Details

  • Last Online: 14 hours ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location:
  • Contribution Points: 0 LV0
  • Roles:
  • Join Date: April 27, 2021
Star and Sky: Sky in Your Heart thai drama review
Completed
Star and Sky: Sky in Your Heart
0 people found this review helpful
by swearsindainty
18 hours ago
8 of 8 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 8.0

Cuties

Sky in Your Heart feels like the deep breath you take after surviving the chaos of city life.

After the energy and messiness of Star in My Mind, this series arrived with mountains, sunsets, village life, and enough healing energy to fix at least three of my unresolved issues.

Khuafah and Prince were the definition of "I can't stand you" slowly turning into "I would literally move mountains for you."

Mek Jirakit brought so much warmth and vulnerability to Fah. Beneath the teasing and confidence was someone trying to figure out who he wanted to become away from expectations and privilege.

And Mark as Prince? The man had patience levels that deserve scientific study. Watching his walls slowly come down and seeing him allow himself to be cared for was genuinely beautiful.

Their relationship wasn't built on grand gestures or dramatic plot twists. It was built through shared moments, quiet conversations, helping a community, and learning to understand each other. Somehow that made every little moment feel even bigger.

The village itself became a character in the story. The children, the volunteers, the community — they made the world feel warm, lived in, and real.

Mesa and JJ deserve honorary awards for surviving Fah's nonsense.

And can we appreciate the people behind the camera for a moment?

Director Siwaj Sawatmaneekul understood exactly what this story needed: space to breathe. The slower pacing, lingering shots of the mountains, and quiet moments between characters allowed the emotions to settle naturally instead of rushing toward the next plot point.

The teams at GMMTV and Studio Wabi Sabi gave the series a cozy, almost healing atmosphere that perfectly matched its story. The cinematography turned northern Thailand into a love letter to nature, while the soundtrack quietly wrapped itself around every emotional moment.

This wasn't a series trying to be loud.

It didn't need to be.

Its strength was always in the quiet moments:
the shared smiles,
the teasing,
the sunsets,
the conversations under the stars,
and the realization that sometimes love doesn't arrive like a storm.

Sometimes it arrives gently.

Sky in Your Heart wasn't trying to break your heart.

It was trying to heal it.

8.5/10.

Would absolutely move to the mountains, help out at the village, become emotionally attached to everyone, and watch Fah and Prince fall in love all over again.
Was this review helpful to you?