Visto
Hotel del Luna
A 2 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
16 of 16 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 7.5
Historia 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.5
Música 10
Volver a ver 4.0

recommend to watch

Nice drama, but ML was a little bit, very little bit boring and serious whereas the FL was exciting and fun to watch due to the in-depth character. OST is top notch Punch, Taeyeon
name them. but I did not like how Lee do Hyun was more of a bit or minor character and was shown way lesser.
well acting, great
ost great
storyline, the story writer needs some beating cos of the ending, too vague.
cinematography, well done

I can recommend it to someone else because of IU and the other hotel staff.

I cried, laughed, I was happy, disappointed and I had all the feelings while watching this

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Becoming a Cooking Soldier Legend
A 5 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
12 of 12 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 9.5
Historia 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Música 10
Volver a ver 9.0

? “A recipe of laughter, chaos, and pure entertainment "

The Legend of the Kitchen Soldier was such a fun and entertaining watch from start to finish.

The biggest strength of this drama is how naturally it mixes comedy with enjoyable storytelling.

Every episode kept me interested and never felt boring.
The funny moments landed really well and made the characters feel more lovable.

The main cast had great chemistry and made even simple scenes enjoyable.

I liked how the show stayed light while still keeping the audience invested.

The pacing was smooth and easy to binge.

I enjoyed was when the main character’s cooking skills ended up becoming a turning point and surprised everyone in a really satisfying way.

The humor felt fresh and gave me a lot of genuine laughs.
Overall, it’s one of those dramas you watch to relax and have a good time — highly recommended.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Yao Yan
A 1 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
30 of 30 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 9.5
Historia 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Música 9.0
Volver a ver 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

good but could be better

First i will start off with the fact that the chemistry between the main leads was awesome. I felt the tension between them when she was leaving he didn't want her to leave but he couldn't do anything, especially because the dad said not to contact her again. But the plot in my opinion was pretty good but i did see a hint of similarity between this drama and speed and love. When i started i thought why would cousins date and almost dropped it but decided to watch it. It was worth the watch might be my fav drama for the summer because it was just a summer drama and was what we needed this summer. But i did have a problem with the timings. first they made the part when they were younger so long that they weren't able to show much romance and the romance just felt rushed with him meeting her dad. but the casting for this drama was awesome considering the fact that all of the cast looked really young and fit the younger role really well.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
My Demon
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
16 of 16 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 10
Historia 10
Acting/Cast 10
Música 10
Volver a ver 10

A fantasy romance that perfectly matches my kdrama taste

Bear in mind: My taste in kdramas is very personal and uniquely my own.

I really enjoyed My Demon because it represents exactly the kind of kdrama I naturally gravitate towards. Fantasy romance with gorgeous visuals, intense chemistry, playful banter, emotional tension and a couple whose dynamic makes you want to keep watching them again and again.

For me, this drama was never just about the supernatural storyline. What truly made it memorable was the relationship between Do Do Hee and Gu Won. I loved watching their connection slowly shift from teasing, pride and chaotic power struggles into something much softer, deeper and more protective. Their enemies-to-lovers energy had the perfect balance of humour, tension and emotional vulnerability, which is one of the reasons I found them so addictive as a couple.

The whole drama has a very specific charm that perfectly matches my personal taste. It is stylish, romantic, dramatic, funny, mysterious and visually beautiful. All wrapped in this elegant dark-fairytale atmosphere. The cinematography, outfits, soundtrack and overall mood made every episode feel aesthetically pleasing and emotionally engaging at the same time.

My Demon became one of those dramas that I didn't watch once and move on from. It stayed with me enough to make me rewatch it multiple times because it gives me the exact comfort I love in kdramas. It is the kind of story I enjoy not only for the plot but for the feeling, atmosphere and emotional pull it creates.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Si la Vida te da Mandarinas
A 1 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
por Jirmina
hace 14 días
16 of 16 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 10
Historia 10
Acting/Cast 10
Música 10
Volver a ver 1.0

Masterpiece do século!

Não tenho palavras para descrever a experiência...

