Completados
Love In the Air: Koi no Yokan
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
8 of 8 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 8.0
História 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 7.0
Voltar a ver 7.0

Love in the Air: Koi no Yokan — A Remake That Surprisingly Improves One Half of the Story

Whenever a successful BL gets remade, I immediately become sceptical. The original Love in the Air set a very high standard, so I wasn't expecting the Japanese version to compete with it. Surprisingly, it managed to do something I didn't think was possible: I actually preferred the first couple over the Thai version.

The production is clearly more modest. You can immediately tell that the budget is much smaller than the original series. The racing scenes are simpler, the locations are less spectacular, and the overall scale feels more intimate. The good news is that none of those limitations really hurt the story. Instead of trying to imitate the Thai production scene for scene, the series embraces a quieter, more character-focused approach that suits the Japanese style surprisingly well.

The biggest surprise is the relationship between Rei and Arashi. Their chemistry feels incredibly natural, and I actually found their romance more believable than Rain and Payu's in the original. The performances are more restrained, allowing the emotional progression to feel smoother and less theatrical. Rather than relying on overwhelming physical attraction, the relationship develops through small gestures and genuine affection, making it easier for me to become emotionally invested.

Unfortunately, I can't say the same about the second couple.

Sky's story was always the emotional heart of Love in the Air, and Peat Wasuthorn delivered one of the most heartbreaking performances I've seen in a BL. That's an incredibly difficult role to recreate, and while the Japanese actors certainly try their best, I never felt the same emotional impact. The trauma, vulnerability, and gradual healing are all present, but they don't hit with the same intensity. The chemistry between the second couple is also less convincing, making several important scenes feel emotionally flatter than they should.

The acting overall is actually very good. The cast understands the quieter style of Japanese dramas and avoids exaggerated performances, which works perfectly for the first storyline. My criticism isn't really directed at the actors themselves but rather at the impossible comparison they have to face. Recreating one of the strongest emotional arcs in modern BL was always going to be an enormous challenge.

Visually, the series makes intelligent use of its smaller budget. Instead of attempting to compete with the original's scale, it focuses on intimate cinematography and character interactions. The result feels more personal than spectacular, and I think that was the right decision. The soundtrack also fits the atmosphere well, even if it never becomes particularly memorable.

Final Thought

Love in the Air: Koi no Yokan proves that a remake doesn't have to copy everything to succeed. I genuinely preferred the first couple over the Thai version because their relationship felt more natural and believable. The second half, however, never reaches the emotional power of the original, making the overall series slightly less impactful. Even so, this is a respectful adaptation that successfully finds its own identity instead of simply trying to imitate one of the most popular BLs of recent years.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Double Helix
1 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
de Yukii
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 10
História 10
Acting/Cast 10
Musical 7.5
Voltar a ver 10

.

What an emotional rollercoaster. This series took me through every feeling imaginable. 🤍

Sometimes, there’s just one person you can never truly let go of—no matter how much time passes.

A beautiful and heartfelt story that stayed with me long after it ended. Definitely one I’ll remember. ✨

.. ... ... .... .... .... .... .. .. ... ... .... .... .... .... .. .. ... ..

🌸✨🌈 Hiii~ Welcome to my kawaii corner~ ♡(≧▽≦)ノ✨🌸

You can find more of my reviews on Instagram~ 🌟💖

Check my homepage for my account~ (。♥‿♥。) 🌷

Some reviews are under 500 words, so I can’t post them here~ (≧ω≦)ノ💫

Thank you sooo much~ ☆:.。.o(≧▽≦)o.。.:☆ 💕🌸

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Amor no Ar
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
13 of 13 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 7.0
História 8.0
Acting/Cast 6.0
Musical 7.0
Voltar a ver 7.0

Love in the Air — Beautifully Produced, but Not Every Casting Choice Worked for Me

After reading MAME's novel before watching the adaptation, I had very high expectations for Love in the Air. Thankfully, the series gets many things right. The production quality is outstanding, the story remains faithful to the spirit of the novel, and several emotional moments are even stronger on screen than I imagined while reading. Visually, this is easily one of the best-looking BLs I've watched. Some scenes genuinely feel closer to a high-budget film than a television drama.

