It's actually not hard to understand. Actors before taking a role only have access to a small fraction of the…
Goblin, but not everyone can tolerate the age gap thing. (Goblin is a distant first, WYWS is second, but only by a small margin there are others that I liked very nearly as much, for example `It's Okay That's Love` or `Hogu's Love`. Ranking these barely makes sense.. Hogu is so effin underrated, ppl are put off by the drama description)
It's actually not hard to understand. Actors before taking a role only have access to a small fraction of the…
Imo WYWS is the second best kdrama I have ever seen. However if you've watched the ENTIRE episode1 (including the last scene) and you still don't find it interesting, then perhaps it's ok to drop it.
I will never understand why these great stars sign up for Fantasy and crappy type shows. The same for Lee Min-Ho…
It's actually not hard to understand. Actors before taking a role only have access to a small fraction of the script. `When the Stars Gossip` is a special case, so what I'm saying may not completely apply to it, but anyway generally speaking an actor before taking a role only knows the character outline & basic concept of the show, not much else.
I'm sure the actors that starred in Goblin or While You Were Sleeping are happy with taking the offer. Everyone just wants to get paid, increase their star value & try new things as well for carrier development, a silly supernatural role can be a part of that even if the script writer ruins the show.
As predicted, self censorship on Korean TV always ruining plots involving awful elders, but since it`s the last…
I have seen well over 100 kdramas, well thought out, consistent with logic final episode plots are uncommon. Writers are judged by the financial successes of their writing, the final episode being weaker has very little impact on that. (the domestic Korean market is the main focus)
>Another weird comment as plenty of dramas show abandonment or otherwise evil elders. I don't really know where you get this idea from.
Have you seen kdramas with evil parents before? o_O There are countless examples of trash parents getting redemption arks in the final episode, as for counterexamples I can only think of two very tame half examples. (grandma is basically ML's adoptive mother, the person that raised him) I made a mistake of saying elders instead of parent figures.
As predicted, self censorship on Korean TV always ruining plots involving awful elders, but since it`s the last…
Of course, it's as bad as it gets.
1. Kdrama writers don't care about final episode quality, because it has no impact on their paycheck & can just work half as much on it as they otherwise would.
2. An elder family member being abandoned/disowned cannot be shown on Korean TV, it's one of those awful unwritten rules that are effectively nearly as bad as Chinese censorship.
edit: by elder I mean parent figure, not just any random grandparent.
I don't know what you mean, because I've been waiting for ending spoilers before starting this show, which I'll do later today.
I for one would be okay with most things you are describing, if they get it over with before e20.
I did that with Hogoo for several years, but then at one point I had nothing else to watch and oh my god, it was so good.
I'm sure the actors that starred in Goblin or While You Were Sleeping are happy with taking the offer. Everyone just wants to get paid, increase their star value & try new things as well for carrier development, a silly supernatural role can be a part of that even if the script writer ruins the show.
How did you guys bear with this?
You are right, I don't like saeguks, so of course that could be possible in that genre.
>Another weird comment as plenty of dramas show abandonment or otherwise evil elders. I don't really know where you get this idea from.
Have you seen kdramas with evil parents before? o_O There are countless examples of trash parents getting redemption arks in the final episode, as for counterexamples I can only think of two very tame half examples. (grandma is basically ML's adoptive mother, the person that raised him)
I made a mistake of saying elders instead of parent figures.
1. Kdrama writers don't care about final episode quality, because it has no impact on their paycheck & can just work half as much on it as they otherwise would.
2. An elder family member being abandoned/disowned cannot be shown on Korean TV, it's one of those awful unwritten rules that are effectively nearly as bad as Chinese censorship.
edit: by elder I mean parent figure, not just any random grandparent.