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Teach You a Lesson korean drama review
Completed
Teach You a Lesson
9 people found this review helpful
by oakowl62
2 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 5.0
Story 4.5
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

A unique, if unrealistic, take on school bullying

On the one hand, this show is deeply satisfying if you enjoy watching bullies get a taste of their own medicine, especially when those bullies are snot-nosed kids who think they're above the law. It also addresses a wide range of issues that affect students, teachers, and parents alike, including students bullying fellow students, students not respecting their teachers, teachers favoring students with connections and rich parents over students from poor backgrounds, parents bullying teachers, and the enormous pressure students face from their parents to perform well academically.

On the other hand, this show is also ridiculously over the top and not at all realistic. The ERPB itself is government overreach to an absurd degree, and I found it really hard to believe that, in South Korea of all places, where public scrutiny of celebrities and elected officials is almost suffocating, there was not an immediate outcry over adults physically assaulting literal children, no matter how much the children deserved it. Not to mention the invasion of privacy and constant surveillance by the ERPB. Honestly, as much as I liked the main characters individually, I was actually rooting for the opposition party to disband the ERPB entirely. There's also the fact that the Bureau was founded after the murder of a teacher at the hands of her student, yet somehow no one knew that Ga-Yun, the murdered teacher, was actually the daughter of the Minister of Education who founded the Bureau and the fiancee of the Bureau's lead investigator until well after the ERPB was established. Han-Rim and Geun-Dae both routinely going undercover as students makes for some funny scenes and I get that they both look young but COME ON, you're telling me none of the students ever suspected them of being narcs?? Do not even get me started on their "romance," the negative amount of romantic chemistry they had should be studied. Also, what the actual HELL did they do to my girl Jin Ki Joo with that haircut?? South Korea's obsession with bangs should also be studied, my god, they treat foreheads like the Victorians treated ankles.

The last two episodes center around the student who murdered Ga-Yun as the big bad who has set up an extensive drug ring that spans multiple schools and goes so far as to commit multiple murders to maintain said drug ring. And yes, murder is bad, and yes, kids are capable of committing horrific crimes, but like, he's literally in high school. His brain's not even fully developed. I'm not downplaying his actions but there's a reason juvenile offenders often get lighter sentences and that is because their brains are literally not fully developed yet and as a result, they don't always know the consequences of their actions. Again, I'm not downplaying the actions of the bullies in this show, but it does make it hard to really root for the good guys when you remember it's literally a group of grown ass adults beefing with a bunch of teenagers. There's another episode earlier in the show where a group of kids who are also dealing drugs get thrown in a juvenile detention facility and basically get the shit scared out of them by the other prisoners who are legit murderers, and frankly, it's hard to really view this as justice when you consider that there's a very real chance they will get murdered before they get released. Maybe this is just my American worldview showing, but juvenile detention is not really considered a rehabilitative success here when most juvenile delinquents just end up becoming adult delinquents and commit further crimes.

As someone who doesn't particularly enjoy school bullying dramas primarily because it's so frustrating to watch the adults sit by and do nothing, I initially felt like this show was a breath of fresh air. The first episode in particular is fast and fun and I loved seeing an adult actually stand up to the school bullies and bully them back. But as the show progresses, it becomes harder and harder to stomach some of the extreme lengths the ERPB goes to to deliver justice. I've seen a lot of people compare this show to Taxi Driver because they're similar stories about people using violence for a good cause. Unfortunately, vigilante justice can only actually be delivered by vigilantes, and the ERPB is not that, they're literally a government agency. And when the government does it, it feels less like vigilante justice and more like the beginnings of fascism. I'm sure this show has more appeal to its native audience, but as an American, it hit a little too close to home for me, and not in a good way. If this show came out in 2024, I might've been able to just enjoy it for what it is and not think too much about it. But in 2026, when the U.S. government is figuratively and literally waging war on its own citizens and weaponizing different government agencies to do so, it's a lot harder to watch this and feel like it's anything other than a particularly insidious form of propaganda.
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