The cinematography deserves special praise. Every frame feels carefully composed, from the racing scenes to the romantic moments and the quieter emotional conversations. The lighting, camera work, and overall visual direction constantly elevate the material, making the series feel much more expensive than most BL productions.

The story also remains one of MAME's strongest. Splitting the drama into two couples works surprisingly well because each relationship explores completely different emotions. Payu and Rain bring the lighter, more playful romance, while Prapai and Sky gradually take the story into much darker and more emotional territory. Rather than feeling disconnected, the two halves complement each other beautifully.

My biggest criticism is the casting of Rain.

Noeul Nuttarat certainly commits himself to the role, and I completely understand why many viewers enjoy his performance. Personally, however, I never found him believable as Rain. His mannerisms are so exaggerated that I struggled to accept the character's initial innocence whenever Payu openly flirts with him. From the very beginning, it felt like Noeul was performing the character instead of becoming him. Compared to the novel, where Rain comes across as naturally naïve rather than theatrical, I felt the adaptation pushed that aspect much too far.

Fortunately, Boss Chaikamon balances the relationship perfectly. His confidence, charisma, and calm presence make Payu exactly the kind of character I imagined while reading the novel. Even when I wasn't fully convinced by Rain, Boss remained consistently believable, and his chemistry with Noeul is ultimately what keeps the first half of the series entertaining.

Then comes the second couple...

For me, Peat Wasuthorn completely steals the show.

Sky is by far the most emotionally demanding character in the series, and Peat delivers a heartbreaking performance. His portrayal of trauma, fear, and vulnerability feels painfully real. Several scenes genuinely made me cry because you can almost feel the weight his character carries every single day. Unlike Rain, Sky feels almost exactly as I imagined him while reading the novel. Every emotional breakdown, every moment of hesitation, and every small step toward healing feels completely earned.

Fort Thitipong also deserves recognition for understanding that Prapai isn't simply a charming flirt. Behind his confidence is someone willing to patiently wait until the person he loves is ready to trust again. Together, Fort and Peat create the strongest relationship in the series, not because it's the most passionate, but because it's built on healing rather than seduction.

The soundtrack isn't particularly memorable, but it supports the atmosphere well enough without ever becoming distracting. More importantly, the series understands when silence is more powerful than music, especially during Sky's most emotional scenes.

Final Thought

Love in the Air is one of the most visually impressive BLs I've seen, with excellent production values and a story that successfully brings MAME's novel to life. While I never completely accepted Noeul as Rain, the performances from Boss, Fort, and especially Peat more than compensate. Peat's portrayal of Sky is one of the most emotional performances I've seen in a BL, and by itself makes this series worth watching.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
TharnType 2 Special 2
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
1 of 1 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 9.5
História 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 9.0
Voltar a ver 8.5

TharnType Season 2 Special: The Wedding Day — The Perfect Goodbye

After following Tharn and Type through everything they experienced over the past two years, I honestly couldn't have asked for a better ending. The Wedding Day isn't trying to create one last dramatic obstacle or force unnecessary conflict between them. Instead, it celebrates everything the couple has overcome and gives them the happy ending they truly deserve.

The story is wonderfully simple because it doesn't need to be anything else. This special isn't about asking whether Tharn and Type belong together anymore—that question was answered long ago. It's about watching two people who fought through countless misunderstandings, personal struggles, and family issues finally reach the point where they can confidently choose each other forever. Sometimes, that's all an ending needs.

Mew Suppasit and Gulf Kanawut remain the heart of the entire franchise. Their chemistry feels just as effortless as ever, and because we've spent so much time watching these characters grow together, every smile, every joke, and every emotional moment carries extra weight. They don't have to convince us that Tharn and Type love each other anymore. We already know it, and that's exactly what makes this final chapter so satisfying.

