I mean, I love this drama, but what's O Gyu Jang's motive for wanting Kang Da Wit's downfall? I really don't get…
Maybe it really is the way Da-wit’s mother used to say it. You come from nothing, and you’ll always be treated like dirt. A smart man outside the clique can’t rise above the snobbish legal elite. This is just a reminder of where his place is.
On top of that, his integrity won’t allow him to be a puppet, so he’ll never be useful to a major firm. He was hired as a pro bono lawyer because he was meant to keep his head down and win custody cases over dogs, not to change the law in Korea.
We're not living in the 70s or 80s. The world has changed. Now we have smartphones and the internet to communicate. Honestly, why are you so fixated on me? Do you like me or something?
You know, when you know from the beginning who is going to shoot and why – not because of trailers, descriptions and comments, but because of how it is shown in the drama – there is really no point in dragging it out over the whole episode. And what's wrong with you? Are you three years old that you insult someone who has a different opinion than yours? Didn't your nursery school teacher teach you good manners?
I finished watching it, but more out of boredom than enjoyment. I lost interest somewhere halfway through the season, and as the episodes went on, I just yawned and rolled my eyes. If I were 10 years younger and had seen 100 fewer dramas, maybe I would have been excited.
I liked it more when the story was in the prison. Introducing the Squid Game-like survival element was weird and…
Agreed. The third arc is better than the second but worse than the first. As far as I'm concerned, they went a bit overboard. The action scenes were okay.
I can't even say if I liked this drama. The first two episodes were terribly slow. Okay, they built tension, but I think they built even more frustration. It was great to see all these veteran K-drama actors, and ML was okay, even interesting. The middle was quite nice. But the ending – meh. It was a bit like this drama didn't know if it wanted to be a psychological thriller, a morality tale, or just a reflection of the American discussion on the issue of firearms transferred to foreign soil. Great cast, huge potential, but the good storylines weren't used well at the expense of discussing the state of society.
On top of that, his integrity won’t allow him to be a puppet, so he’ll never be useful to a major firm. He was hired as a pro bono lawyer because he was meant to keep his head down and win custody cases over dogs, not to change the law in Korea.
And what's wrong with you? Are you three years old that you insult someone who has a different opinion than yours? Didn't your nursery school teacher teach you good manners?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmDU9Rl2-Bk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plzBGbXMg-M