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Teach You a Lesson korean drama review
Completed
Teach You a Lesson
0 people found this review helpful
by kkimchay
2 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 10
Story 10.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 10.0
This review may contain spoilers

most satisfying kdrama in a while

seriously, i love the topic that they tackled in this show, it is truly such an important thing to talk about. not only the korean education system but education systems all around the world continue to fail both students and teachers systematically.

yes, it's utterly far-fetched that such an organisation would be possible, the 'human-rights' arguments would probably always outweigh that possibility, them having the ability to pass through so many legal loopholes in being able to use violence against students and so on. but it's still so satisfying seeing what the bullies got. i seriously could not stop smiling everytime hwa jin slapped, hit and threw them across the corridor, like yes, you assholes deserve this and more. it doesn't even compare to the lives lost.

i truly love na hwa jin. he's truly one of my favourite characters now. kim muyeol's performance was so strong and captivating, his ability to immerse the audience just through his menacing smile and the lectures that they gave through such little words to the bullies, wow, just wow. i was also extremely moved by the scream that he'd let out towards gyu cheol in the flashback.

the team together was literally perfect, im han rim always screaming and being so aggressive, bong geun dae being so scared yet so smart and na hwa jin being the lead and extremely headstrong, great dad humour too, and obviously, choi gang seok always teaching these organisations, people and media the continous failure of the education system and adults overall.

the way hwa jin always mirrored everything that ga yun would say in the past was truly so powerful. especially the last scene where he'd repeated "chances aren't something you're given." "you earn them when you truly want them." to gyu cheol which were ga yun's own last words towards him, the sheer impact of that and the fact that he had the control to simply let him go further shows that it wasn't 'just' a 'personal vendetta' that the erpb had.

that also being said, the whole 'personal vendetta' that the other party had tried to force on them was so ironic, the irony lays in the face of the accusers. a personal vendetta would've been instantly answered if gang seok had just let hwa jin drive his car into gyu cheol. he didn't. instead, they carried her legacy and fight as well as protecting both students and teachers.

episode 5 was truly heartbreaking. the pain and suffering that ji seon had to deal with because of the mother, the legal loophole of "i just have to apologise" without any consequences for false accusations, hwa jin replicating the exact torture she'd brought ji seon through on ujin's mother was so significant.

in conclusion, no matter how unrealistic the idea of this kind of organisation existing, the film sends a truly powerful message to its viewers and the people questioning it, hating it and feeling targetted are the exact people it criticises.

"that's my son-in-law, you punk!"

that line cracked me up so hard 😭.

"for the rest of your life, you will carry the burden of knowing you caused this."

"that's the justice he will get."

"this is the hell you created."

"enjoy living in it."

this entire scene and dialogue from hwa jin was so important and moving. the truth spoken in those lines in itself just silences you.

"if the roots of the tree are rotten, you don't blame the leaves for withering."
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