One thing I particularly appreciated is that the special gives fans time to simply enjoy the couple. Rather than rushing from one dramatic event to another, it allows us to celebrate alongside them. After all the emotional highs and lows of the series, slowing down was exactly the right decision. It makes the wedding feel earned instead of simply becoming another plot point.

The production also feels slightly more polished than before. The ceremony itself is beautifully presented without becoming overly extravagant, and the music fits the atmosphere perfectly. For once, I actually noticed the soundtrack because it quietly enhances the emotion instead of disappearing into the background.

More than anything, this special feels like a farewell—not just to Tharn and Type, but to everything this franchise has represented. It's the final chapter of a journey that began with two completely opposite personalities learning to understand each other, and it ends exactly where it should: with two people choosing to build a life together.

Final Thought

The Wedding Day is the ending I wanted for Tharn and Type. It doesn't rely on unnecessary drama or last-minute twists because it understands that the journey has already been completed. Instead, it gives fans one final opportunity to celebrate one of BL's most memorable couples and lets the story close with happiness rather than heartbreak. As a conclusion to both the series and Mew and Gulf's journey as Tharn and Type, I honestly couldn't have asked for much more.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Pluto
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
de b.
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 8.5
História 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.5
Musical 9.0
Voltar a ver 8.0

A must to watch

Pluto will always hold a special place in my heart; it’s the kind of story where you connect with the characters from various perspectives and find yourself debating what you would have done in their shoes. Words can hardly do justice to Namtam and Film’s performances in this project; anyone familiar with their work knows they have nothing left to prove when it comes to acting, yet here you can truly see and feel that they poured their all into it. While I think the story's pacing could have been better at times, and perhaps some technical choices could have been different, none of that detracts from the narrative flow, and this drama definitely ranks among the very best GL series.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
TharnType 2
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 9.0
História 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 5.0
Voltar a ver 8.0

TharnType 2: 7 Years of Love — Growing Up Doesn't Mean Love Becomes Less Exciting

One thing I appreciated immediately about TharnType 2 is that it doesn't try to repeat the first season. Seven years have passed, and thankfully the writers allow the characters to grow with that time. Instead of watching two young men discovering love for the first time, we're now following an established couple learning how to build a future together. It's a different kind of romance, but one I found just as enjoyable.

The story naturally feels more mature. The conflicts are no longer about whether Tharn and Type belong together, but about the challenges every long-term relationship eventually faces. Careers, trust, jealousy, family expectations, and the fear of change all become part of their everyday life. I actually enjoyed that shift because it shows that staying together can sometimes be just as difficult as falling in love.

What continues to carry the entire series is Mew Suppasit and Gulf Kanawut.

Their chemistry is still outstanding.

If anything, they look even more comfortable together than they did in the first season. Every scene feels effortless because they no longer have to convince us that Tharn and Type love each other. We already believe it. The affection between them feels natural, whether they're teasing each other, arguing, or simply sharing quiet moments at home. That's exactly how an established couple should look.

The intimate scenes also deserve credit. Like the first season, they never rely on explicit content to create passion. Instead, it's the trust between the actors and the confidence of their performances that makes every romantic moment believable. Few BL couples manage to create that level of intimacy while keeping it emotionally meaningful rather than simply provocative.

The supporting cast once again brings plenty of energy to the series. Some secondary storylines are stronger than others, but I enjoyed seeing familiar faces return and watching how everyone's lives had evolved over the years. While the focus occasionally shifts away from Tharn and Type for longer than necessary, I never felt completely disconnected from the main story.

Visually, the production remains consistent with the first season. The direction is confident, the pacing rarely drags, and the emotional scenes are given enough time to breathe. The soundtrack isn't particularly memorable, but it supports the atmosphere well without becoming distracting.

If I have one criticism, it's that some of the new conflicts don't feel quite as powerful as those in the original series. The emotional intensity of discovering each other for the first time is naturally impossible to recreate, and a few dramatic moments seem designed more to create temporary tension than to genuinely challenge the relationship. Even so, because the central couple is so convincing, those weaker moments never significantly affected my enjoyment.