E eu que pensava que não me remetia do The Good Bad Mother! Não sei o que dizer mais sem ser: perfeito, a não rever (não porque não foi bom, mas sim por ter medo de chorar outra vez nos mesmos episódios, fiquei tão mal que não conseguia levantar-me sequer) e não aconselhado a corações frágeis como o meu (principalmente o último episódio). Cada cena tem um propósito, cada personagem tem uma história que nos faz relembrar algum momento da nossa vida e se, por ventura, retirassem algum pormenor, a história já não teria o mesmo impacto.
Não tenho nada a dizer sobre o elenco, simplesmente incrível, cada ator/atriz foi escolhido/a a dedo e não mudaria absolutamente nada! A química entre o casal principal foi mágica (mas a IU prefere o Lee Jongsuk e eu entendo) e RECOMENDO todos, independentemente se gostam de k-dramas ou não, a verem.

Props!: para Park Bogum, a emoção na atuação do nosso sunshine foi de outro mundo!
Curiosidade: não só ‘cresci’ um pouco mais como pessoa como alguns factos mencionados ao longo da história me fizeram pensar o quão duro realmente foi sobreviver para os que estavam cá antes de nós.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
En busca del jade
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
40 of 40 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 10
Historia 10
Acting/Cast 10
Música 10
Volver a ver 10

Adaptation perfect ?

Watched this after seeing clips and hearing how great it was in china ( im uk) and was very surprised. The acting and comedy is brilliant! Not usually one for a ancient china based drama but this has a great modern feel of acting and its by far the best ive watched in a long time. So good that it made me dive back into that genre. Absolutely fantastic and love it !
¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Becoming a Cooking Soldier Legend
A 6 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
12 of 12 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 10
Historia 10
Acting/Cast 10
Música 10
Volver a ver 10

sem palavras!

dei play exclusivamente pelo Park JiHoon! quem não for apaixonada pela atuação desse homem tem problema, maaas me encantei com todos os demais do elenco! a história é muito fofa e retrata muitas coisas do militarismo mesmo, claro q com uma baita qtde de comédia, mas a essência do q ela apresentou é real. amei as atuações, as edições, a história! a adaptação do webtoon foi incrível! Não tinha percebido todo o casting do kdrama até começar e depois que comecei não me arrependi em nadam! E pra melhorar, temos mais uma boyband no mundo dos kdramas!
¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Becoming a Cooking Soldier Legend
A 1 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
12 of 12 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 8.5
Historia 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Música 7.0
Volver a ver 8.0

The Recipe for Happiness Under Military Regime

To begin, I’ll borrow inspiration from my old review of Mr. Queen. To create a truly tasty dish, here is the recipe:
“Take a young, popular and likeable actor. Make him play a hero built around the universally comforting theme of cooking. Add an unexpectedly peaceful military setting, a generous dose of humor, passion, and human values. Sprinkle in absurd comedic situations and strong bromance. Finally, season it with RPG-like video game sequences where you gain EXP to level up, and a light touch of romance.” Based on the webcomic of the same name, kitchen utensils replace weapons, because the real danger is… on the plate. Here, there isn’t a trace of physical violence: no bullying, only a few squabbles, and above all challenges that are more digestible than dangerous. Why did this drama work so well in Korea? Probably because it brings together almost all the ingredients the local audience loves. But the real question is elsewhere: will this perfectly calibrated mix manage to appeal to our own taste as well?

Two months after losing his father, a highly respected chef, young conscript Kang Seong-Jae (Park Ji-Hoon) is assigned to the Ganglim forward base, near the North Korean border. This small garrison of 29 men is commanded by Captain Hwang Seok-Ho (Lee Sang-Yi), assisted by Lieutenant Cho Ye-Rin (Han Dong-Hee) and Staff Sergeant Park Jae-Young (Yoon Kyung-Ho). They are all very humane officers. Because of his parents’ profession, Seong-Jae is assigned to the mess hall to assist Sergeant Yoon Dong-Hyun (Lee Hong-Nae) in the kitchen. Not only is he loud-mouthed, but he is also utterly useless at cooking. The verdict is clear: every meal is a disaster, and the entire base is at breaking point. That’s when Seong-Jae is suddenly presented with a hologram that, like in a video game, assigns him missions to earn EXP, level up his skills, and ultimately reach the final goal: becoming the “ultimate chef.” Thus begins the epic journey of the Kitchen Soldier, whose mission is to rebuild cohesion through good food.

