This review may contain spoilers
When X-Men meets The Umbrella Academy and becomes absolute fun ride!!!
Honestly speaking,I was only interested in this drama for Park Eun Bin. Nowadays,kdramas are neither interesting,nor appealing.... The same story,same repetition, same tropes....it has become such a boring place.But this one was really enjoyable. I wont say it was some magnificent, mindblowing, extremely top level superhero drama,cause it was not. But the thing that makes it special was the chemistry among the four leads and the makers never pretending its story to be something heavy cause its not. It had its sad moments,which was also good,but overall,it was fun. It was lighthearted, it was joyful.... It was something really needed for the moment.
Storywise,its not something new. Some outcasts,nobody.. found superpowers and became superhero to save the city while the villains are some crazy science guy who are torturing by experimenting on children....nothing special. But the bonding among the casts were really good. Park Eun Bin as Eun Chaeni was hilarious and her tremendous ability to shift between an absolute trainwreck to some kind soft always happy girl was so nice to see. Her bonding with her halmeoni was so hearwarming,she was like real grand daughter of Kim Hae sook,both having same character traits!Choi Dae Hoon as a suffering man who became a burden in his own family,later became superhero, always pretending never caring about anything or anyone but a real softball inside was to good to see.Im Sung Jae as the crybaby was also never annoying or boring. Their funny scenes actually landed really well.
But it was Cha Eun Woo who made me amazed. Believe me when I say,I was never a fan. He has one of the best face card in korea...but his acting was never great for me. But WoW! This time he pulled his character really good...specially beside such great actor like Park Eun Bin and others,he didn’t leave any chance to complain. He deserves his flower this time.
Overall...it was a fun ride. Will definitely watch season 2 if it ever comes!
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Horror Stories of Tang Dynasty
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This review may contain spoilers
Strange Tales of Tang Dynasty – A Gong’an Gem with Minor Flaws
Don’t let its quiet release fool you—Strange Tales of Tang Dynasty is a sleeper hit that respects its audience’s intelligence. Set during the reign of Emperor Ruizong (son of Empress Wu Zetian), this drama follows two mismatched investigators—Lu Lingfeng, a hot-headed young general from an elite clan, and Su Wuming, the calm, wise disciple of legendary detective Di Renjie—as they unravel eight supernatural-tinged mysteries across Tang-era China.What begins as a simple death investigation in Chang’an evolves into a richly layered journey through folklore (zhiguai), political intrigue, and personal redemption. It's like The X-Files meets classical Chinese literature—with cool fight choreography!
What Works Brilliantly
- Tight, Filler-Free Storytelling
In an era where even 30-episode dramas drown in pointless fillers, STOTD’s 36 episodes feel remarkably lean. Every case advances the plot, deepens character arcs, or expands the world. No episode is wasted—a rare feat worth celebrating.
- Strong Core Trio & Character Growth
Yang Xuwen delivers a great performance as Lu Lingfeng, evolving convincingly from arrogant prodigy to grounded detective. Yang Zhigang’s Su Wuming is the perfect foil: serene, perceptive, and emotionally intelligent. Chen Chuang steals scenes as Fei Jishi (“Master Chicken”), whose wine-loving, chicken-eating charm provides just enough humor without breaking tension.
- Atmospheric Production
Despite a modest budget, the show nails its gritty, mysterious Tang Dynasty aesthetic. The lighting, costumes, score, and set design immerse you in 8th-century Chang’an. Fight scenes are clean, purposeful, and refreshingly coherent compared to recent C-drama standards.
- Smart, Logical Cases (Mostly!)
Cases like “The Stone Bridge Painting,” “The Killing of Huangmei,” “The Hall of All Beings,” and “Gantang Post” are standouts—blending historical plausibility with eerie folklore. Deductions rely on observation and evidence, not coincidence.
Where It Stumbles
- Forced Romance Subplots
Pei Xijun and Chu Yingtao feel shoehorned in primarily as love interests. While both characters improve slightly over time, their romantic arcs with Lu Lingfeng and Su Wuming respectively distract more than enrich. In a genre that thrives on focus, these threads seem aimed at broadening appeal rather than serving the story.
- Weaker Final Arcs
The last three cases (“The Alligator God,” “The Human-Faced Flower,” “The Towering Tower”) lean too heavily on fantastical gimmicks and “magic trick” resolutions, losing the grounded mystery that made earlier episodes shine.
