Completed
Perfect Crown
1 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 4.0

an decent quick watch

i'll start by saying i'm a sucker for period dramas so having a modern twist on one is always a nice thing to see.

i think the overall plot was just ok but certain moments with acting and symbolism really pulled it up from a lower score i would've otherwise leaned towards.

that said idk if i'd say this is what you want for a romance drama . the characters are all fine and the acting is mostly good but the chemistry/passion isn't there when the scenes call for it i feel like , mostly on the FL moreso than the ML if i'm being honest. that said romance aspect aside i think everything is well acted child actors included.

there are some plotholes that never exactly get clarified and sometimes the cuts between scenes followed by calling back to them in other moments are a bit odd but in the end i think it wrapped up nicely in a way that was fitting to the respective characters.

i'd say its a solid 7.75 but since we can only do full and half stars i'll give it an 8

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Completed
Love in the Moonlight
0 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Emotional truth vs Social performance ?❤️

I ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT!!! The chemistry, the tension, the drama, the angst, all beautifully executed. This isn't just a romance, it is a story about desire colliding with duty inside a rigid social structure.
• Saenkaew(love as imprisonment) - someone whose life has already been decided for him.
• Sasin(destabilizing force) - Pushes Saenkaew toward emotional honesty.
• Pinanong(stability) - the socially acceptable future
Underneath the romance, the series is asking: "Can a person shaped entirely by duty learn to choose themselves?
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Completed
Dual Stars
5 people found this review helpful
by Gendli
14 days ago
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 6.0

Cute and funny short series

Overall I enjoyed watching it. It had nice acting, good chemistry, and actually funny jokes, which is for some reason a really rare occurrence. I can definitely recommend it as a nice short series to watch when you want something easy to relax to.

Things I liked:
1. Crossover with GL series "The Way Back to You."
2. Pretty good acting.
3. Great chemistry.
4. A lot of cute and sweet moments.
5. Actually funny humor.

Things I disliked:
1. Voiceover. I am not sure why Taiwanese series needs one, but I am really not a fan.
2. Kisses. If you can even call that a kiss, I am usually not the one to complain about kisses or the absence thereof, but this is something else. I don't know what was going on there, but I know that I'd rather they didn't kiss at all or just smooched on a cheek instead. Because that was just embarrassing.

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Completed
Sold Out on You
0 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 6.5
This review may contain spoilers

A Tad on the Predictable Side

Finishing Sold Out on You marks the 109th Kdrama series or movie I have watched. My review of this drama is definitely affected by this. My thoughts and feelings toward it were pretty much just...meh. But I think if this were one of the first dramas I watched, I would have enjoyed it more. When you've watched as much as I have, you understand the formula used by the writers to develop the story. That's why I stated....

It's a tad on the predictable side.

It was enjoyable, but boring. It was funny, but cringe at times. It ended nicely, but was very, very, so very predictable. If you're new to Kdramas and just starting to watch different series, I highly recommend this. It really represents why Kdramas have become so very popular.

If you're like me and you've seen quite a few of these....well, you might want to flag it, and maybe come back to it on some rainy weekend when all you can do is binge Netflix.

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Completed
Duty after School: Part 1
0 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

Lindo, apaixonante e doloroso.

Quando comecei a assistir, eu tinha em mente que muitos personagens morreriam, acontece que não morreram, não como eu pensava.
Pelo contrário, os personagens foram ficando bem e então você vê a evolução da equipe como pessoas, a forma como todos se ajudam e cuidam um dos outros, vê como a liderança do Sr. Lee é cheia de cuidado e amor para com as crianças.
E então você se apega, e isso é péssimo.
Para mim o Sr. Lee era a peça que conectava tudo, não vejo sentido em assistir a outra temporada.
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Completed
Lovely Runner
4 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
16 of 16 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

Loved it and watched it many times but ...

I really enjoyed this show and found it new and exciting as it was the first time I have watched a show like this. I have watched it several times, I rate it high because I can watch it over again and still laugh and feel the feelings.

I liked the characters and found the chemistry between the leads enticing ... but ...........

I find the FL terrible. I can not believe that a 30 something year old woman has so little common sense. So many of her decisions are so frustrating and naive. I am pretty sure a 19 year old would do better than she did. ... just grrrrr. I still like it but more for him and the actual storyline.

