This review may contain spoilers
Love to Hate You? More Like Love to Love it
I needed a break from the usual cliché rom-coms, and Love to Hate You was exactly what I was looking for. It’s fresh, upbeat, and genuinely hilarious. I enjoyed every minute of it.
The story felt so different from the usual K-drama formula that I was hooked almost immediately. And the female lead? An absolute bold queen. I wasn't her biggest fan at first, but she quickly grew up on me. I have a serious weakness for badass female leads, and she delivered. Although I wish they had kept her backstory simple as “that’s how she is” rather than making up a story that felt half baked.
The male lead took a little longer to win me over. At first, I was wondering what all the fuss was about. Then around Episode 4, something shifted and suddenly he was adorable. The character development snuck up on me, and before I knew it, I was fully invested. The love-hate dynamic between the leads was pure entertainment. Their bickering, their chemistry, their mutual inability to trust the opposite gender it all made for a relationship that felt surprisingly well-matched. They were a disaster together, but the kind of disaster you can't stop watching.
Now let's discuss the real issue here: Woo Joon. Sir, you had no business being that attractive. Every time he appeared on screen, I forgot who the Male lead was. The style, the attitude, the long hair, the effortless cool factor. I was down bad.
This is the perfect enemies to lovers rom-com for those days when life is annoying and you need something guaranteed to put you in a better mood. So many recent rom-coms have felt stale or forgettable, but this one actually brought something fresh to the table.
Did I have an absurd amount of fun watching it? Absolutely. Sometimes that's all a rom-com needs to do.
The story felt so different from the usual K-drama formula that I was hooked almost immediately. And the female lead? An absolute bold queen. I wasn't her biggest fan at first, but she quickly grew up on me. I have a serious weakness for badass female leads, and she delivered. Although I wish they had kept her backstory simple as “that’s how she is” rather than making up a story that felt half baked.
The male lead took a little longer to win me over. At first, I was wondering what all the fuss was about. Then around Episode 4, something shifted and suddenly he was adorable. The character development snuck up on me, and before I knew it, I was fully invested. The love-hate dynamic between the leads was pure entertainment. Their bickering, their chemistry, their mutual inability to trust the opposite gender it all made for a relationship that felt surprisingly well-matched. They were a disaster together, but the kind of disaster you can't stop watching.
Now let's discuss the real issue here: Woo Joon. Sir, you had no business being that attractive. Every time he appeared on screen, I forgot who the Male lead was. The style, the attitude, the long hair, the effortless cool factor. I was down bad.
This is the perfect enemies to lovers rom-com for those days when life is annoying and you need something guaranteed to put you in a better mood. So many recent rom-coms have felt stale or forgettable, but this one actually brought something fresh to the table.
Did I have an absurd amount of fun watching it? Absolutely. Sometimes that's all a rom-com needs to do.
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