What immediately stands out is how quickly the series pulls you in—even if you consider cooking an abstract art. Indeed, food culture is something that unites everyone, across all generations. The concept is also introduced very quickly: we are not simply following a soldier in a remote outpost, but a character evolving like in a video game. EXP, levels, skill unlocks, quests, “resets”… everything is there. This RPG system is treated as a mental reality experienced by the hero—a way for him to cope and reassure himself. The presence of his father figure is also essential in the evolution of his “character sheet.” The outpost is not really an army base; it feels more like a friendly village where everyone depends on one another. Cohesion comes first. The drama deliberately highlights the positive side of military conscription—we are not in D.P. here. The war is not on the battlefield; it takes place in the kitchen. Cohesion around food strengthens camaraderie, and the show fully delivers on its feel-good promise. And to reinforce this concept, food becomes the catalyst for absurd moments: once the palate sends taste information to the brain, an explosion of flavors triggers hallucinations. A rice ball, for example, can spark a full boyband fantasy sequence featuring the Migak Boys’ entire music video.

Why do all these ingredients work so well and feel so appetizing? It mainly comes down to perfect synergy. This is a simple but enjoyable story, with a strong cast, sharp dialogue, and immediately lovable characters you can relate to. Above all, it highlights universally appealing themes: teamwork, camaraderie, motivation, selflessness, naïve optimism, and over-the-top absurd humor. Of course, this is not realism—we are dealing with a live-action adaptation of a webtoon. But does enjoying tasty dishes and sincere characters make us fools? I sincerely hope not. Cooking is a universal language, just like laughter, and both are appreciated in their own way. To spice things up, a subplot involving corruption in the supply chain adds a slightly darker note, showing the zealous behavior of certain higher-ranking officers. But overall, everyone remains well-meaning, with a paternal figure watching over the younger soldiers. Seong-Jae even gets his own awkward romantic moment with Jung Min-A (Jeon So-Young), a girl who has been in love with him since high school—without any manual on how to handle teasing from his comrades.

Of course, everything isn’t perfect: there is a slight dip in energy in one or two episodes. Some moments may feel repetitive, but the spirit remains intact and the simple lifestyle is respected. The pacing is generally solid, even if it slows slightly before the culinary competition finale. Everything is fairly predictable, but that is intentional within this “feel-good utopia”: this is not a harsh world, but one where taste and skill resolve problems instead of fists. This drama is aimed at a family audience, but not only them—everyone can enjoy it, feel emotions, and recharge their dopamine levels. Director Jo Nam-Hyung also shows growth here, serving up a satisfying dish after the excellent The Tale of the Nine-Tailed 1938, which I also recommend. The adaptation of the webcomic—spanning nearly 200 chapters—is quite successful in tone and atmosphere. To be honest, without the “spicy” contributions of Yoon Kyung-Ho, Lee Sang-Yi, and Lee Hong-Nae (who is genuinely excellent), surrounding the very solid Park Ji-Hoon, the drama wouldn’t have had the same flavor. Without their punchlines, the recipe might have left a bitter aftertaste. Thanks to them, the emotional cooking ladle digs out the very best from the bottom of the pot.