Final Thoughts
Strange Tales of Tang Dynasty is a rare example of craft-first storytelling in today’s C-drama landscape. It prioritizes narrative cohesion, historical texture, and character logic over star power or viral moments. While the romance and final arcs hold it back from true perfection, its strengths far outweigh its flaws.
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This review may contain spoilers
To Match Her Freak
A Splendid Match is the kind of drama that knows exactly what it is from the very beginning. The premise itself is nothing groundbreaking. A noblewoman returns home, several men orbit around her life, and viewers are left waiting to see who ultimately becomes her “perfect match.” The answer is obvious almost immediately, but surprisingly, that never becomes a weakness. This drama is not interested in asking who gets the girl. It asks how two people become worthy of each other, and that distinction is what makes the story work.Gu Jin Zhao grows up exiled from her own family because of an old prophecy, yet instead of becoming bitter or fragile, she returns sharper, louder, and completely unapologetic about who she is. Raised with love by her grandmother rather than suffocated by aristocratic rules, Jin Zhao carries herself with a confidence that unsettles polite society. She refuses to indulge nonsense, refuses to tolerate injustice, and settles accounts immediately whenever she is wronged. Ren Min captures both her youthful charm and fiery stubbornness perfectly. Every time Jin Zhao stands up for herself, I found myself silently cheering like a proud sister watching family drama unfold at dinner.
What I appreciated most is that the story never turns Jin Zhao into a heroine waiting to be chosen. In true amor fati fashion, she embraces the life handed to her and bends it into something that belongs entirely to her. Marriage, for her, is not survival or social strategy. It is recognition. She wants someone who sees her fully without asking her to shrink, and among all four potential matches, only Chen Yan Yun truly understands that.
I am one of the minorities who liked how the narrative took time exploring Jin Zhao’s dynamic with every man in her life. While the male lead lacked (romantic) screentime in the earlier episodes, I thought the structure made sense. The first half focuses heavily on Jin Zhao and Ye Xian’s chaotic friendship, while the latter half gradually shifts toward Yan Yun and Jin Zhao’s partnership. It creates a natural emotional progression instead of rushing directly into romance.
Chen Yan Yun is, without question, her splendid match. Mature, wise, reliable, and quietly affectionate, he feels like the rare male lead who understands that loving a strong woman does not mean taming her. Ci Sha portrays him perfectly. The actor embodies the mature, manly, and reliable allure of his character. Chen Yan Yun never asks Jin Zhao to compromise herself for his comfort. Instead, he protects the space where she can continue being exactly who she is. Their relationship is built on mutual respect, trust, and admiration, which makes their romance feel deeply satisfying even within a fairly cliché setup. He may navigate political disasters effortlessly, but love clearly short-circuits his brain, and honestly, that made him even more charming.
Once they got married, this drama practically turned into a romantic buffet. The kisses, the hugs, the mirrored gestures, the teasing intimacy, everything delivered maximum flutter damage. I also appreciate that the production committed fully to their chemistry instead of hiding every kiss behind curtains, sleeves, candles, or strategically placed furniture like some historical dramas love to do. Their romance feels passionate because both characters themselves are passionate people. The physical affection supports the fiery nature of their relationship instead of existing purely for fanservice.
One of the strongest parts of the writing comes from how the drama handles emotional conflict after marriage. When Chen Yan Yun discovers the history between Jin Zhao and Chen Xuan Qing, the story wisely avoids the easy route of one dramatic argument followed by instant reconciliation. Instead, it lets Yan Yun sit with the discomfort. Of course it would hurt knowing your wife once actively pursued someone else, especially when that someone is your own nephew. The added realization that they may have ended up together had he not intervened makes the situation even more complicated. What made the arc work for me is that the drama allows Yan Yun to spiral through those ugly “what if” thoughts instead of pretending mature people instantly process emotions rationally. And true to Jin Zhao’s character, she refuses to lose herself trying to soothe him. Her “I won’t indulge him” line felt completely consistent with who she is. She loves deeply, but she refuses to abandon her own dignity in the process.
Ironically, Chen Xuan Qing’s storyline only further proves why he and Jin Zhao were never meant to be. He may have been her first love, but he fundamentally lacks the courage and conviction needed to stand beside someone like her. Jin Zhao is drawn to his worldview and gentleness, yet in the end, he mostly awakens her protective instincts rather than standing as her equal. When forced to choose between safety and love, he chooses himself. That decision defines his entire character.
