Are you Smarts CEO or a friend? Cause most Boom haters are on that side! LOL anyway everyone can have an opinion.…
You are such a childish person that I am not even sure it is worth responding to you. No one hates Boom, although only yesterday I found out that he had an indictment for fraud, which I honestly do not care about; he does not interest me. I was referring solely to what I consider his weak acting ability. He overexerts himself, and it shows.
By contrast, despite having less experience, Smart is charming, and even though the series itself was not successful, Smart left an impression.
The script, at least at the beginning of the series, is Japanese, and chances are that if the production had been Japanese, the acting and directing would have been good. That is not the case in Thailand.
In Thailand, even when you are given a good script, it is usually ruined. Actors are often cast without experience or talent, based on looks or connections. I have no idea what their considerations are.
It is not by coincidence that toward the very end everything turned into chaos with the production, including mistreatment of the actors and various conflicts that did not even allow the two leads to meet or do an interview together. I do not know how they always manage to fall out like this; maybe it is cultural, maybe it is because there are scammers involved. Everything feels unprofessional.
You can tell the script is Japanese, but unfortunately the execution is weak and deteriorates as the episodes progress. In my opinion, the one who carries the series is Smart. He is not the greatest actor, but he gives his entire self to the role, and you can feel it. He also has a baby face while at the same time being very masculine, which is an unusual combination. At times it is hard to understand who he really is, meaning that one moment he conveys his is a man and the next moment he is a puppy, and that is very attractive.
The actor Boom is very rigid in his acting and tries too hard to be rigid. The character is supposed to be somewhat arrogant but attractive, and in my view he does not fully manage to convey that, even though he looks very good.
It is disappointing that at some point, starting around episode 6, it shifts into clichéd tropes instead of continuing along the more human line that existed at the beginning, focusing on the acquaintance between two very different people. The dialogues that appear supposedly on stage, as dialogues they are saying to each other, were more sophisticated at first and then really deteriorated into something else.
I wonder whether this even appears in the manga, or whether these are just additions by the Thai screenwriter, because from episode six onward it really feels more Thai than Japanese.
The first season is based on the first 2 books of the series whilst this season is based on the latter 3 books.…
Thanks, I really liked the second episode too, but from the preview of the third episode it looks like the entire cast from the previous season will appear, possibly even more than the current cast. I hope I am wrong. What do you think? Maybe you have some insight from the novel?
i guess first, but anyways so excited for their story!btw here is the trailer for it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TosmNLu__o&list=TLPQMTIwMzIwMjX1tcrPoYXtMg&index=3
I think she looks fine. She’s one of the more natural looking SNSD members. She hasn’t gone overboard like…
The growing pressure to undergo cosmetic procedures is awful, and I genuinely feel for the people who are harmed by it—there is no doubt about that. I am only saying that, from a viewing perspective, the result is very noticeable and distracting.
Of course, this is not the only problem with the show, and I also wrote a broader critique that you chose not to address, presumably because that was uncomfortable for you as well.
I tried watching it because the male lead is quite cute, but the female lead looks overly surgically altered and appears older than him. Overall, it feels overproduced, as usual. Why do they always have to be so grandiose and repetitive? Why not go for a more modest production—something less flashy, without the constant over-the-top approach—just normal and grounded? It feels like they hardly make normal series anymore, which is a shame.
I tried watching the first season and didn’t like the actors, but in this season I do like the cast and the way it’s directed. The question is whether I need to watch the entire first season.
Episode 6, even without subtitles, made me cry. It is so beautiful, simply stunning. I truly love this series.
Nakagawa’s acting is exceptional; he fully inhabits the role. Daigo, by contrast, is very rigid. I have mixed feelings about him because he is convincing in his melancholy and comes across as a depressive person, and his crying feels genuine, yet he is very restrained in expressing love. On the other hand, that may be the character.
In any case, the casting was fortunate because Nakagawa perhaps even carries him. I really do not want it to end, but at least they surprised us with an additional episode. Maybe it is a special episode or something like that;
I watched the final episode, but the dialogue between them felt illogical and very strange to me. I also concluded that KIDA is trying far too hard, which makes the acting feel forced. He is simply not skilled and likely lacks basic acting training. This significantly damaged the series. Beyond that, there is not much of a plot
By contrast, despite having less experience, Smart is charming, and even though the series itself was not successful, Smart left an impression.
The script, at least at the beginning of the series, is Japanese, and chances are that if the production had been Japanese, the acting and directing would have been good. That is not the case in Thailand.
In Thailand, even when you are given a good script, it is usually ruined. Actors are often cast without experience or talent, based on looks or connections. I have no idea what their considerations are.
It is not by coincidence that toward the very end everything turned into chaos with the production, including mistreatment of the actors and various conflicts that did not even allow the two leads to meet or do an interview together. I do not know how they always manage to fall out like this; maybe it is cultural, maybe it is because there are scammers involved. Everything feels unprofessional.
The actor Boom is very rigid in his acting and tries too hard to be rigid. The character is supposed to be somewhat arrogant but attractive, and in my view he does not fully manage to convey that, even though he looks very good.
It is disappointing that at some point, starting around episode 6, it shifts into clichéd tropes instead of continuing along the more human line that existed at the beginning, focusing on the acquaintance between two very different people. The dialogues that appear supposedly on stage, as dialogues they are saying to each other, were more sophisticated at first and then really deteriorated into something else.
I wonder whether this even appears in the manga, or whether these are just additions by the Thai screenwriter, because from episode six onward it really feels more Thai than Japanese.
Of course, this is not the only problem with the show, and I also wrote a broader critique that you chose not to address, presumably because that was uncomfortable for you as well.
Nakagawa’s acting is exceptional; he fully inhabits the role. Daigo, by contrast, is very rigid. I have mixed feelings about him because he is convincing in his melancholy and comes across as a depressive person, and his crying feels genuine, yet he is very restrained in expressing love. On the other hand, that may be the character.
In any case, the casting was fortunate because Nakagawa perhaps even carries him. I really do not want it to end, but at least they surprised us with an additional episode. Maybe it is a special episode or something like that;