Just started watching and I don't know why the guy just froze and sat there in the middle of the street instead of picking up the child and run when a bus was careening towards them, but the next minute he was able to move like superman and carry the guy out of the burning bus??????? đ€Šđ€Šđ€Š
Of course subject to change once I watch more titles, (newer titles from 2024/2025 most likely not included because I am still catching up....I'm still on 2023 --- when it comes to Chinese standard dramas. I am behind 2 years hahaha)
This drama tried to sell me slow-burn romance and tender pining, and honestly, I was ready to buy. But the female…
Then she meets a guy who briefly helps her out and vanishesâonly for fate to shove them back together. Sure, they had the same music taste when they first met, but the odds of her ending up in the same place? Drama logic strikes again. Turns out, Oto and Soramame both get scooped up by the same landlady like stray kittens, and suddenly theyâre overnight successes.
Soramame lands a fashion gig with nothing but a few doodles, and Otoâwhoâd been middling at bestâsuddenly earns recognition because a girl with a nice voice sings his song while wearing Soramameâs designs. Sure, it sounds poetic, but letâs be real: the buzz was mostly because the original singer slated to pair with Oto was part of a famous duo. The talent was decent; the timing was pure drama math. What are the odds? No, seriouslyâwhat are the odds?
Then after huffing off in a stormâjustifiably furious that her boss stole her ideasâSoramame turns to the mother she swore she hated, just because she needed someone to fund her fashion show. And suddenly, everythingâs fine? No tirade, no reckoning, no emotional fallout. The abandonment, the nightmares, the resentmentâall swept under the rug like a bad sketch. Then she goes to Paris Fashion Week thanks to her famous designer mom, only to come home a few years later because she got bored. Bored. Like her talent was a hobby she could pick up and drop at will. People would kill for her genius, and she treats it like a mood swing.
And donât even get me started on the love triangle, which felt less like emotional complexity and more like narrative whiplash. At first, Seira is fake-dating Oto as part of a scamâa classic setup that couldâve gone somewhere juicyâbut instead of developing any tension there, the drama veers off and suddenly sheâs in love with Soramame. Blink and youâll miss the pivot. Iâm all for fluid feelings, but this felt like the writers changed ships mid-episode and hoped no one would notice. Oto, for his part, looked perpetually dazed, like even he couldnât keep track of who was supposed to love whom. Unpopular opinion: I think Seira suited Oto far betterâhe and Soramame felt more like siblings forced into romance by the script.
By the end, I only finished it out of stubborn loyaltyâand for Oto, who deserved a story not buried under contrivances. This drama wanted to be poetic and bittersweet, but it ended up feeling like a slow burn that forgot to ignite.
This drama tried to sell me slow-burn romance and tender pining, and honestly, I was ready to buy. But the female lead? She made me want a refund. I get that sheâs a âcountry bumpkin,â but reckless doesnât even begin to cover it. Heartbroken or not, spending all her money on one night in a luxury hotel and a grand feast isnât romantic; itâs financial self-destruction. I could empathize with heartbreak, but not with poor life decisions disguised as spontaneity.
After two failed attempts, Zhao Yi Qin finally managed to hold my attention in Provoke. Third timeâs the charm,…
And audacious it is. Hidden identities? Check. But not just oneâboth leads are masquerading as someone else. Heâs pretending to be the son, sheâs pretending to be the mistress of the same man. I mean, either that guy was incredibly gullible, or they were counting on everyone around them being too confused to ask questions. Suspension of disbelief? Hanging by a thread.
Then there are the moments that border on parody. One man fending off a dozen attackers because his sidekick took too long to fetch helpâapparently from men who wonât throw a punch unless theyâre in fedoras and three-piece suits. The dry-cleaning bill alone could fund a sequel. And letâs not forget Susu (now Jingyi) pulling off a full-on Houdini actâescaping from a sack buried underground when she was a mere child. Iâve seen zombies come back with less determination.