Final Thought

TharnType 2: 7 Years of Love proves that romance doesn't end once two characters become a couple. Watching Tharn and Type navigate adult life together was just as rewarding as watching them fall in love. Mew and Gulf once again deliver outstanding performances, and their chemistry remains among the very best in BL. It may tell a quieter story than Season 1, but it's a story that feels honest, mature, and completely worth following.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
TharnType Special
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
1 of 1 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 9.0
História 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 5.0
Voltar a ver 8.0

TharnType Special: Our Final Love — Fan Service Done the Right Way

After everything Tharn and Type went through during the series, I didn't need another major conflict. I simply wanted to see them happy together, and that's exactly what Our Final Love delivers. This special isn't trying to surpass the original story. It's simply a reward for everyone who became attached to the couple.

The plot is admittedly very simple. If you're expecting shocking twists or dramatic revelations, you'll probably be disappointed. Most of the special focuses on everyday life, showing what happens after the happy ending. Normally, I would criticise a story for having so little happening, but here it actually works because watching Tharn and Type as an established couple is satisfying enough on its own.

Mew Suppasit and Gulf Kanawut once again prove why they became one of the most talked-about BL pairings. Their chemistry is still exceptional. Every interaction feels effortless, whether they're teasing each other, arguing over something trivial, or sharing quieter romantic moments. Nothing feels forced, and because we've already spent an entire season with these characters, even the smallest scenes carry emotional weight.

One thing I appreciated is that the special doesn't create unnecessary drama simply to justify its existence. Too many sequels invent conflicts that damage the original relationship. Here, the focus remains on the couple themselves. It's warm, romantic, and occasionally funny without ever losing sight of why people fell in love with Tharn and Type in the first place.

That being said, I understand why some viewers might find it slow. There isn't much story beyond spending more time with the characters, and the special clearly prioritises fan service over plot progression. Personally, I didn't mind because that's exactly what I expected from an epilogue.

The production remains consistent with the original series. The direction, cinematography, and performances all maintain the same quality, making the special feel like a natural continuation rather than a separate project.

Final Thought

TharnType Special: Our Final Love is exactly what a special episode should be. It doesn't try to reinvent the story or create artificial conflict. Instead, it gives fans one last opportunity to enjoy Tharn and Type together before saying goodbye. Thanks to Mew and Gulf's outstanding chemistry, that's more than enough to make this a satisfying conclusion.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Em andamento 3/12
Wat Fan Wan Wiwa
6 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
de Yu Mei
16 dias atrás
3 of 12 episódios vistos
Em andamento 0
No geral 10
História 10
Acting/Cast 10
Musical 10
Voltar a ver 10

Gl of the year

Absolutely incredible acting performance from LingOrm, they indeed improved a lot and I'm pretty sure the next episodes will keep surprising me. I dare to say this will become my favorite project so far, the story is really intriguing and makes me want to watch more and more.
Also I would like to praise a bit the director, his work is amazing, I had already heard that he was good, but seeing with my own eyes is another story, he really knows what he's doing.
Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
TharnType: A série
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 9.0
História 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 5.0
Voltar a ver 8.0

TharnType — The BL That Dared to Go Further

I honestly didn't expect a BL to go this far. Most series until now have been fairly innocent, but TharnType isn't afraid to portray physical attraction as an important part of a romantic relationship. The intimate scenes are some of the hottest I've seen in a BL, not because they show everything, but because of how they're directed. Through the tension, the performances, and the chemistry between the actors, the series manages to be incredibly sensual without relying on explicit nudity. It feels bold, mature, and surprisingly realistic.

What impressed me even more is that those scenes aren't there just for shock value. They help build the relationship between Tharn and Type and show how their feelings evolve over time. Their physical attraction grows alongside their emotional connection, making the romance feel much more believable than in many BLs where a simple kiss is treated as the ultimate reward.