Let’s move on to the bill—and rest assured, it won’t be too salty. If you accept the “set menu” formula and don’t try to over-analyze it, you’re in for a treat. Like a good ice cream, The Legend of Kitchen Soldier is a tasty, crunchy dessert—Cyril Lignac would approve. No need for Philippe Etchebest to restore order in the kitchen: Seong-Jae handles the mess hall like a true chef. The series whets your appetite from the very start, even throwing in a small twist in the penultimate episode to whip everything up right before the finale. It’s intense, joyful, and should be taken for what it is: excellent entertainment to enjoy with others. This accumulation of unlikely concepts works surprisingly well, mostly perfectly cooked with a touch of controlled madness. However, I did miss a bit more craziness, and the arc introduced around Captain Im Seung-Bin strangely fizzled out. But as someone not exactly skilled in cooking myself, I still enjoyed this gargantuan meal. (Private joke—this is for you Aude.)
The holographic interface still works, the ending is open… so, “Ready Player One”? And as they say: bon appétit, of course! (Joël Robuchon).
The references to the chefs are French of course :)

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Link: Comer, Amar, Morir
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
por ltspada
hace 14 días
16 of 16 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 8.5
Historia 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Música 9.0
Volver a ver 10
This review may contain spoilers

When Everyone Around has a bit of psychosis (even the "good" guys) so whodunnit is not a slam dunk

Review

My rating: 8.5/10

I really enjoyed Link: Eat, Love, Kill - it wasn't perfect but it was a solid watch. It’s a very good serial killer mystery that does a phenomenal job of making so many of the characters slightly psychotic. This made the “who could it be” aspect much more difficult, as I could genuinely see multiple people being capable of violent acts. This was often revealed in darkly humorous situations that fit the storyline perfectly. 

There are a couple of romances, including of course the main romance between Eun Gye-hoon (male lead) and Noh Da-hyun (main girl), and they all are paced believably and completely feasible. The show is exciting enough that I didn’t find any episodes unnecessary or boring. If you like murder mystery-type dramas, darker humor, and a darker overall tone—or if you’re a fan of either of the main actors or the supporting cast—you would enjoy this. It was well-acted and well-scripted, a really solid offering in this genre.

Spoilers

One of the things that bothered me the most was Noh Da-hyun’s (main girl) total lack of self-preservation. She knows she has a stalker/killer after her and she just walks down dark alleys completely oblivious. Her mother who is so concerned for her still just waits for her worried when simply sending someone to walk with her would have made anything bad happening less likely. It’s hard for me to buy that she would put herself in so many powerless situations all the time. Having a stalker is terrifying, wise people do not put themselves in situations where they could be alone with their nemesis, but she did it time ana again. Her lack of self preservation was further evident toward the end when she does get attacked by the killer, she’s not going full force, which doesn’t make any sense to me. She’s scared but she’s fighting for her life, so that was a little bit disappointing.

There were also quite a few storylines that were started and I didn’t feel were ever completely resolved, like around the stalker. One thing that was really confusing was how he kept gifting her that box with all these items in it, and then it turned out later one of the items was a scarf. Given his girlfriend (who he had more likely than not murdered), he never really got that direct tie. He just knew he was going out with her, said the weird thing to the sister about her not coming back, and then they find her body—but it never directly linked it to him. That left an open question of whether he did that and kept that souvenir from her like a killer keeps items of their victims. Were the rest of the items in that box souvenirs from other victims of his? Anyways, it just completely drops out as if it’s no big deal, and I felt like that was a huge deal. Wanted to see him at least questioned in that case (maybe they would have found out about other victims) but we never got that loop closed.

Then you have the killer guy. I realize they were little kids so they didn’t want to go into too much detail, but it wasn’t clear at all why he took the little kids in particular. Most serial killers pick a type of victim, but for him it was like little kids and then older people. Why those little kids specifically, or was it just any little kids? Did he just want to end somebody and little kids were easier victims? I mean, I know you can never fully know what a psycho’s true motivation is, but usually there’s at least somewhat of a psychological profile to it, and that was completely lacking. He wasn't accused of being a pedophile, didn't show him creeping around little kids, but they seemed to be implying he was—so was he a pedophile or a killer? It’s just weird that we didn’t know more. I know they were trying to carefully approach the subjects, but we never knew what really happened to the sister or what happened to the dad. Since they were buried near each other we can assume the dad discovered who it was and wound up getting killed himself. We never got to know how they ended, and that sounds morbid but you kind of want to know. It just is part of the overall profile of the killer—of how and why, some of their motivations—so that was frustrating.