Even the hospital hideout scenes had me raising an eyebrow. Secret doors in operating rooms? Sure, the patients wonât noticeâtheyâre probably too busy being unconscious. Amid all the clever ploys, itâs hard not to think our leads survived mostly through dumb luck. Their tension was delicious, but I half-expected a âbrotherâ slip-up to kill the mood, which might explain the suspicious lack of smooches.
The grand finale, though? Less a bang, more a whimper. I wanted Susu to rise and reclaim everything, not ride off on a train like she missed her stop. Still, Iâll give this drama credit where itâs due: beneath the melodrama, the redemption arcs of Wan Yi and Bao Qi were surprisingly thoughtful. Messy, absurd, but oddly satisfyingâkind of like the drama itself.
After two failed attempts, Zhao Yi Qin finally managed to hold my attention in Provoke. Third timeâs the charm, I guess. Something about his performance hereâmeasured, sharp, and simmeringâfinally worked. Maybe itâs the noir-esque tone, maybe itâs the chemistry, or maybe I was just too entertained by the sheer audacity of this plot to look away.
I knew she was going to land main role in the future but not this young. Remembered her from Who Rules the World and The Blood of Youth when she was probably around 13.
She captivated the screen even with her presence even when she was only support or guest roles like in Maiden Holmes or Novoland Pearl Eclipse, and she was younger than.
I'm episode 19. I don't know why I don't like it? Why does everyone like it?
You realized until ep 19 that you don't like it? I usually can gauge within the first 2 or 3 episodes whether I willl continue or not. I will tolerate maximum 25% of the show to call it quits but with like 90% watched, might as well finish.
I'm struggling to like it and contemplating of dropping it. Not sure yet.
Iâll admit it â I was hesitant to âlistenâ to An Ancient Love Song. After being burned by a few overhyped…
The balance between past and future was masterfully done â complex enough to be engaging without spiraling into a convoluted mess. Each timeline carried its own ache, its own emotional weight. Shen Bu Yan and Lu Yuanâs love story was quietly devastating, echoing across lifetimes without losing clarity. Even though the ending was shown at the start, the journey still managed to surprise me â not with twists, but with sincerity. Itâs the kind of emotional payoff that sneaks up on you, then lingers.
What truly sets this drama apart is its precision. No filler. No fluff. Every scene matters. The lore, the pacing, the cinematography,, the acting â all chefâs kiss. Even the secondary coupleâs arc left a bruise. Itâs proof that perspective, not budget, makes a story resonate. Itâs a rare short-form drama that punches far above its runtime, delivering more emotional payoff than some 40-episode epics. I almost overlooked it out of cynicismâand that wouldâve been a mistake.
If I had one tiny caveat, itâs the ending. Personally, Iâd have stopped at the museum reunion. The final scene with middle-aged Shen Bu Yan meeting child Lu Yuan, while poetically intended, lands in slightly murky territory. Itâs not a dealbreakerâjust an eyebrow-raiser.
Final Verdict: This is how dramas should be done â concise, heartfelt, and crafted with care. A rare gem that proves emotional resonance doesnât need runtime bloat or flashy tricks. Just intention. And this one had it in spades.
Iâll admit it â I was hesitant to âlistenâ to An Ancient Love Song. After being burned by a few overhyped short-length C-dramas, my guard was up. Add the umpteenth time-travel premise on top of that, and I was fully prepared to half-watch this one on 2x speed while folding laundry. But lo and behold, this drama had the audacity to earn my full attention. The concept may sound familiar, but the execution? Surprisingly convincing â a rare case where time travel doesnât feel like a gimmick, but a bridge between two fully realized worlds.
And donât even get me started on Cheon Ki. I wanted to root for her, I really did. But watching her charge headfirst into every situation like common sense was an optional skill was exhausting. Every time someone told her to stay put, she did the exact opposite â and not in a brave or clever way, just catastrophically dumb. When even your friends say âwe almost died because of you,â maybe take the hint. Watching her blow up everyoneâs sacrifices was like watching someone trip the alarm in a heist movie â over and over again.
