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Angel's Last Mission: Love korean drama review
Completed
Angel's Last Mission: Love
0 people found this review helpful
by mell
Jun 16, 2021
32 of 32 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

It just kept on giving!

Angel’s Last Mission: Love Review

I had been really sick this past week, sick to the point where I did not want to a show I was currently watching because I was not mentally enough here to enjoy it to the fullest. So, I decided to pick a show that I would be able to just put on and watch, without the expectations of watching it full heartedly. I went into this show thinking I could half-ass watch it, but boy was I wrong.

Plot: I went into the show without really reading over the synopsis. I have previously watched “Thirty But Seventeen,” starring Shin Hae Sun as the main female lead, I remember really enjoying the show and her acting, so I figured I would give another of her shows a try. All I knew about the show going into it was that it was about a blind ballerina meeting an angel, falling in love, and live happily ever after. The show was so much more than this, as well as the blind aspect of the show, somewhat threw me off. As someone who loves to find dramas that portray people with mental or physical differences than the average, I was somewhat disappointed with the way that the drama was said to be and the actual way that it was. I thought that the physical difference of being blind, was going to be present throughout the whole show but was disappointed when it was only present within the first few episodes. And then magically, she wasn’t blind anymore. As you continue to watch the show, you do come to understand why they did this the way that they did, it was needed, but I felt that maybe it shouldn’t have been somewhat of a big deal, like they had made it out to be (in trailers, synopsis’, etc.). As the story goes on, we come to the basic premise of the show. Kim Dan, aka Kim Myung Soo, is an angel sent from above who needs to help Lee Yeon Seo (Shin Hae Sun) find love. Sounds easy right? Wrong.

Rib: The rib, aka Ji Kang Woo (Lee Dong Gun), was the aspect of the show that I felt somewhat confusing. I always found myself getting really mad at the rib, so you could say that Lee Dong Gun did a really job of portraying his character, because the goal was for the audience to be a bit heated, but I felt it was somewhat unnecessary. The rib’s character I felt was never really explained as to why it had to be him or really why he was even there. One could argue that it had to be him so that Shin Hae Sun’s character would find true love *spoiler alert: didn’t work*, but the angel’s mission was to help Lee Yeon Seo love, in general. It was never said that it had to be a love with the rib, but a love overall. The whole thing with the rib losing the one he loved and now going after Shin Hae Sun’s character just because they looked similar, I felt was just creepy. Not in the creepy sort of way that adds to the plot or storyline, but just plain creepy. There was then no explanation as to why the angel had to meet him in the first place, other than him scaring the couple. There was no closure with the whole thing.

The End: Speaking of closure, I did not get any. I went into the show thinking it would just be some mindless show I could watch, but turns out, I was hooked. I was whole heartedly watching it, it made me cry, multiple times. So, when the end came and nothing was really said, I felt so much utter disappointment. I was following and understood why the story had progressed the way that it did, God is a bitch sometimes, but the actual end, was not enough. I am going to be honest, when I was about 12 episodes in and I was scared, so I googled whether there would be a happily ever after or not. After a basic google search, I came to know that there would be, but it caused some disappointment to the audience. I did not read further so I wouldn’t get anymore spoilers, but let me tell you, that was an understatement. Usually, disappointment that comes with a happily ever after, comes from the rushed ending of making everything magically happy within the last episode or within the last two episodes. That was not the case here, it was worse. Instead of pushing things to the last episode, like some do, they pushed it to the last 30 seconds of the show. No explanation. One frame. Zoom out. The. End.
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