Oh and her freezing time 'ability'. There were no other times that she could have used that ..... really?

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Completed
Sell Your Haunted House
0 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
16 of 16 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 3.0
This review may contain spoilers

Started off great.

I enjoyed the start of this show. I found it interesting. The characters were pretty good and I am glad they did not push romance when it was not needed. I think it would have been better at 8 episodes. I struggled to finish this from the half way mark. It was watchable and as I said, the start was very good.
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Completed
We Are All Trying Here
4 people found this review helpful
by Salatheel Flower Award1
14 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

Ditch the victim consciousness and own the narrative

This is going to be a very personal review about a drama that I both enjoyed and needed to dive into and explain to myself. I love Park Hae Young’s work, it always leaves a long tail. Weeks, months, years after watching them I am still thinking, wtf was that drama about. And each time you revisit the memory of it, you come out with something new. A lot of things in this drama resonated with me as I have had to go through the process of remaking the narrative. So this time, I want to unpack a few thoughts about it immediately after finishing it.

The opening is typical. The characters irritate you, and you wonder if you can make it out of first base. Then the last scene of the first episode just opens it up and you realise, yes, I sort of know where we are going here. I’ll stick with it.

There is a reason it was set in the film industry. The setting is a metaphor for the stories that we tell ourselves and the difficulty that we have both bringing stories into the real world and also believing in the stories that we create.

The perspective of the drama is about the disconnect between what we feel and how we interpret our feelings, the narrative that we place those emotions in. The stories that we tell ourselves about ourselves and our experiences. The characters are written with that very rare trait of self observance and introspection. They often speak unreal lines, but you go along with it because it’s like an inner voice explaining what’s happening on an emotional level. The use of emotion watches (watches that identify what your are feeling) was a clever device to allow this to be understood and make it credible.

It is also a love story, but we only glimpse the intimacies of that through voice-overs and the odd scene where Dong Man and Eun A make a connection. This must have been a very deliberate choice. Perhaps Park Hae Young did not want the drama and the focus to be highjacked by the “romance” label, or whether she just wanted that emotion to be unspoken. At one point there is a conversation about love not being one of the emotions displayed on the watch, as it is not a raw emotion. So she follows that through by showing how the characters react to each other in a kaleidoscope of different ways that constitute care, closeness and empathy.

As always with her writing, every character has a carefully curated arc and a totally filled out personality. They are larger than life, wearing their inner lives like an outer visible skin. You may not like every character, or even any of them. But the magic of Park Hae Young is that she has the ability to connect you to them. To enable you to see their vulnerabilities in a way that evokes compassion rather than dismissal.

The drama explores how most of the characters’ narratives involve the demonisation of others. The shifting of the responsibility for their misery onto something or someone else and labelling the other as the perpetrator and themselves as the victim. In doing so they cling to the situation or other person as justification for their emotions. This results in trying to manipulate and control the other to fit the self-made narrative. When this manipulation synchs from both sides, such as Dong Man and Gyeong Se, this becomes a co-dependant relationship of mutually assured destruction.

In fact the true narrative, revealed by the correct identification of emotions, is about each person alone. There is short key scene late in the drama where a counsellor explains that once you can correctly identify an emotion, put the correct description to it, you can begin to see the sometimes hidden narrative that lies behind it and change it to something positive. The other situation/person was/is only the catalyst. Each character creates their own storyline, and now lives it, believing that taking revenge, or running away, or indulging someone will in some way free them from the pain. But only the character alone can change it. The path to fulfilment lies in being able to be free themselves from the notion that the fault /responsibility lies elsewhere or with others.

The genius of Park Hae Young is to craft a story of complex and tangled relationships that brings these truths to life. The actors really bring themselves to the table and invest everything. There was not a weak performance amongst the leads. But personally, I fell for Kang Mal Geum as Ko Hye Jin. Whenever I see Go Youn Jung, I feel that her eyes are like black wells that plumb the hidden depths, and here the cinematographer and director did a wonderful job of capturing that ability. Koo Kyo Hwan courageously put everything he had into Dong Man and exploded onto the screen. His total commitment and exposure hit me like a train. It was an all or nothing performance and a less confident portrayal would have been catastrophic for the whole drama.

Overall, another stunning offering.

