My favorite is “Lee se joo and Choi Soo Ji“ I want them together in the ending.when ending... they’re love…
normal Liaisons Dangereuses adaptations: she loves him, but only realises it after her manipulation & lies get the ML killed.
Tempted: he loves her, but she always rejects him because "couples break up"; when he gets over it and falls for the FL, she realises she loves him back, but her manipulation & lies destroyed their core friendship as well; the whole bet/game also almost gets the ML killed.
Okay but I just finished ep 28 and wow I love Sejoo but why did he do this??? It's to cruel I'm crying
It's completely out of character, but towards the end of other Liaisons Dangereuses adaptations, the ML and FL are rushing towards each other (in Cruel Intentions, literally running) and the jealous female instigator (here = Choi Soo Ji) causes something nasty to happen to prevent their happiness. So it's the writer somewhat poorly trying to incorporate a core part of the storyline.
Though Joy's acting needs work, the other main/supporting actors & the storyline made up for it for me. I will…
It was weird that, at the 'silly train station place', they expressed a desire to sleep together (and then after some odd scenes literally merely slept together).
The more serious Korean movie adaptation of the novel is of course infinitely more explicit.
How did forgiving FL fail to forgive in the end? What??? She did the same as them, how was she any differences…
Forgiving FL not forgiving wasted whole episodes, yes.
GY (as in Lee Ki Yeong) could have easily been arrested by the police, there was more than enough reason for FL or the other 'good' characters who escaped to call them. The drama usually had its weaker moments when trying to adapt plot elements of the novel/source.
They had a small tacked on explanation by Myung Mi Ri as in Soo Ji's mother how she apologised and was punished. If that meant going to jail or doing community service or just bowing in front of a camera crew wasn't detailed.
How did forgiving FL fail to forgive in the end? What??? She did the same as them, how was she any differences…
Forgiving FL not forgiving wasted whole episodes, yes.
GY (as in Lee Ki Yeong) could have easily been arrested by the police, there was more than enough reason for FL or the other 'good' characters who escaped to call them. The drama usually had its weaker moments when trying to adapt plot elements of the novel/source.
They had a small tacked on explanation by Myung Mi Ri as in Soo Ji's mother how she apologised and was punished. If that meant going to jail or doing community service or just bowing in front of a camera crew wasn't detailed.
I watched an mv of this and felt like I completed it, but didn't quite understand why Soo Ji wanted to hurt Eun…
In Liaisons Dangereuses (adaptations), the (reasonably) evil manipulative female character with repressed deep feelings for the manipulative male casanova lead is upset that a lover rejected her for another girl, which provides the set-up. To hurt him, the casanova character is asked to seduce that girl (who isn't his later True Love™!).
In this case, Lee Ki Yeong breaks up with Choi Soo Ji around 25/26 minutes into Ep1 to pursue two girls simultaneously, Park Hye Jung and Eun Tae Hee. As revenge, Choi Soo Ji wants both of them seduced. This is (unconvincingly) supposed to hurt Lee Ki Yeong – touched upon briefly at the very start of Ep2 (Netflix: middle of Ep1) and at length shortly before the end of Ep2 (Netflix: end of Ep1).
There's some actually really good Cinderella & Cheese in the Trap mashup in the early episodes. Thankfully Les…
ep29 (15.1): Se Joo & the FL Tae Hee are completely out of character to facilitate dramatic plot development. Se Joo as the one cleaning up after his friends would never use the nuclear option, and Tae Hee as a previously very smart Cinderella character would never follow someone far away for indoctrination after she already found out that she was lured out of the house under false pretenses (& knowing if she stayed she would get a big explanation).
ep30 (15.2): Makjang murder spree, with nobody calling the police or anything like that for the sake of later wasting screen time on the classic coma episode. Even more absurd than the lack of police or private security intervention is that nobody unties Se Joo at any point, even though several people could and have ample opportunity.