The story is another major strength. At first glance, it seems like a simple enemies-to-lovers romance, but it quickly becomes much more than that. Type is a complicated character whose hatred of gay men comes from a traumatic past, while Tharn patiently tries to understand him instead of giving up. The series constantly explores trust, forgiveness, jealousy, family, friendship, and personal growth, making every episode feel important. There are plenty of twists throughout the story, but they never feel unnecessary because they all contribute to the development of the main characters.

Mew Suppasit and Gulf Kanawut are excellent together. Their chemistry is undeniable and carries the entire series from beginning to end. Gulf, despite being new to BL, delivers a remarkably convincing performance. His emotional scenes feel genuine, and he handles the romantic moments with a confidence I honestly wasn't expecting. It's easy to understand why this series is bringing him so much international attention. Mew also perfectly captures Tharn's patience, confidence, and vulnerability, creating a character who remains likeable even during the story's more difficult moments.

The supporting cast also deserves praise. Rather than existing only to fill screen time, most of the secondary characters have their own personalities and conflicts, making the university setting feel alive. Some subplots are stronger than others, but they all contribute to the feeling that this is a world where every character has their own story.

The production isn't perfect. Some editing choices are a little rough, and the soundtrack isn't particularly memorable. There are also moments where the drama becomes more melodramatic than necessary. Still, those flaws never prevented me from becoming emotionally invested in the story.

Final Thought

TharnType is one of the boldest BLs I've watched. It combines excellent chemistry, memorable characters, emotional storytelling, and a level of romantic intensity that feels genuinely refreshing. Mew and Gulf make every scene believable, and together they create a relationship that's impossible to ignore. Whether because of the romance, the drama, or the chemistry, this is a series I won't forget anytime soon.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Fake Fact Lips
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
9 of 9 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 9.0
História 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Musical 8.5
Voltar a ver 9.0
Esta resenha pode conter spoilers

Simple but i like the pacing

Didn't read the manga, so this review is based purely on the series.

It may look like your typical enemies-to-lovers trope because it is. But I think what made me enjoy it was the pacing. Everything moved at just the right speed without feeling dragged out. We got to see the root of their rivalry, how they slowly started liking each other, their relationship, the usual conflicts that come with dating, and, of course, a happy ending.

If you really analyze it, there's nothing that makes you go, "Wow." But you know what? I still liked it. 😂 I enjoyed the jealousy scenes and even the misunderstandings. Just a simple series to season my week.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Amor Por Acaso
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
14 of 14 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 8.0
História 8.0
Acting/Cast 6.0
Musical 3.0
Voltar a ver 6.0

Love By Chance — A Sweet Romance That Simply Works

Love By Chance isn't trying to reinvent romance. It's a simple university love story, but what makes it so enjoyable is how natural everything feels. The relationship develops at a comfortable pace, the conflicts rarely become frustrating, and most importantly, I actually cared about the characters. Sometimes that's all a good BL needs.

The biggest strength of the series is undoubtedly Perth Tanapon and Saint Suppapong. They immediately make Ae and Pete believable as a couple. Perth gives Ae exactly the confidence and protectiveness the character needs without making him feel overbearing, while Saint perfectly captures Pete's innocence and kindness. Their personalities complement each other naturally, making their relationship easy to support from the very beginning.

Their chemistry also feels genuine. Nothing ever looks forced, and even the quieter moments between them are enjoyable to watch. Rather than relying on constant fan service, the series lets the relationship grow through everyday interactions, making the romance feel sincere instead of exaggerated.

The supporting couples are a little more uneven. Some storylines are much stronger than others, and there are moments where I found myself wanting to return to Ae and Pete rather than following the secondary characters. Still, they help create a lively university atmosphere and keep the story from becoming repetitive.

The production is fairly simple, but it suits the tone of the drama. The university setting feels believable, the pacing remains pleasant throughout, and the series knows when to be funny without turning every scene into comedy. The soundtrack isn't particularly memorable, but it supports the story well enough without becoming distracting.

If I have one criticism, it's that the story occasionally plays things a little too safely. There aren't many surprises, and several situations are fairly predictable. However, because the leads are so likeable, I never really minded. I was simply happy spending time with them and watching their relationship develop.