It’s also hard coming from a culture where self-defense is an acceptable thing if you ever have to use force. It was hard to understand how the mother (Noh Da-hyun’s mom) was in so much trouble when she was not only defending her daughter (Noh Da-hyun) but she was also defending the police officer who was about to get shanked by a chisel. To me, it was proof that such laws are pretty ineffective because they were always disarming themselves with other things—which you would if you couldn’t use a knife or a gun, then you would find other things if you felt in peril, which is exactly what they were doing. So you don’t end people ending other people; you just change what they choose. I have watched a lot of true crime and I would be very concerned about hammers. So, the self-defense and what constituted a weapon were very much outside of my own culture.

If anything, I did like that surprise with Noh Da-hyun’s (main girl) mom’s husband—Noh Da-hyun’s dad obviously was abusive to her, and the grandmother chose to take her daughter-in-law as her daughter rather than maintain a super close relationship with her son. I thought that was very admirable of her.

Korean guilt is always a hard thing for me to process because they feel guilty about different things than we might. Like, I could understand Noh Da-hyun (main girl) feeling guilty for letting go of the sister's hand, but for anyone else to even minimally blame her for that—was weird. It looked like the sister deliberately shook her hand to break the grip. In any case they were children and who can judge what they do when they are running from a monster. Usually it’s self-blame, but others understand the circumstances. Same thing with the mother getting rid of the second kidnapper, she felt guilty over that. Like she should turn herself in. I mean it was a crime in her culture but I get the police officer's perspective. Since we do not know the motivation of the second kidnapper, maybe he was a pedophile so she Freddie Kruegered him. We just don't know. Eun Gye-hoon (male lead) was mad at her for not turning herself in because he felt like somehow that would’ve helped them find his sister, which really wasn’t true at all at that point. It was two separate things. And you had a mother who came upon a situation where someone had hurt her daughter. Of course she wasn't in her right mind.

With the older man that left main guy's twin sister in the road when she asked for help, I was just flabbergasted. Like, what crazy adult would ever leave a child who said to please help as they had a bad person chasing them? It just showed how many morally gray and downright psychotic people there were in that little town and that little community. I was glad she haunted him—if anything, he needed to be haunted even more. He should have had every child that died of such crimes haunting him. What he did was unimaginably horrible, and he was partially responsible for the murder.

I also found it extremely annoying just how many times they broke it off. One time was really frustrating because Eun Gye-hoon (male lead) had just said how he couldn’t live without her, then he finds out that the mom dispatched the other kidnapper and didn’t tell, which might’ve helped lead to the sister. I don’t know, but it was so weird because you would’ve thought they would understand that everybody in that situation was so dramatically affected. But it was another break up. She broke up with him before because seeing her knowing she let go of his sister's hand might be too painful for him. So, they broke up any time it got hard. It makes you wonder for their future. So, it chilled the romance a bit for me. I felt like that wasn't what defined this one as much or set it apart it was more the mystery and dark comedy. The whole link thing was weird too. A large portion of their reltationship she didn't know, or didn't believe, he could feel her emotions. So, it might it sort of a meaningless plot point. It was better when she could feel his emotions too. It was more important in the beginning.

Eun Gye-hoon’s (male lead) mom was just horrible. I didn’t find it excusable—she lost her child and then was such a cold, unfeeling person to her other child. It made no sense, and she blamed him and treated him horribly because his sister had passed. He was a child, a little kid—it was not his responsibility to look after his younger sister to that level. I mean, he was the sibling; siblings fight all the time and go and do things. My older sister made it a point to ditch me. So I never found her a redeemable character. I was glad she came back around eventually, but I was still like, lady, you’ve got a lot of making up to do. You were completely cold and horrible, and all the emotional damage your son experienced was because of you.

