As someone quite introverted as well, I understand why he didn't smile as much as Jinhwan. What I don't really…
I think Min Jun's character is neurodivergent. Because he has a difficult time of understanding and bonding with others, he often misunderstands their intentions. He's also deeply insecure, so he rarely imagines good intentions. Luckily, someone with endless patience and a naturally sunny disposition fell deeply in love with him.
You just about summed up my feelings, except for the overly fem nature of Khemjira. I don't mind men who are feminine, but I do mind individuals are are utterly useless and perpetually damsels in distress. Give me a bloody break! As a woman, it grates on my nerves that women are often depicted in this manner. We can be just as emotionally and mentally strong as any man and, even with relatively weaker muscles, we can also be physically strong and capable. Khem being saddled with the wilting lily personality that was as interesting as white bread was both boring and annoying. I didn't care about the love story between the main leads-- I just wanted the story, itself, to be resolved.
There was a good story trapped in there, overall, though; and, yes, the second couple were much more interesting. At least their scenes together had zing!
š Your comment genuinely made me laugh. Here's the VenomGoblin whining about no zombies showing up, so I was convinced that somehow, despite the show's summary, the series was actually about a zombie outbreak, but your comment just drops in that the series, is not, in fact, about zombies.
What in the world was VenomGoblin going on about!?
I loved this movie. Yes, there's infidelity-- life's not black and white, no matter how much we'd prefer it to be. Both Ki Hong and Sang Min were deeply unhappy. They found solace with and in each other and that, of course, led to complications. While love is a vital force, it isn't always simple and pretty.
Completely unhinged-- in the best way. Two broken people found each other, made a mess, and somehow ended up cleaning themselves up and settling down into domestic bliss. There's nothing remotely ethical or normal about this story, but it was a lot of fun.
The ones who cornered him in the previous episode and seemed to be one the verge on getting handsy with him because be was able to get close to the Four Heavenly Kings were not pleasant. They were the ones that Hioki was primarily concerned about.
Also, there are girls constantly twittering and fawning over the guys. That's hella cringe.
When your's favourite actor doesn't act like KSH, you need spread these type controversy like his ex did.By the…
"If you take time out of your day because you have the desire to write hateful comments about someone, however casually or without care you claim to do it, I just think it is a net negative for everyone."
Thank you for writing this. Sometimes, people sink so deeply into hate that they become poison for themselves and, tangentially, for others. A life lived sowing hate is a sad life-- a life wasted.
The manga has happy ending so don't cry yourself to sleep. They're going to be just okay.
I haven't read the manga and I'm sure I'm not the only one. I avoid searching Google to learn details, as I want to immerse myself in the series as it unfolds. I don't read the last chapters of books, either. I love the journey of discovery.
Yes, the screenwriter of this series may change the ending, but now you've deposited the info of the likely ending and I'll be watching the rest of the series with that info in mind, which makes me want to stop watching entirely.
Please, is it difficult to keep in mind that there exists those of us who do not desire knowing the ending of a story while watching it?
I'm completely over the excessive slow-motion editing. Slow-mo doesn't up the tension-- it bloats the runtime and, for me, is leading to boredom. I'm interested in the story, but am growing increasingly annoyed. Now, I've resolved to watching the rest of the series on 1.5 speed, just to finish this thing. Dudes, get to the point already. Geez.
Unpopular opinion- this is a snooze fest. Whats up with the unnecessary pauses...dont get me started on Khem!…
Unnecessary pauses and loooong drawn out scenes-- them taking forever to do something as simple as walking, moving closer to each other, speaking to each other. This is turning the pace into molasses and I started watching the episodes on 1.5 speed, because I've grown annoyed with the directing. They're not creating tension-- they're inflating the episode runtime.
just finished ep 8... overall thoughts are overwhelming. Great directing, great cinematography, superb acting…
I'm puzzled by some of the issues you listed here.
A. Naran didn't just "leave his meaningful job behind." He resigned, as his boss was insistent on continuing with burying the truth of the government's and the military's corruption in the country. He had already quit before Krailert proposed they leave together. Also, Krailert's wife threatened his life. She made it clear that if he stayed, he was likely going to be killed by her family, just as Krailert's first lover was killed. Her exact words were, "Tell him to leave as fast as he can if he doesn't want to end up like that movie star."