I honestly think the writers did Xuan Qing dirty toward the second half. His character practically takes a full tragic opera turn into pathetic lovesick territory. Zuo Ye portrayed his restrained misery very well, but the writing reduces him into someone consumed entirely by resentment. It is understandable for him to feel jealous of Yan Yun and out of place with the Chen family, but at some point his bitterness becomes exhausting because the Chen family genuinely treated him with sincerity from the beginning. The drama wanted emotional collapse, and boy, did it commit to it.
On the other hand, Ye Xian ended up becoming one of the most interesting characters in the drama for me. At first, he is basically a spoiled manchild wrapped in pretty robes and family pressure. Winwin embodied that mischievous youthful energy perfectly while still hinting at the burden beneath it all. His relationship with Jin Zhao works wonderfully as friendship because they are too similar. Putting them together romantically would be like throwing two fireworks into the same box and hoping the house survives. They bicker, annoy each other, protect each other, and genuinely care deeply, but they would absolutely self-destruct as lovers.
Episode 28 genuinely hurt. The wedding procession crossing paths with the funeral procession was one of the strongest scenes in the entire drama. While Jin Zhao and Yan Yun move toward happiness, Ye Xian stands there grieving the loss of his own love story. The way he lowered his gaze and stepped aside felt devastatingly mature. It was acceptance, resignation, and heartbreak all folded into one quiet moment. That scene alone deserves applause.
I also appreciated Ye Xian’s eventual growth. Watching him choose responsibility over obsession was satisfying because it finally felt like he matured beyond simply chasing Jin Zhao. Him addressing Yan Yun as Jin Zhao’s “fujun” carried more emotional weight than any dramatic speech could have. At the same time, the battlefield storyline constantly filled me with dread because it felt less like heroism and more like a beautifully wrapped suicide mission. Yes, from a character perspective, it makes sense. A man with limited years left would rather burn brightly on the battlefield than fade slowly in bed. But emotionally, it still hurt to watch.
The scene where Yan Yun carried Ye Xian’s body covered by the Ye flag genuinely left me speechless. Alongside the wedding versus funeral procession, it became one of the most memorable moments in the drama for me. Jin Zhao’s devastation afterward also landed emotionally, even if some of the screaming leaned slightly too theatrical for my taste.
As for the rest of the cast, the ensemble adds so much charm to the viewing experience. The sidekicks bring excellent comedic timing, especially Chen Yan Yun’s sidekick compete over who can gather information faster. Unfortunately for him, nobody gathers gossip faster than women. The Ji family was largely lovable aside from one permanently irritated aunt, while most members of the Gu family existed solely to test my blood pressure. The Chen family sat somewhere in between chaos and sincerity, though I appreciated that many of the women in the household remained reasonable and supportive.
The overall atmosphere strangely reminded me of Bridgerton mixed with a classic chick flick romcom. The “searching for the perfect match” narrative, the playful romantic energy, and even parts of the soundtrack carried that same exciting first-love feeling. The production quality is admittedly inconsistent at times. Certain shots and color grading occasionally look a bit cheap or overly template-like, but the emotional core of the story remains strong enough that I stopped caring after a while.
My biggest issue ultimately comes from the ending. After all the suffering, heartbreak, political turmoil, and emotional growth, I desperately wanted one final peaceful moment for the main couple. A quiet meal together, stargazing, attending a festival, literally anything warm and comforting. Instead, the drama fully commits to its fire symbolism until the very end. I understand the intention. Jin Zhao and Yan Yun are intense people who love fiercely and burn brightly together. Still, after everything they endured, I wanted softness. I wanted peace. I wanted my splendid ending.
Even so, I genuinely enjoyed A Splendid Match. It is a cliché done right. The plot may follow familiar beats, but the sincerity of the characters, the emotional storytelling, and the chemistry between the leads make it incredibly engaging. Despite an ending that left me emotionally robbed, the journey itself was entertaining enough to make me laugh, cry, scream internally, and grow attached to nearly everyone along the way. Sometimes that alone is enough to make a drama worth remembering.