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Completed
Mr. Plankton
1 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

Heyy, I want to say this Kdrama is really good. The actors, chemistry fits very well. The acting seems really realistic, you can feel the characters emotions as if they were real (it makes me cry a lot). The plot was good, And it is different from other Kdramas that I have seen and that makes it special.



The ending was good too, many people say they could have had a happy ending and it would have been nicer that way, but I think the sad ending was perfect, even though the characters deserved a good ending, this sad ending made it seem more realistic!



Overall I liked it and I recommend it to everyone but it depends on the person, some might not like it that much because it might seem slow at first or a bad plot..

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Completed
Sold Out on You
4 people found this review helpful
by Nyy010
14 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 3
Overall 7.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0

Surprisingly Disappointing

I was really looking forward to this series, for the main reason of the strong cast that was involved. I'm a fan of all three protagonists in this series, but I have to say it turned out to be a disappointment ... not so much for the acting, but just the general story itself.
The first 30 minutes are really silly, but you eventually start getting a serious tone in the story. It took most of the first episode before you see Kim Bum, so glad he finally showed up. He kind of filled in what the drama was missing at that point. I just wish he had a bigger role throughout the drama. Hyo Seop normally plays great roles, judging by his past performances, but this character of Hae Seok is so angry and boring for so much of the series, it becomes rather annoying to watch him. I think the first time he shows positive emotions, like a smile, is the end of episode 5. It just didn't seem to be his kind of acting we're used to.
Episode 6 is definitely the pinnacle episode of the series. It's when the story truly turns into a good drama ... but it really takes a long time to get to that point. From there till the very end, it is worth watching. The cast seems to gel together and the chemistry is finally showing a great blend with everyone. I'm sure some people didn't stick it out that long, but if you do, it is worth it.
The final episode does do a great job at wrapping things up in the way you were hoping. All antagonists get the retribution they deserve, and the protagonists get their happy endings in different ways.
All in all, it was good, but I was expecting so much more.

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Completed
Hidden Love
1 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
25 of 25 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

A Drama That Broke My Heart in the Best Way

I love this show!! Hidden Love is one of my favorites, and Zhao Lusi is one of my favorite actresses. I love the chemistry between the ML and FL, and I also love how this drama shows that love takes time.

I felt so bad for the FL when she thought the ML had a girlfriend—her tears broke my heart into pieces. I do think she made a healthy choice by trying to move on, but I don't think cutting him off completely was the best decision. Still, it all worked out in the end.

The ML also really touched my heart, especially when he was working and started crying. I just wanted to hug him, especially when he was heartbroken over his dad’s death. It really tugged at my heartstrings.

However, the stalker-like character who kept blaming him for his father’s mistakes made me so angry. She clearly needed help, and I’m glad the FL pointed out that she was mentally unwell.

Other than that, this drama was so cute and heartwarming. It shows how love can develop in the most unexpected places. I also loved the family aspect—especially her brother and parents. It made the show even better. I love how it shows strong family bonds and how family tries to understand each other even when they disagree.

I also really enjoyed the sibling dynamic. Even though they acted like they hated each other, it was very funny and realistic. They did a great job portraying it.

Overall, this was a great drama!!!!

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Completed
Lost You Forever Season 2
0 people found this review helpful
by vicki
14 days ago
23 of 23 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 3.0
This review may contain spoilers

objectively it's a great drama.. subjectively i absolutely hate it..

I’ve never spent so much time analyzing a show just to end up feeling this pissed off. This drama is well written, the characters have so much depth, but the actual story is an injustice.

Xiang Liu is the only character who earned my full respect. He is a man of ultimate principles and intention. While other men were selling "happiness", an empty promise no one can actually control, he was the only real "green flag" in this show, even if that’s controversial. Cang Xuan also has my respect. He was the only sane one in the second half. He is a good king who had to swallow his own heart to get the throne, and his tragedy feels even heavier than the demon's. He won the world but lost his soul, and he’s the only one smart enough to actually see what the demon did for her. His restrain throughout the shows was impressive, too.

The Weakness and the Hypocrisy!! Oh how i Hate Tushan Jing, you truly pissed me off. He is a weak man and a coward who used his "brokenness" to guilt-trip Xiao Yao into loving him. His "15-year promise" was bullshit he couldn't control. Watching him smile like an idiot while better men bled for her was exhausting. Sorry to Tushan Jing defenders, sometimes a character just pisses you off from the first moment he opens his mouth.