Many lost plot strands, even or especially with the weird 5 years time skip at the end: - What happened with Park Hye Jung's boyfriend Joo An? He was hit in the head with a golf club and bleeding all over the place, but that's the last we hear of him? Is he not human because he's not rich? - We never see Lee Ki Yeong (or his hired chaebol heir / part time assassin) punished. Just saying that his family's law firm is doing poorly now doesn't cut it. - What happened to the wedding plans of Myung Mi Ri and Kwon Suk Woo? - We don't even find out if FL ultimately moved to Germany with her dad or not. - We can only guess that ML might have gone for formal painting / art education rather than enter the family business – but he's still on good enough terms with his family to spend outlandish money on a ridiculous prank. - The drama is missing any scene of the "adults" (besides FL's stunned mother) reacting to who exactly ML has feelings for. - We never find out the details of ML's mother's death. When the hospital director arrives she's still alive, after all - and why is her car door locked anyway? I've never driven with a locked door before, and even if it's common for KR chaebols, you would NOT do that with a heart condition. Plus her window is down when she talks to FL, but then up again later on. - The whole hinted at sub plot of ML's father possibly conspiring with his later fiancee Myung Mi Ri to have his wife killed was so silly if the only goal of them lying was covering up his well-known feelings for FL's mother. Even his own mother knew everything about it. - The subplot of ML kissing or perhaps even sleeping with the mother of Go Kyung Ju completely disappears to never be mentioned again. Go Kyung Ju talks to ML like a generic friend-of-gf side character later, like the writers forgot about earlier episodes. - Go Kyung Ju's adoption is mentioned once, but also never pursued or detailed.
There's some actually really good Cinderella & Cheese in the Trap mashup in the early episodes. Thankfully Les Liaisons Dangereuses isn't adapted all that strictly (I watched three movies as preparation for the show!), and ML very soon stops being anything like the 'full-on psycho' character you'd find in aforementioned Cheese in the Trap.
From others' comments, I expected more outlandish recurrent breakups than there were, though the ones the writers came up with were usually very hard to agree with as a viewer.
By the last two hours, as is tradition with K-dramas, the story takes odd turns, and the ending is unfulfilling. The last episode in particular wastes tons of time on utter crap instead of using it for something useful.
Randomly noticed that on Netflix (and surely Viki or other licensed sites), like so often, various things are removed/censored.
All the music at the very start of Ep.1 (character intros) is different.
Ep1 at 11:50 on NF has some replaced music, while Dramacool at 11:20 has the Superman theme play. - also Ep1 at 8:10 and 7:44, slightly different music for the musicians playing - Ep 1 at 19:20 / 19:04, different music - all techno club music in Ep1
At 12:54 of Ep.1, they sing the KR anthem for a few short seconds – Netflix just does one big cut. Not missing much here.
There's a LONG two minutes scene missing at Ep1 55:00 (DC: Ep2 21:35) introducing Park Hye Jeong.
Ep.2 (or 3 in the 32 split) has Lee Se Joo watching pornography on his TV cut out. At around 25:30 on NF and 25:10 on Dramacool and the like.
Different music again at Ep2 12:55 NF / Ep3 12:35 DC.
Short sequence of cello playing missing at Ep2 34:30 NF / Ep4 00:28 DC. I suppose each and every instance of Choi Soo Ji playing her instrument might be missing on Netflix.
I wonder how much else of the show is removed/censored. This seems almost as terrible as the Reply series in that regard.
I don't think the untangled mystery plot makes much sense.
- what happened with the first 'bullet inside the wall'? - why was their third member, Xiao Wu, even killed, and with what kind of silent crossbow bone bullet? if it was the police underling, none of this makes any sense. - how can the mastermind hire to afford an expensive killer, Wang Hai? - why did Wang Hai seek to kill Ding? - why would a bone bullet be left in the 'pig shooting wall'? complete nonsense.
for The Twins Effect 1, The Twins Effect 2 and Twins Mission: "Twins" in the title refers to the Cantopop group of the same name, lead actresses Charlene Choi and Gillian Chung. This one at least also has ... twins in the plot, lol. (The plots of the movies are not related.)
Tempted: he loves her, but she always rejects him because "couples break up"; when he gets over it and falls for the FL, she realises she loves him back, but her manipulation & lies destroyed their core friendship as well; the whole bet/game also almost gets the ML killed.
Bad acting I only saw among some of the really unnecessary support characters, like Lee Se Joo's extended family.
The more serious Korean movie adaptation of the novel is of course infinitely more explicit.
GY (as in Lee Ki Yeong) could have easily been arrested by the police, there was more than enough reason for FL or the other 'good' characters who escaped to call them. The drama usually had its weaker moments when trying to adapt plot elements of the novel/source.
They had a small tacked on explanation by Myung Mi Ri as in Soo Ji's mother how she apologised and was punished. If that meant going to jail or doing community service or just bowing in front of a camera crew wasn't detailed.
GY (as in Lee Ki Yeong) could have easily been arrested by the police, there was more than enough reason for FL or the other 'good' characters who escaped to call them. The drama usually had its weaker moments when trying to adapt plot elements of the novel/source.