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Poorly Edited Wang Hedi Show Featuring A Stellar, Neglected Supporting Cast
1. Cast finds out wang hedi is the "boss" after signing. Don't think they'd have signed if most of their scenes were gonna be cut. Most also probably didn't have a choice considering how the industry powers work.2. Too much wang hedi, not like how the inn usually is. It gets irritating.
3. Badly edited. Quality compromised to make multiple versions. Episodes don't feel complete or wholesome.
4. Even if there's nothing else to watch, I still wouldn't recommend.
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One of the best east Asian dramas this year
I watch a loooooot of kdramas and cdramas and I've been watching k-dramas for more than 8 years now but this is definitely one of my top 10 dramas at the moment. The romance, the comedy, the plot, the acting, EVERYTHING IS PEAK!!!! I love it sooooooooooooooooooo much already I hope it continues to surprise me!¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
This review may contain spoilers
Emotional rollercoaster
This is the first review I’ve ever written, so please bear with me.To begin with, I didn’t have high expectations for this movie. I mainly started watching it just to have some background noise while doing other things, although the cast did look pretty good. The movie also started off rather slowly, following an ordinary gamer who suddenly finds himself in the middle of an apocalypse.
What I really liked was how the main character pulled himself together for the sake of his family. I also appreciated how the film showed his regrets about their relationship and gave emotional weight to his actions. I do not want to go too deeply into the story itself, but rather explain why I ended up giving this movie such a high rating.
I honestly felt like this was one of the most realistic apocalyptic films I have watched when it comes to human emotions. The movie constantly balanced hope and despair. Just when everything felt doomed, hope would appear again, only to disappear and return later. That emotional cycle continued throughout the entire story and kept things engaging.
Another thing I liked was how unpredictable it felt. I genuinely could not tell whether the main character was going to survive or not, which made the tension feel real. Even with the slow start, the movie hooked me surprisingly fast.
Also, props to the movie for not unnecessarily killing off every main character just for shock value.
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An Interesting Romance and Political Story All Wrapped Into One
A Splendid Match does exactly what it promises. It splendidly matches up the main couple, who have quite different temperaments and yet are similar in enough in certain aspects aspects that it simply clicks. Certain characters truly grow and develop until the end of the drama like Ye Xian and Gu Lan, though Ye Xian is offered more screentime and is one of the best - if not THE best - SML's out there.The deaths of certain characters were incredibly heart wrenching. I had a good cry two times in this drama and I love when a story actually makes me care!
Overall, the Gu family feud at the beginning of the drama was just a little better structured. The last arc is both rushed and yet too few things happen at the right time. I would have enjoyed a bit more focus on Jinzhao's female relationships and her business ventures around those episodes. Some political things just happen instead of being reacted to by the joint force of the main couple.
One big caveat are also the excessive fade to blacks that are awkward. They are used for censorship but also lack of time and probably lack of budget.
Despite that, I actually enjoy the ending (as in the last episode). It does not wrap everything up perfectly but there doesn't need to be a lengthy epilogue. The goal is reached. The deed is done.
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I love the plot
The plot is my fav part. At the beginning, it is a bit slow, but it got better every ep. I really love the show. The only thing I hate about this is the costume. Women's clothes are ugly.I hope to see more show like this. Women might be seen as fragile at the beginning, but she is very strong, even with petite body.
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A Perfectly Acceptable Romcom
Sometimes, I just want to watch pretty people in pretty clothes and surroundings entertain me. Perfect Crown fit that need perfectly.The Good:
• There's something about IU I like. She was achingly believable in My Mister, mesmerizing in Hotel del Luna, heartbreaking in Moon Lovers: SHR, and authentic in The Producers. She did well here as the striving, overachieving chaebol trying to secure her position by becoming royalty.
• Byeon Woo Seok was the perfect Prince Charming: tall, handsome, and a bit tragic.
• Gong Seung Yeon did a fantastic job as the Queen. She was a scene stealer.
• The supporting cast of a secondary romantic couple (very sweet and just the right amount of time so as to not take away from the main couple); the family members; and the villain were all top notch.
The Bad:
• The characters weren't consistent. Evil, vindictive people don't flip a switch and become decent and caring. Am I supposed to believe treating a child with demeaning, cold neglect was done out of some noble purpose? A person who has grasped for power all her life suddenly walked away from it? An ambitious person who has never actively pursued the object of his affection becomes willing to risk his career and soul by killing for her?
• The politics and machinations were never fully explained. Once the villain was exposed, there was no mention of him again.