Meanwhile, secrets in this show had the shelf life of a tweet. Apparently, in this universe, âdonât tell anyoneâ translates to âplease broadcast this immediately.â By the finale, every secret had been spilled, and I couldnât tell if it was poor writing or just comedic timing.
By the end, even the gods seemed to have given up. Samshin and Hyo Ryeong waited until the last possible minute to lift a finger against Ma Wang, letting everyone suffer just for dramatic effect. Still, Iâll give credit where itâs due â the cinematography was gorgeous, the art sequences beautifully rendered, and the royal portrait subplot was genuinely mesmerizing. Prince Lee Yul deserves a special mention â a second lead with grace, depth, and enough emotional maturity to step back without turning into a sulky shadow. We love a man with dignity.
Final Verdict: This drama is not a total flop, but definitely more Lovers of the Red Flags than Lovers of the Red Sky.
I picked this one up because Iâve been trying to bulk up my historical K-drama watchlist â hoping to stumble upon another gem to add to the favorites pile. On paper, Lovers of the Red Sky had everything: fantasy elements, palace politics, and Ahn Hyo Seop looking devastatingly good as Ha Ram â the astrologer with red eyes needing some Visine drops. And for a while, that was enough to keep me watching.
Why is the rating low? A work of art like this deserves a 9.1.
Because Line TV doesn't have as many rabid fans like that other, more. Popular network to rate the show 10s across the board even though the show doesn't justify the scoring. They can have a mediocre show with a popular ship, and still have a high rating above 8.5 as long as they are from that network.
Also having NC scenes help in securing high ratings, because for a lot of people a moving story with great acting isn't enough anymore.
And what could also happen is that fans of that other network down rate titles not from their network to lift theirs up to the top of lists.
For Modern Chinese, Hidden Love, Justice in the Dark, Falling into You. Complete list here: https://mydramalist.com/list/1xrQmED3
Of course subject to change once I watch more titles, (newer titles from 2024/2025 most likely not included because I am still catching up....I'm still on 2023 --- when it comes to Chinese standard dramas. I am behind 2 years hahaha)
Soramame lands a fashion gig with nothing but a few doodles, and Otoâwhoâd been middling at bestâsuddenly earns recognition because a girl with a nice voice sings his song while wearing Soramameâs designs. Sure, it sounds poetic, but letâs be real: the buzz was mostly because the original singer slated to pair with Oto was part of a famous duo. The talent was decent; the timing was pure drama math. What are the odds? No, seriouslyâwhat are the odds?
Then after huffing off in a stormâjustifiably furious that her boss stole her ideasâSoramame turns to the mother she swore she hated, just because she needed someone to fund her fashion show. And suddenly, everythingâs fine? No tirade, no reckoning, no emotional fallout. The abandonment, the nightmares, the resentmentâall swept under the rug like a bad sketch. Then she goes to Paris Fashion Week thanks to her famous designer mom, only to come home a few years later because she got bored. Bored. Like her talent was a hobby she could pick up and drop at will. People would kill for her genius, and she treats it like a mood swing.
And donât even get me started on the love triangle, which felt less like emotional complexity and more like narrative whiplash. At first, Seira is fake-dating Oto as part of a scamâa classic setup that couldâve gone somewhere juicyâbut instead of developing any tension there, the drama veers off and suddenly sheâs in love with Soramame. Blink and youâll miss the pivot. Iâm all for fluid feelings, but this felt like the writers changed ships mid-episode and hoped no one would notice. Oto, for his part, looked perpetually dazed, like even he couldnât keep track of who was supposed to love whom. Unpopular opinion: I think Seira suited Oto far betterâhe and Soramame felt more like siblings forced into romance by the script.
By the end, I only finished it out of stubborn loyaltyâand for Oto, who deserved a story not buried under contrivances. This drama wanted to be poetic and bittersweet, but it ended up feeling like a slow burn that forgot to ignite.
