, via Netflix in the US).
We are in the 21st century... and yet to learn that governments and societies in Japan (proud of its modernization) and in so many other countries (and not just developing countries... as I found out after doing a bit of research) are not systematically addressing learning disabilities is rather shocking.
Hence, this TV show is amazing because it not only addresses DYSLEXIA, but also other socio-economic prejudices, stigma and problems in a relatively light-hearted, sweet, and chewable format (light romance) so it may be more appealing to a wider audience.
Please read other people's comments and reviews about the romance, production, actors, plot, etc.
I just decided to comment about the dyslexia because I have not seen much about this important subject.
(By the way, I do not know of relatives or close friends suffering of learning disabilities, but my heart goes out to those who are and have been.)
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Just Not Sure
I started out really loving this series. Sometimes Kaoru would act a bit awkward in the club, but I still like his character. He's really cute too!The series is not over but I've watched up to the current 8 episodes. This last episode has me upset. He acted like he really didn't care. Am I missing something? I'm frustrated. Isn't he supposed to love her? Ugh
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Emocionante e inspirador
Os doramas japoneses tem essa maturidade de conteúdo que os destaca dos coreanos e chineses. Eles mostram uma realidade mais crua, mas também com muito lirismo e inspiração. Essa série é muito gostosa de assistir, põem na mesa vários questionamentos sobre o machismo, a moral e os bons costumes, o ensino e o mercado de trabalho que atropelam sem dó os menos favoráveis como as mulheres e as pessoas com deficiência (neste caso na figura do personagem principal Taiga que tem dislexia). Mostra como uma sociedade totalmente pautada no sucesso, competitividade e excelência absoluta de educação tem seu preço, e ele é muito caro aos que não tiveram as mesmas oportunidades dos naturalmente mais favorecidos. Gosto demais desse tipo de narrativa, escancara com muita elegância a hipocrisia dessa sociedade e ao mesmo tempo nos dá outra perspectiva de esperança e perseverança, apesar de todas as dificuldades. A trilha sonora é muito bem escolhida, uma delícia de ouvir, e os personagens tem todos seus altos e baixos com evoluções próprias e particulares, ninguém ali é 100% bom ou mau, são tão bem construídos que não caem nos estereótipos, tornando esse dorama até um tanto imprevisível e interessante de acompanhar. A jornada da personagem principal é um excelente exemplo disso, passando de uma moça totalmente acuada, que se anula e vivendo à sombra de um emprego estável e um pai extremamente protetor para uma adulta independente, que respeita e defende seus próprios limites e desejos, e até mesmo disruptiva e irreverente. Ela é um exemplo lindo de superação, desapego e autoestima construída com o tempo.Was this review helpful to you?