• The drama felt as though entire scenes were cut, because the edits didn't always make sense.
• I realize this is an odd complaint, but those fake press-on nails were distracting. I'd feel relief when suddenly they were gone (hospital scene and others), but they'd return in the next scene. This is the second recent K-drama I've watched with those bad press-on nails. I hope this isn't a trend. I suffer through bad wigs in sageuks; must I suffer through bad nails in modern dramas?
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This review may contain spoilers
Too much fluff, not enough Investigating, and as you will find out, no mystery.
Let's start with the parallel worlds, which, for some reason, everyone believed Mum about without question. We have the main world, which is Mum's, then Dew's world that exists parallel to it. The interesting thing about the parallel worlds in this series is that it only works in room 609 from 12 am to 1:05 am. The month and years are the same, but the days are different; for Mum, it all starts on the 6th, and for Dew the 24th, and each day forward for Mum is a day backward for Dew.I both love and hate this late detail. On the one hand, it adds a layer of complexity that I hadn't seen before; on the other, it creates a couple of problems with the plot. First, because everything works backwards in Dew's world, that means at the starting point for Mum, Dew already knows everything that has happened to that point, especially when we learn that Mum told him everything on Dew's day one. Why didn't Dew tell him everything when he learned they were working in reverse order? Search me. To build suspense and tension? Didn't work. When I found out that Dew knew who killed him and why all along, I was so annoyed for reasons I will get to in a minute. The second problem is that it took the suspense and tension out of the 2 or 3 times someone tried to or thought about killing Dew (we didn't know it wasn't real at the time). We knew it wouldn't happen because we knew when it would happen. Dew's fate was sealed, and there was nothing that would change it because everything Mum was doing in Dew's world had already happened for Dew, just not for Mum.
Now, to the reason I was so annoyed with Dew when I learned he knew everything. I won't go into too much detail as I don't want to spoil too much, but to fix everything, all he had to do was break up with Mint. That is it. He didn't need to get An to keep her busy & avoid her. Just break up. It wasn't like he liked her as more than a friend anyway.
Mint is a good, if not overbearing and insufferable, sister. Honestly, I was confused when I learned she's the younger one. I get that she cares, and Mum is the only family she has left, but she was a bit much at times. That being said, Dew's world Mint has some mental problems. Not only does she badger him to date her for literal years, but she also fantasized about killing him when she thinks he might be cheating on her. Breaking up never entered her mind! Mum's world Mint was just as badgery, but she at least was happy that Dew was honest with her. I don't think Dew's world Mint would have been, not based on the amount of yelling and refusal to listen.
An should have been able to tell her that Dew wasn't cheating on her since he was following the boy. I mean, he would have told her he was, but his telling her Dew was gay didn't work out too well either. He was a headache; the only time I liked him was in the little time that he was helping Dew with Mint. He was an angry, drunk 95% of the time, who seemed to do nothing productive but follow Dew around. No idea what Joey sees in him.
Honestly, I hated both Mint and An's characters. An because of how entitled he felt he was to know everything about Dew and Mint's relationship, just because he liked Mint, and he accused Dew of a lot of stuff based on messages Mint posted on her social media. I didn't like Mint because she couldn't accept that Dew only sees her as a friend. After years of constantly asking someone to be your boyfriend, it should be obvious that they said yes, so you'd leave them alone. If I had a friend who wouldn't take no for an answer, I would simply cut ties with them. It could easily turn into something life-threatening if it goes on too long, or maybe I just watch too many crime shows and am paranoid. Based on Mint's reaction, I would like to think I'm not being paranoid.
If the goal was to make me hate Mint, Emi did a great job.
The last episode has an alternate ending, which I sadly couldn't find to watch. The canon ending, Wake Up, saw our characters getting their happy ending, but a lot of it felt unrealistic, and it happened too fast. Mint accepts that her brother loves Dew and helps get them together, and the parents are told about the relationship, and they are okay with it. To make it even more convenient, Mum's world Dew also somehow remembers things that happened between them in Dew's world, and after an encounter with a Mum from another universe, he falls in love with Mum. Almost no time went into building up the relationship between Mum and his world's Dew.
As a side note, these guys are having sex on the first meeting, 3 different times, and at least one of them each time didn't think they were gay . . . Why? And one of those times, life or death information needed to be given, but no let's bone first! I rolled my eyes so hard it hurt.