Full Review in the spoiler below:
Then there are the moments that border on parody. One man fending off a dozen attackers because his sidekick took too long to fetch helpâapparently from men who wonât throw a punch unless theyâre in fedoras and three-piece suits. The dry-cleaning bill alone could fund a sequel. And letâs not forget Susu (now Jingyi) pulling off a full-on Houdini actâescaping from a sack buried underground when she was a mere child. Iâve seen zombies come back with less determination.
Even the hospital hideout scenes had me raising an eyebrow. Secret doors in operating rooms? Sure, the patients wonât noticeâtheyâre probably too busy being unconscious. Amid all the clever ploys, itâs hard not to think our leads survived mostly through dumb luck. Their tension was delicious, but I half-expected a âbrotherâ slip-up to kill the mood, which might explain the suspicious lack of smooches.
The grand finale, though? Less a bang, more a whimper. I wanted Susu to rise and reclaim everything, not ride off on a train like she missed her stop. Still, Iâll give this drama credit where itâs due: beneath the melodrama, the redemption arcs of Wan Yi and Bao Qi were surprisingly thoughtful. Messy, absurd, but oddly satisfyingâkind of like the drama itself.
Full review in the spoiler below:
She captivated the screen even with her presence even when she was only support or guest roles like in Maiden Holmes or Novoland Pearl Eclipse, and she was younger than.
Congratulations and may your star keep rising!
I'm struggling to like it and contemplating of dropping it. Not sure yet.
What truly sets this drama apart is its precision. No filler. No fluff. Every scene matters. The lore, the pacing, the cinematography,, the acting â all chefâs kiss. Even the secondary coupleâs arc left a bruise. Itâs proof that perspective, not budget, makes a story resonate. Itâs a rare short-form drama that punches far above its runtime, delivering more emotional payoff than some 40-episode epics. I almost overlooked it out of cynicismâand that wouldâve been a mistake.
If I had one tiny caveat, itâs the ending. Personally, Iâd have stopped at the museum reunion. The final scene with middle-aged Shen Bu Yan meeting child Lu Yuan, while poetically intended, lands in slightly murky territory. Itâs not a dealbreakerâjust an eyebrow-raiser.
Final Verdict: This is how dramas should be done â concise, heartfelt, and crafted with care. A rare gem that proves emotional resonance doesnât need runtime bloat or flashy tricks. Just intention. And this one had it in spades.
Full review in the spoiler below:
And donât even get me started on Cheon Ki. I wanted to root for her, I really did. But watching her charge headfirst into every situation like common sense was an optional skill was exhausting. Every time someone told her to stay put, she did the exact opposite â and not in a brave or clever way, just catastrophically dumb. When even your friends say âwe almost died because of you,â maybe take the hint. Watching her blow up everyoneâs sacrifices was like watching someone trip the alarm in a heist movie â over and over again.
Meanwhile, secrets in this show had the shelf life of a tweet. Apparently, in this universe, âdonât tell anyoneâ translates to âplease broadcast this immediately.â By the finale, every secret had been spilled, and I couldnât tell if it was poor writing or just comedic timing.
By the end, even the gods seemed to have given up. Samshin and Hyo Ryeong waited until the last possible minute to lift a finger against Ma Wang, letting everyone suffer just for dramatic effect. Still, Iâll give credit where itâs due â the cinematography was gorgeous, the art sequences beautifully rendered, and the royal portrait subplot was genuinely mesmerizing. Prince Lee Yul deserves a special mention â a second lead with grace, depth, and enough emotional maturity to step back without turning into a sulky shadow. We love a man with dignity.
Final Verdict: This drama is not a total flop, but definitely more Lovers of the Red Flags than Lovers of the Red Sky.
Full Review in the spoiler below:
If he sleeps with sponsors, he gets into a scandal = career ruined; if he doesn't sleep with sponsors, they get "blacklisted" = no career.
Seems to me very limited choices.
Also having NC scenes help in securing high ratings, because for a lot of people a moving story with great acting isn't enough anymore.
And what could also happen is that fans of that other network down rate titles not from their network to lift theirs up to the top of lists.