A man who is harsh but unselfish is a much greener flag than a man who is "sweet" but manipulative....

But my biggest loss of respect was for the female lead. She is a hypocrite. She spent the whole show saying she would never wait for a man who might not come back (which is why she wouldn't dive into a relationship with the demon), but then she decides to have a "solo wedding" and wait forever for the dead fox? It was giving Trisha Paytas marrying a cardboard cutout Brad Pitt lol. She chose the safe path because she was too scared to be with a man of character (I might be hating too hard on her, I get her choices most of the time, but when she broke her own principles is where she lost me).

The "unspoken stuff" in this drama screams louder than the actual dialogue. I’m rating it high because a sloppy show wouldn't make me feel this much rage or analyze characters this deeply (my notes are long), but I stayed for the demon and the cousin, not the romance.

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Completed
Girl from Nowhere the Reset
0 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 4.0
Story 4.0
Acting/Cast 6.0
Music 4.0
Rewatch Value 2.0
This review may contain spoilers

Too Many Questions and Too Little Substance

Becky did a great job with her role, but this part of "Girl From Nowhere" felt weak to me. The stories seem to touch on important topics, but they lack depth and proper development. Very often, after an episode ends, it feels like the writers themselves didn’t fully understand what they were trying to say. In the earlier seasons with Nanno, everything worked much better: she felt like something supernatural, a mysterious being who came to a new school, observed people, and exposed their flaws. She didn’t care about anyone’s feelings — she simply pushed people toward certain actions and watched what would happen. The punishments always felt logical there. Here, though, Nanno feels more like an immortal psychopath without that same mystery and atmosphere.

The first episode raised a lot of questions. I understand that bullying is a real problem, but everything felt way too exaggerated. Where are Sky’s parents? Aren’t they concerned that their child constantly comes home beaten up, covered in bruises and blood? It’s also unclear why Nanno suddenly decided to help him and why he kept appearing afterward. At first, I thought they were trying to turn him into something like a new Yuri from season two. That would have at least explained why he knew about Nanno's existence and was trying to summon her.

The second episode was more interesting because it brought up a genuinely important issue. But the scene where Nanno shows her underwear felt extremely weird.

I liked the idea behind the third episode. It showed really well how jealousy and the desire for fame can drive a person insane and destroy them from the inside.

The fourth episode was probably my favorite. It gave an interesting look at how the phrase "my body, my choice" can be twisted. The girls enter that industry mainly for money, not because they enjoy taking their clothes off. Over time, people stop seeing them as human beings and start treating them like products that can be bought and shared. And even when they are emotionally broken and unhappy, many of them continue because they no longer see another way out.

By the fifth episode, I was already starting to lose interest in the story, so I don’t really have much to say about it. The only thing I was happy about was that the dog survived.

The sixth episode was okay, I guess. But again: where did Sky suddenly come from in the finale? The ending clearly hints at another season, and Sky is obviously going to turn out to be more than just some "guy".

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Dropped 14/42
The Heir
9 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
14 of 42 episodes seen
Dropped 0
Overall 3.0
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 5.5
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

A Heavy-Handed Exercise in Social Conditioning and Exhausting State Propaganda

The Heir starts with a promising premise, offering a rare look into the intricate world of Ming Dynasty Huizhou ink-making. Stripping away the usual instant-gratification tropes, the first few episodes dedicate real time to the childhood of the leads and the immediate, brutal fallout of the Li family’s exile. It feels grounded, the production design is detailed, and the emotional stakes of a fallen clan are clearly established. Unfortunately, whatever narrative potential the show possesses is quickly suffocated by an exhausting, heavy-handed ideological framework. By episode five, the drama completely ceases to be an organic human story and transforms into a glaring piece of state-backed social conditioning. Watching a top-tier actress like Yang Zi play a female lead who is forced to degrade herself, scrap and destroy her health just to beg for a single crumb of labor within a rigged ancestral system is not inspiring, it is deeply unsettling. Instead of fostering a genuine underdog story, the narrative operates as subtle propaganda aimed at reinforcing the status quo. It explicitly glorifies solitary, grueling hardship, sending a message to the audience that structural systems are absolute and that individuals must endure maximum exploitation without rocking the boat. To make matters worse, the show prioritises the tedious mechanics of national heritage over actual character dynamics, completely withholding the male lead for the first several episodes just to force the viewer to marinate in the female lead's isolated misery. What could have been a sharp, high-stakes business rivalry is instead ruined by classic C-drama fatigue and a preachy, mandatory lecture on enduring systemic oppression for the "collective good." If you enjoy watching an abusive establishment demand absolute submission from its leads under the guise of resilience, you might tolerate this. But if you value organic character growth and actual entertainment over civic conditioning, The Heir is a frustratingly difficult, exhausting watch.