Final Thought

Love By Chance is exactly the kind of BL that leaves you smiling after each episode. It doesn't need complicated twists or unnecessary drama because the chemistry between Perth and Saint carries the entire series. Their relationship feels sincere, the romance is enjoyable from beginning to end, and despite a few predictable moments, it's a very satisfying watch.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
My Sweetheart Jom: Uncut
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 5.0
História 5.0
Acting/Cast 6.0
Musical 4.0
Voltar a ver 4.0

My Sweetheart Jom: Uncut — A Little More Romance, but the Same Overall Impression

Like many Uncut editions, this version simply feels more complete. The additional scenes give the relationship a little more breathing room, some emotional moments flow more naturally, and the romance benefits from a few extra interactions between the leads.

That said, none of the added footage changes my overall opinion of the series. Poom Nuttapart still dominates the screen with his natural charisma and intensity, while Saint Suppapong's performance still feels too restrained for a character who should command much more presence. Their chemistry improves slightly thanks to the extended scenes, but not enough to fundamentally change the dynamic.

The story also remains exactly the same. The beautiful countryside setting is still one of the drama's greatest strengths, while the slow pacing and lack of emotional impact remain its biggest weaknesses. The Uncut Version smooths the experience, but it doesn't fix the issues that prevented the series from becoming memorable.

Final Thought

My Sweetheart Jom: Uncut is the version I'd recommend to anyone watching the series for the first time, simply because it feels a little more polished. However, don't expect a different drama. The extra scenes improve the romance, but they don't change the performances, the story, or my overall opinion of the series.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
My Sweet Heart Jom
0 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
12 of 12 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 5.0
História 5.0
Acting/Cast 6.0
Musical 4.0
Voltar a ver 4.0

My Sweetheart Jom — One Actor Brings the Fire, the Story Never Does

My Sweetheart Jom is one of those dramas that isn't bad enough to hate but never good enough to become memorable. It has an attractive cast, a pleasant rural setting, and a few interesting ideas, yet nothing ever truly comes together. By the end, I didn't dislike it—I simply didn't feel much of anything.

The person who constantly caught my attention was Poom Nuttapart. Every time he's on screen, he radiates confidence and desire. Even in scenes that aren't written to be particularly intimate, he has this intensity in his eyes and body language that makes it look like his character is constantly restraining himself. That's become his trademark. After watching several of his dramas, I honestly think he'd be excellent in a role where his character fully embraces that dominant, emotionally driven energy instead of trying to suppress it. He has a natural magnetism that's difficult to teach.

Saint Suppapong, on the other hand, left me unconvinced. Returning to BL after several years should have been an opportunity to remind everyone why he became so popular in the first place. Instead, I found his performance surprisingly flat. His character is supposed to be an accomplished chef with confidence and authority, yet I never truly felt either. The role needed someone capable of quietly dominating a room. Instead, he often blended into the background while Poom naturally drew the eye. Whether it was the writing, the direction, or simply a role that didn't suit him, the result never reached the level I expected.

That imbalance also explains why the romance never worked for me.

Chemistry isn't just about looking good together. It's about creating the illusion that two people can't stay away from each other. Here, I never fully believed that connection. Poom brought emotional and physical intensity, but it often felt as though Saint was performing on a completely different emotional wavelength. Instead of watching two people gradually fall in love, I often felt like I was watching one actor trying to pull the relationship forward.

The story doesn't help either. The countryside setting is beautiful, and the production makes excellent use of it, but the script rarely gives the characters situations that allow them to grow. Several episodes simply drift along without adding much to the central relationship, making the pacing feel slower than necessary. There are enough ideas here for a good romance, but very few of them are explored deeply enough to become memorable.

Visually, the series is pleasant throughout. The rural landscapes create a warm atmosphere, and the production is consistently polished. Unfortunately, attractive cinematography can't compensate for a romance that never becomes emotionally compelling. By the end, I remembered the scenery more than I remembered the relationship.