I was also very disappointed because with it in the title, I thought there would be more about the restaurant and the food and preparing the food, but that was such a background part of everything. It was this restaurant that always seemed on the verge of opening. I was like, oh come on, open already. Thankfully we did eventually get to see it open, but it was weird because it seemed like it should’ve been a bigger part of the story and it just wasn’t. Also, with the son-in-law that knew how to cook, I thought it was weird that he didn’t teach his future mother-in-law how to cook better. She could’ve had a Korean restaurant across from his very successful European restaurant. It would’ve actually helped both businesses and it would’ve insured a better livelihood for his mother instead of her seeming like she was gonna rely on her daughter for financial support. I mean, fair, but at the same time, why not have two successful ones?

Overall, still a very enjoyable watch despite these frustrations!​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
En curso 6/10
Así Aprenderás
A 1 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
6 of 10 episodios vistos
En curso 0
Global 8.0
Historia 7.5
Acting/Cast 3.5
Música 1.0
Volver a ver 5.0
This review may contain spoilers

Wrong actress for the lead

This would have been a perfect 10 for me if not for the female actress. Her voice is so shrill I feel like muting my tv every time she screamed. She also doesn't have a loud authoritative voice so every time she shouts, it just irritated me even more.

And her character is so not suitable to be part of the bureau; Impatient, reckless and also acts as a bully toward her colleague. Why did the writers create a character with a personality like that to be part of the bureau?

I’ve already finished episode 6 and so far she’s not contributed much to the team, except to do some interviews, beat up some juveniles and accuse ML of being biased towards students because of his backstory, even though she’s known him for years prior. LOL

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
En curso 19/24
Chu Hou
A 7 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
19 of 24 episodios vistos
En curso 0
Global 9.0
Historia 7.5
Acting/Cast 9.5
Música 10
Volver a ver 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Non-Biased Review Up to Current Ep 19

This is my first ever review so please excuse me if this isn't the best.

So this story is simple, a rebirth series where our FL gets killed and used by one of our antagonist. It's a pretty fast paced story with only 24 eps. I like Chen Duling so I decided to watch it for her and it's my first series for Zhou Yiren. You see what happens to our FL in ep1, what transpires and how she meets our ML before her death. Right after being reborn/brought back, she basically goes into action trying to change her fate all in what seems like a night. I liked the pacing this was going at, I had questions but it kept me interested because it wasn't beating around the bush in the beginning half and I wanted to see where and how she was going to change the course of her life.

We got to see our FL fail and get back up, get mentally stronger while figuring out who in the palace she could use to get her revenge. This then introduces us to what I would call our 3 main antagonist. In the first half, it get's interesting, as the viewer I'm trying to figure out what their intentions are and just what kind of character they are. As to the fiancé in our FL's first life, we already know straight up what he wants so to me his character is already set in stone. The other two, it was a mystery because I still didn't know exactly what kind of "bad" guy they're going to play but one thing for sure, there is A LOT of using each other, and mind games between FL and the 3 antagonist. Especially Deng Yi and Xie YF, in the beginning it was funny to see but in the second half I got bored of it and was watching their parts on x2 speed. It gets a little redundant. One of the biggest issue for me is that the 3 antagonist and the FL are all playing a game of chess. It's a back and forth back and forth game and as of ep19 I'm like okay, where is this going now? I need more, I need something to happen, I need to start seeing their cards because we don't have a lot of eps left until the end and I don't want it to rush (which is probably will). This series isn't heavily focused on the politics, which I prefer. It has just enough since she becomes the Grand Princess so I appreciate that.

The plot itself could use more, and I've seen some watchers say she's not getting rid of anyone etc, no killings, but to me it's understandable from both sides because one, I get that she's the Princess, she can't just go on a killing spree, which is why she was trying so hard to bring into light the fact that her ex-husband wanted to kill the current emperor. She's playing this chess game with the other 2 antagonist who are also very smart in their own way and probably have survived all this time because of the tactics they used. I also understand why some are annoyed because no one bad has died yet, and I so wish it had happened already because sometimes Im like, okay where is the revenge? Like c'mon, lets get to it, but then I remind myself she's not just a generals daughter anymore. So I'm trying my best to be patient. The revenge just seems to be very slow at moving in order for us viewers to see the results. The story/plot isn't super heavy and dark, which I appreciate but there's definitely room for improvement.