B. Regarding your assertion that "Trin just [threw] everything down and [moved] away, that's not at all what happened.
Trin was an economist--a civil servant-- someone who worked to better the lives of his fellow humans through appropriate distribution of society's resources ranging from small, local communities to entire nations, and if positioned in the right departments within certain countries, even the global economy. He didn't abandon his civil service work. As he told Krailert and his wife, he would continued it from his position at the Thai embassy in Paris.
Trin got reluctantly dragged into the politics, but that was never his intention nor was he particularly passionate about it. What he was passionate about was bringing about positive and fair changes. Before he departed Thailand, he proposed the village co-operative project for education, which contributed with bringing about positive changes in Thailand. Towards the conclusion of the finale, we also see that he was still working in his position at the embassy-- he signed documents for a project that needed to be confirmed with the Austrian embassy.
C. As for Naran and Krailert wanting to leave together-- if only they'd been able to do so and live a peaceful life. So many choose to sacrifice their lives, their peace and their joy for systems that chew them out and spit them out. If only they'd been able to have the outcome that Trin and Tanwa eventually got. If only Victor had been able to have the gift of experiencing a long life of beautiful skies.
The script didn't spell everything out, but all the details were provided for the audience to infer these details. Shine had some of the most nuanced and impressive writing I've ever encountered in a series, Thai or otherwise.
Eventually, I resorted to watching the show on 1.5 or 1.75 speed, just to get through it, because for some godawful reason, the director decided that every single scene had to be played out sloooooooooooowly. The main leads talked slowly, walked slowly, pined slowly. š«©š„±š“ I don't know if it was a deliberate attempt to drag the runtime out or if it was a ridiculous ploy to ramp up tension. What I do know is my eyes kept rolling back into my head from boredom.
There was a good story trapped in there, overall, though; and, yes, the second couple were much more interesting. At least their scenes together had zing!
What in the world was VenomGoblin going on about!?
Also, there are girls constantly twittering and fawning over the guys. That's hella cringe.
Now, if you meant fan as in fanatical lunatics, then maybe.
Thank you for writing this. Sometimes, people sink so deeply into hate that they become poison for themselves and, tangentially, for others. A life lived sowing hate is a sad life-- a life wasted.
Good day.
Yes, the screenwriter of this series may change the ending, but now you've deposited the info of the likely ending and I'll be watching the rest of the series with that info in mind, which makes me want to stop watching entirely.
Please, is it difficult to keep in mind that there exists those of us who do not desire knowing the ending of a story while watching it?
A.
Naran didn't just "leave his meaningful job behind." He resigned, as his boss was insistent on continuing with burying the truth of the government's and the military's corruption in the country. He had already quit before Krailert proposed they leave together. Also, Krailert's wife threatened his life. She made it clear that if he stayed, he was likely going to be killed by her family, just as Krailert's first lover was killed. Her exact words were, "Tell him to leave as fast as he can if he doesn't want to end up like that movie star."
B.
Regarding your assertion that "Trin just [threw] everything down and [moved] away, that's not at all what happened.
Trin was an economist--a civil servant-- someone who worked to better the lives of his fellow humans through appropriate distribution of society's resources ranging from small, local communities to entire nations, and if positioned in the right departments within certain countries, even the global economy. He didn't abandon his civil service work. As he told Krailert and his wife, he would continued it from his position at the Thai embassy in Paris.
Trin got reluctantly dragged into the politics, but that was never his intention nor was he particularly passionate about it. What he was passionate about was bringing about positive and fair changes. Before he departed Thailand, he proposed the village co-operative project for education, which contributed with bringing about positive changes in Thailand. Towards the conclusion of the finale, we also see that he was still working in his position at the embassy-- he signed documents for a project that needed to be confirmed with the Austrian embassy.
C.
As for Naran and Krailert wanting to leave together-- if only they'd been able to do so and live a peaceful life. So many choose to sacrifice their lives, their peace and their joy for systems that chew them out and spit them out. If only they'd been able to have the outcome that Trin and Tanwa eventually got. If only Victor had been able to have the gift of experiencing a long life of beautiful skies.
The script didn't spell everything out, but all the details were provided for the audience to infer these details. Shine had some of the most nuanced and impressive writing I've ever encountered in a series, Thai or otherwise.