They had a small tacked on explanation by Myung Mi Ri as in Soo Ji's mother how she apologised and was punished. If that meant going to jail or doing community service or just bowing in front of a camera crew wasn't detailed.
In this case, Lee Ki Yeong breaks up with Choi Soo Ji around 25/26 minutes into Ep1 to pursue two girls simultaneously, Park Hye Jung and Eun Tae Hee. As revenge, Choi Soo Ji wants both of them seduced. This is (unconvincingly) supposed to hurt Lee Ki Yeong – touched upon briefly at the very start of Ep2 (Netflix: middle of Ep1) and at length shortly before the end of Ep2 (Netflix: end of Ep1).
ep30 (15.2): Makjang murder spree, with nobody calling the police or anything like that for the sake of later wasting screen time on the classic coma episode. Even more absurd than the lack of police or private security intervention is that nobody unties Se Joo at any point, even though several people could and have ample opportunity.
Many lost plot strands, even or especially with the weird 5 years time skip at the end:
- What happened with Park Hye Jung's boyfriend Joo An? He was hit in the head with a golf club and bleeding all over the place, but that's the last we hear of him? Is he not human because he's not rich?
- We never see Lee Ki Yeong (or his hired chaebol heir / part time assassin) punished. Just saying that his family's law firm is doing poorly now doesn't cut it.
- What happened to the wedding plans of Myung Mi Ri and Kwon Suk Woo?
- We don't even find out if FL ultimately moved to Germany with her dad or not.
- We can only guess that ML might have gone for formal painting / art education rather than enter the family business – but he's still on good enough terms with his family to spend outlandish money on a ridiculous prank.
- The drama is missing any scene of the "adults" (besides FL's stunned mother) reacting to who exactly ML has feelings for.
- We never find out the details of ML's mother's death. When the hospital director arrives she's still alive, after all - and why is her car door locked anyway? I've never driven with a locked door before, and even if it's common for KR chaebols, you would NOT do that with a heart condition. Plus her window is down when she talks to FL, but then up again later on.
- The whole hinted at sub plot of ML's father possibly conspiring with his later fiancee Myung Mi Ri to have his wife killed was so silly if the only goal of them lying was covering up his well-known feelings for FL's mother. Even his own mother knew everything about it.
- The subplot of ML kissing or perhaps even sleeping with the mother of Go Kyung Ju completely disappears to never be mentioned again. Go Kyung Ju talks to ML like a generic friend-of-gf side character later, like the writers forgot about earlier episodes.
- Go Kyung Ju's adoption is mentioned once, but also never pursued or detailed.
From others' comments, I expected more outlandish recurrent breakups than there were, though the ones the writers came up with were usually very hard to agree with as a viewer.
By the last two hours, as is tradition with K-dramas, the story takes odd turns, and the ending is unfulfilling.
The last episode in particular wastes tons of time on utter crap instead of using it for something useful.
All the music at the very start of Ep.1 (character intros) is different.
Ep1 at 11:50 on NF has some replaced music, while Dramacool at 11:20 has the Superman theme play.
- also Ep1 at 8:10 and 7:44, slightly different music for the musicians playing
- Ep 1 at 19:20 / 19:04, different music
- all techno club music in Ep1
At 12:54 of Ep.1, they sing the KR anthem for a few short seconds – Netflix just does one big cut. Not missing much here.
There's a LONG two minutes scene missing at Ep1 55:00 (DC: Ep2 21:35) introducing Park Hye Jeong.
Ep.2 (or 3 in the 32 split) has Lee Se Joo watching pornography on his TV cut out. At around 25:30 on NF and 25:10 on Dramacool and the like.
Different music again at Ep2 12:55 NF / Ep3 12:35 DC.
Short sequence of cello playing missing at Ep2 34:30 NF / Ep4 00:28 DC.
I suppose each and every instance of Choi Soo Ji playing her instrument might be missing on Netflix.
I wonder how much else of the show is removed/censored. This seems almost as terrible as the Reply series in that regard.
- why was their third member, Xiao Wu, even killed, and with what kind of silent crossbow bone bullet? if it was the police underling, none of this makes any sense.
- how can the mastermind hire to afford an expensive killer, Wang Hai?
- why did Wang Hai seek to kill Ding?
- why would a bone bullet be left in the 'pig shooting wall'? complete nonsense.
"Twins" in the title refers to the Cantopop group of the same name, lead actresses Charlene Choi and Gillian Chung. This one at least also has ... twins in the plot, lol.
(The plots of the movies are not related.)