Now, for the MAIN reason why this series still has me even though there are some areas for improvement... my ML and FL. I seriously LOVE all their scenes together. It's never dull and dry. This isn't just a "because they're beautiful and handsome" reason, I'm talking about their chemistry and what they bring to their scenes. I've said this already, but their love isn't on a grand scale like other ML/FL's we've seen. Their actions say much more than their words. The gazes they give to each other says so much without a lot of conversation in my opinion. The way they wipe each others tears, the way they hold each others hands, from the teasing she gives him, to him not being able to look her in the eyes, I mean it's just everything. You feel the tension, the playfulness, the longing, and the way A'Jiu goes out of his way to protect her? Don't get me wrong, she's not a damsel in distress where she always needs his help. She can stand on her own two feet. This series isn't heavily focused on romance but gives us very very good couple scenes where it makes you giddy and in my case, just smiling ear to ear cause I get butterflies from their interactions. I think this series is a somewhat good balance of romance, politics, drama, mystery etc. with some areas for improvement. I'm waiting for the rest of the eps to rate it again. I always say, watch 3-5 eps to see if you like it, if you don't, you gave it a fair shot. Sometimes drama series don't really get going until ep 5 for me. Anyways, I'm excited and I can't wait to see how this all plays out!

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Esto Que Sentimos
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
8 of 8 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 8.0
Historia 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Música 9.0
Volver a ver 7.0

Voice overs ruined a lot!

This was a sweet drama, it had a classic story about 2 highschool boys who became friends and the slow path to realizing they were in love. The toxic classmate made the story a bit more interesting.
I loved how the cousin and Ouyang Han were first love rivals, but later on they were the ones to help Yu Lei and Chen Ke realize they were in love. So the good kind of love rivals, who backed off when they realize it's useless and turn to help instead.

The visuals were good and the music beautiful. The production didn't do so good. There were some cut of scenes and the voice over ruined a lot for me.
The actors were mostly unexperienced, but they did good. Unfortunatly that diddn't really come through because of the voice overs.
Both couples had good chemistry and kissses. The second couple even had 2 good NC scenes!

One really bad thing was the snow in episode 3 that looked a lot more like foam.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
El Caso del Espantapájaros
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
por Juelkkk
hace 14 días
12 of 12 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 8.0
Historia 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Música 9.0
Volver a ver 6.5

Grim Reality in Great Production

It was a good watch. Park Hae Soo and Lee Hee Jun did a tremendous job, their acting was really great. The same could be said about the rest of the cast. Music was very fitting, especially the opening song really got you and sent shivers down the spine. The story was quite good; however, the exposition was not always the best. The camera sometimes pointed at something so aggressively that it was almost insulting, as if it were saying "see, this is the thing that was mentioned seconds ago, and it is here!!! here!!! look!!!". Two last episodes felt kind of rushed, I wish there were more shown about the present time. The characters were its strongest point. Sometimes, even the "good guys" are not that good and sometimes, nobody really wins.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Thirty But Seventeen
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
32 of 32 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 9.0
Historia 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Música 8.5
Volver a ver 9.5

O tempo reencontrado: A delicada e emocionante arte de recomeçar quando o mundo seguiu sem você

É uma das obras mais doces, sensíveis e terapêuticas da teledramaturgia coreana. Com um roteiro brilhante de Jo Sung Hee, o drama usa uma premissa incomum para construir uma metáfora belíssima sobre o luto pelo tempo perdido, o peso dos traumas psicológicos e a beleza de encontrar acolhimento quando o mundo parece assustador demais.