Probably my favorite thing about the series was Mum morning Dew, whether he knew what happened to him or not, is unclear, but regardless, he knew they wouldn't meet again. Then he picks himself up for the Dew of his universe, only for reality to crash in. His distancing himself from the situation and the people involved was very realistic. The ups and downs of Mum's emotions and mental state were well portrayed by Ohm.
I wish we could have seen a bit of the fallout in Dew's world. It's clear what happened, but I would have liked to have seen the other character's reaction, not just a fade to black.
I also liked Wee and Game as a couple. A was a grade A asshole, and I'm glad that Wee has Game to support and love him.
Overall, the series wasn't bad; I just couldn't stand a couple of characters, and that really brought down my enjoyment of the show. I also wish there had been some actual mystery to solve; we had mostly cute couple moments, not detective work.
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A fresh romcom that sucks you in!
Initial Review at the Halfway Point (Will Post Concluding thoughts after Finale):I don’t really know what I expected from this, but it’s been a blast so far. I’m really optimistic heading into the second half.
Pros:
• A fresh dynamic of the leads — We’ve got a role reversal drama here that took me by surprise. Our ML is NOT the normal K-Drama male lead, and, frankly, I’m here for it. Our FL? She is not our normal female lead, and, again, I’m here for it. The female is a domineering boss with secrets to spare and plenty of hurts while our ML is a cocky employee who has a thing for strong women (not that he’d admit it) and is more in touch with his feelings because he was raised by and around strong women.
• Chemistry — Oh my goodness. The chemistry is there. It is so there, and do NOT get me started on the kiss scene in episode 4. Good grief. These two are dynamite together. I can’t wait to see their dating era.
• Subplots — To my surprise, this show has kept me engaged so far in basically all its subplots. That is no easy feat.
• Production — Just wanted to shout out the overall production of this. The acting, directing, music, cinematography, etc. is very very good.
Cons:
• Slow start — This wasn’t a huge dea, but the pilot is a bit slow for a romcom. In fact, it isn’t until episode 4 that we really get to know the FL’s character (this begins as a male centric narrative and part of the story is the mystery around her). If it would have dragged out longer, I would have been annoyed.
• A potentially very messy love square — Already I find it weird as heck that the ML allowed his ex girlfriend to move into his apartment in episode 1. For the fist five episodes though, it didn’t seem like a big deal. Now it looks like we are about to dive into a very messy love square that has not been introduced very well so I have fear that it could do some damage in the last half. Here’s to hoping not.
Anyway, I am PUMPED for the second half.
Final Review:
This show was a gem, a literal gem. They handled the dynamics of all the shifting relationships with incredible finesse, and the writers/cast truly delivered a stellar second half. The ex-GF drove me crazy, but I actually have to admit they handled her downfall and eventual subtle redemption very well.
Our couple’s dating era was PEAK. And NO messy breakup!! The scene where Ki Jun is defending Inah in the police station had me in tears, and the finale had me cheesy grinning over and over. We got an awesome ending—starting in a similar way it began—with our two leads now a bickering couple. It was adorable and so wholesome. Well worth the watch. It’s my fave K-Drama of the year so far.
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This review may contain spoilers
Möhtəşəm başlanğıc
İlk Bölümdən Heyran Qaldım!Düzünü desəm, Fifties Professionals dizisinin ilk bölümünü izlədikdən sonra aldığım zövqü və həyacanı sözlərlə ifadə etmək çətindir. Hekayəyə belə dinamik, cəsarətli və iddialı bir giriş etmələri gözləntilərimi o qədər aşdi ki heç belə gözləmirdim. İlk bölümdən tempin bu qədər yüksək tutulması və xüsusilə döyüş səhnələrinin sözün əsl mənasında "bomba" kimi işlənməsi layihənin keyfiyyətini dərhal ortaya qoyur. Ekran qarşısında bir an belə darıxmağa vaxt tapmadım, açılış dərhal insanı özünə bağlayır.