Following a gruelling childhood setup, episodes 6 through 14 of The Heir officially plunge the narrative into a bleak, disjointed industry nightmare. The production values remain visually stunning, the muted, slate-blue colour palette beautifully evokes a classic Chinese ink painting, and the physical grit of the craft is fully visible. The brief flash of chemistry when the undercover Male Lead (Elvis Han) finally enters the workshop provides a temporary, intelligent respite from the gloom. However, no amount of technical beauty or individual acting talent can salvage a script that functions primarily as an exhausting lecture on systemic exploitation and the glorification of "suffering as a virtue." The narrative choices across this stretch are deeply frustrating. The show actively punishes the viewer by completely benching the Male Lead for episodes on end after a violent blow to the head, choosing instead to use a three-year time jump exclusively to let the villainous characters instantly triumph and build an untouchable empire. Watching the elite branches of the Li family seize all the prestige of Li Zhen’s (Yang Zi) physical labor while keeping her eighth branch economically suppressed in a shabby house is not inspiring, it is a deeply unsettling exercise in social conditioning. When she is finally forced to cut ties and walk away from the clan in Episode 14 due to relentless internal sabotage and the bullying of the grandmother, it feels like a necessary reclamation of human dignity. Unfortunately, it is a hollow victory, as the entire framework of the genre heavily signals that her freedom is an illusion. I predict the trajectory for the rest of the show will go something like this.
Because this drama is built entirely on a state-approved blueprint that prioritises institutional survival over individual justice, it is completely obvious how the remaining 28 episodes will play out.
Despite the FL drawing a hard line and cutting ties by in Episode 14, she will inevitably crawl back to the main branch. The narrative will use the grandmother’s dying wish or the families fall from grace to guilt her into rescuing the exact same family name that destroyed her youth.
Once she steps up to save the brand from the rival Tian family, her toxic relatives will not experience a sudden moral awakening. The fourth aunt and the remaining uncles will immediately resume their backroom scheming, undermining her authority and attempting to steal her new formulas while she does all the heavy lifting.
I already know the show won’t do anything to deliver real, satisfying justice. Instead of throwing the villains into prison, the script will give characters like the wheelchair-bound Six Uncle a tragic, unearned sacrifice, while the truly vile fourth aunt will face a soft, comfortable suburban exile rather than financial ruin.
Ultimately, individual human dignity will be completely subordinated to the state-backed message of "national heritage." Li Zhen will merge her independent success back into the main family tree, proving that the drama values the survival of a corrupt, corporate institution over any actual emotional justice for its protagonist. The show initially sets up a gritty world of high-stakes business, but its core philosophy demands absolute submission to a rigged status quo. Walking away at Episode 14 is the only way to protect my sanity from a narrative loop that forces its characters to endlessly "eat bitterness" for an abusive system that will never love them back.
I hope somebody can tell me I got it all wrong after the show airs it’s last episode because I won’t be watching.

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Completed
Cunning Single Lady
0 people found this review helpful
by Erika
14 days ago
16 of 16 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 6.5
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 6.0

Second chance romance supremacy!


The Turkish version of this drama has my heart and soul but I enjoyed this as well.

Big fan of second chance romance and I love seeing the ML openly pursue and flirt with his lady. He became more likable in the latter half.

The FL’s appeal was lost on me in this one that 2 eligible bachelors were downbad for her. The actress herself is very pretty but why’d they give her such a bland and clueless personality. Not to mention the bad haircut, makeup, and styling too😭. The turkish remake’s FL was funnier, sassier, and overall more iconic.

And while I root for the ML and FL to get together, the pain of love triangles is I ALWAYS get hit with second lead syndrome. This was not an exception.

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