O coração da história bate no contraste doloroso e, ao mesmo tempo, poético de seus protagonistas, cujas vidas essencialmente pararam aos dezessete anos devido ao mesmo acidente de ônibus. Woo Seo Ri (interpretada com uma entrega física e emocional magistral por Shin Hae Sun) acorda de um coma de 13 anos. Fisicamente ela tem 30 anos, mas sua mente, seus sonhos de violinista prodígio e sua inocência ainda pertencem a uma adolescente de 17. Ao cruzar o caminho de Gong Woo Jin (Yang Se Jong), um cenógrafo excêntrico que se isolou do mundo e desenvolveu uma aversão a conexões humanas para fugir da culpa do passado, a narrativa deslancha. O processo de coabitação forçada entre eles não serve apenas para gerar momentos cômicos e adoráveis, mas provoca uma reflexão profunda sobre transição e identidade: como se encaixar em uma idade adulta que você não escolheu e para a qual não foi preparado?

A direção de Jo Soo Won e Kim Young Hwan brilha ao criar uma atmosfera de conto de fadas urbano que nunca perde os pés no chão quando o assunto é o sofrimento real dos personagens. O elenco de apoio é simplesmente perfeito e traz uma sensação de lar indispensável para a cura dos protagonistas — desde a performance enérgica e solar de Ahn Hyo Seop como o jovem Yoo Chan (com o seu inesquecível lema "Don't think, feel!"), até a misteriosa e rígida governanta Jennifer (Ye Ji Won). Se você procura um drama reconfortante, que trate de dores profundas com uma leveza poética e que prove que nunca é tarde para abrir as portas para a felicidade, Still 17 merece cada minuto do seu tempo.
Um verdadeiro abraço em forma de k-drama! A atuação de Shin Hae Sun é de uma sensibilidade absurda, fazendo a gente rir e chorar com a ingenuidade e a força da Seo Ri.
Um drama com ritmo redondo, trilha sonora instrumental linda e personagens secundários apaixonantes que justificam.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Visto
Jugglers
A 0 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
hace 14 días
16 of 16 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 8.0
Historia 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.0
Música 7.5
Volver a ver 7.5

Equilibristas da firma: O caos delicioso e real de tentar sobreviver ao mundo corporativo

Sabe aquele cansaço clássico de quem passa o dia inteiro equilibrando mil pratos no trabalho, respondendo e-mail, agendando reunião e ainda tentando não surtar? Jugglers (2017) captura exatamente essa vibe da "vida adulta corporativa", mas envelopada em uma comédia romântica super leve, divertida e deliciosa de acompanhar. O título não mentiu: o drama acompanha pessoas que fazem verdadeiros malabarismos para manter o emprego e a sanidade em dia.

O grande motor da história é o choque cultural e de personalidade entre a Jwa Yoon Yi (Baek Jin Hee) e o Nam Chi Won (Choi Daniel). Ela é a definição da secretária perfeita, ultraeficiente e acostumada a antecipar cada passo do chefe, beirando a passividade para agradar. Já ele é aquele chefe absurdamente introvertido, nerd, que odeia interações sociais desnecessárias e quer distância da vida dos outros. Ver esses dois universos colidirem é garantia de boas risadas. A dinâmica funciona muito bem porque provoca aquela reflexão de escritório: até que ponto a gente deve se anular pelo trabalho? Conforme eles são obrigados a conviver, o roteiro de Jo Yong entrega um amadurecimento bem legal, mostrando o Chi Won aprendendo a se abrir e a Yoon Yi descobrindo como impor limites saudáveis na carreira.

Com a direção ágil de Kim Jung Hyun e Kang Soo Yeon, a série entrega um ambiente de escritório super carismático, cheio de personagens secundários hilários que todo mundo que já trabalhou em uma firma vai reconhecer (com destaque para o divertido Hwang Bo Yool vivido por Lee Won Keun). Pode não revolucionar o gênero, mas entrega exatamente o que promete: conforto, risadas e aquela sensação gostosa de que, no fundo, todo mundo no trabalho está só tentando dar o seu melhor.
Uma comédia de escritório super gostosa e despretensiosa! Choi Daniel entrega um chefe ranzinza muito fofo e a Baek Jin Hee é uma querida. Perfeito para maratonar depois de um dia cansativo de trabalho e dar aquela desanuviada na mente.

Leer más

¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?