Final Thought

My Sweetheart Jom had enough ingredients to become a charming rural romance, but it never found the chemistry or emotional intensity needed to make it truly work. Poom Nuttapart continues to prove he has exceptional screen presence, while Saint Suppapong never quite convinces in a role that demanded much more authority and emotional weight. In the end, the series is perfectly watchable—but also perfectly forgettable.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
O Rapaz da Última Fila
1 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
de Lucyy1
16 dias atrás
6 of 6 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 10
História 10
Acting/Cast 10
Musical 10
Voltar a ver 10
Esta resenha pode conter spoilers

A Story That Refuses to Give You the Comfort of Certainty

Adapting a psychological novel is never easy, but Notes from the Last Row succeeds because it understands what made its source material so compelling. Based on the Spanish novel El chico de la última fila by Juan Mayorga, the drama preserves the original's fascination with voyeurism, obsession, and the blurred line between reality and fiction while giving the story its own emotional identity.

From the beginning, the series isn't interested in telling us who is "good" or "evil." Instead, it asks a much more uncomfortable question: how far can admiration go before it becomes obsession?

Heo Mun-oh believes he understands Lee Kang because he's older, more experienced, and a respected writer. But every chapter Lee Kang writes slowly strips away that confidence. Watching Mun-oh lose control isn't just entertaining—it's tragic. His downfall isn't caused by a single event but by jealousy, insecurity, and his desperate need to prove himself superior.

Lee Kang is the drama's greatest achievement. Like the protagonist of the original work, he remains impossible to define. Even by the end, we never know whether he carefully orchestrated everything or whether everyone—including Mun-oh—simply projected their own fears onto him. That ambiguity is exactly what makes him unforgettable.

One of the boldest decisions is refusing to answer every question. The implication that Lee Kang slept with Mun-oh's wife is never completely confirmed or denied. Instead of giving the audience certainty, the drama forces us to experience the same doubt that consumes Mun-oh. In a story about imagination and storytelling, uncertainty becomes the real weapon.

Having read El chico de la última fila, I appreciated that the adaptation didn't try to copy it scene for scene. It respects the spirit of the original while taking creative liberties that feel meaningful rather than unnecessary. It stands on its own while honoring the themes that made the source material so acclaimed.

The ending is frustrating in the best possible way. It refuses easy explanations and trusts the audience to sit with unanswered questions. That's exactly what psychological fiction should do.

The performances elevate everything. Every glance, pause, and line carries emotional weight, making the tension feel constant even in the quietest scenes. Combined with restrained cinematography and a haunting atmosphere, the result is a drama that lingers long after it ends.

10/10. Whether you've experienced El chico de la última fila or not, Notes from the Last Row proves that the best adaptations don't replace the original—they reinterpret it in a way that feels fresh, thought-provoking, and unforgettable.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?
Completados
Amor no Ar
1 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
16 dias atrás
13 of 13 episódios vistos
Completados 0
No geral 2.0
História 1.5
Acting/Cast 2.0
Musical 3.0
Voltar a ver 1.0

Dead Air

'Love in the Air' presents every ingredient for a watchable romance; attractive leads, a dual-couple structure, and the occasional chemistry between PRAPAI and SKY; then methodically wastes all of it on dialogue that loops without landing and performances ranging from mechanical to genuinely difficult to watch.

BOSS SERMSONGWITTAYA renders PAYU so flatly inexpressive that his possessiveness reads less as smoldering intensity than vacancy, while NOEUL TANGWAI’s portrayal of RAIN reduces the character to something between a confused child and a prop, making their central relationship, built on coercion and framed as devotion, not just unconvincing but actively uncomfortable.

The series treats structural elements like character development and emotional stakes as aesthetic choices rather than narrative obligations, dressing predatory behavior in romantic music and letting a sexual assault subplot function as backstory decoration rather than something with actual weight.

Love in the Air was written for audiences who require nothing more than attractive men sharing a frame, and it fulfills that brief exactly... no more, no less.

Leia Mais

Esta resenha foi útil para você?