Digər tərəfdən, dizinin "ajjushi" heyəti sadəcə mükəmməldir! Bu təcrübəli aktyorların xarizması, ekran enerjisi və rollarını mənimsəmə tərzi layihəni ilk saniyədən zirvəyə daşıyır. Onların hər birini ekranda izləmək, yaratdıqları abu-havanı hiss etmək böyük zövqdür. İlk bölümü çox sevdiyimi və tam mənasıyla heyran qaldığımı deyə bilərəm. Ümid edirəm ki, ssenari və bu yüksək temp heç bir eniş yaşamadan sona qədər belə davam edər və növbəti bölümlərdə də eyni həyacanı hiss edərik. İzləməyə mütləq dəyər!
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It wasn't horrible but it wasn't very good either.
I started this because I like the FL and she did a great job with what she was given.I fell in love with ML, he's very pretty and he also did a good job with his character. if not for how much I like those 2 I never would have made it through this.
The concept for the story was good, but the script and directing were rather lacking. The scenes often felt stitched together and they were clearly relying on violence and the flashing of skin to get us through this.
I managed to power my way to the end where one villain dies and the other gets locked up... and then it ended. No idea what the 2 leads are thinking, feeling, or planning... Just credits.
If not for how much I like the 2 leads I would call this a complete waste of my time. I am thankful I discovered the ML though, so it wasn't a total loss.
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Relatable, and Hopeful
I loved this show. I think it had a message many can relate to and provides a beacon of hope for those who are experiencing their own “slump” in life. We don’t have to push through when we’re tired; we don’t need to pretend to be okay; we can lean on the people in our lives; things won’t always be okay, but we can overcome.The story was mostly well-balanced and well-paced. I noticed that the ratings dipped in the last few episodes, perhaps because the more suspenseful plot points were finished; but I’m glad we got to enjoy our characters’ happiness as they began their next chapters. It had a bit of everything: suspense, romance, friendship, family, humor, and reality. It didn’t shy away from tougher topics and handled them fairly well.
The development we saw from each individual character as well as their relationships with each other was emotional and heartwarming. The way Jeong-woo and Ha-neul came into each others’ lives was fortuitous, and it was wonderful to see their relationship as friends, and lovers, grow. It feels extra rare and special to have someone in our life that understands our pain and wants to support us wholeheartedly. I love how they communicated, how they encouraged each other and allowed each other to be themselves. Sometimes words were needed, but other times they understood how to comfort without speaking at all. It was a treasure to witness.
The family dynamic was also emotional and touching. They showed how love and concern can often be misplaced, how honesty is important, and how we are all trying to love in the best way we know. Their love felt so real.
I cried a lot, but I also was laughing hysterically. The acting from our main cast, particularly Park Hyung-sik and Park Shin Hye, was fantastic. They were able to showcase their full range, and I absolutely loved their characters. It was especially nice to see PSH and her growth as an actress.
The next time I experience my own “slump,” I hope to come back to this show as a reminder that life is hard, but not forever.
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This review may contain spoilers
Promised a lot, but didn’t take as many risks as Season 1
I really felt like the first season was much bolder with the couple swaps (WITH ACTUAL KISSES), and that’s exactly what I was hoping to see in this new season. What made the first season so fun was how they took already established ships and, along with Neo (Boston), completely shook everything up. That unpredictability made the series way more interesting. This season was missing exactly that: taking more risks and leaning harder into the drama.For example, by the end, Jack’s reaction felt a bit exaggerated considering everything that had already happened during both the first and second breakups. Boston’s return also could have been much more impactful. They created so much chaos and hype when they announced he’d be coming back to the series, so expectations were really high. Aside from that scene where he was taking pictures with Tua and Arnold which was great. I felt like they didn’t fully take advantage of that energy (honestly, a ménage scene there would have fit the vibe of the series perfectly).
Raffy and Rome were the couple that caught my attention the most, and they deserved much better development. Their dynamic was interesting, bold, and exactly the kind of energy this series needs. Mix’s acting was also really good. His interactions with Raffy were so entertaining to watch.
Another thing that positively surprised me was the lower-body touching and grabbing. The fact that Raffy and Rome were always choosing public places also added a more intense and provocative atmosphere to their scenes.
As for the NC scenes, I thought some of them were really well filmed, with beautiful shots and great choreography especially the Arnold and Tua scene in the middle of the clothes, which looked amazing. But on the other hand, some of the other scenes ended up feeling pretty weak.
Another aspect I really liked was the use of imagery and visual transitions between scenes, as well as the documentary-style approach throughout the series. It gave the show a more dynamic and immersive feeling. However, I do think the documentary storyline itself deserved a more proper conclusion within the series.
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