This review may contain spoilers
Confusing and messy
Quite confused with the plot. FL was supposed tobe without the 5 senses and yet she could see
and hear right from the get-go. It seemed she was only lacking sense of touch, smell, taste and not all 5 senses. Her not killing Chang was out of character given how she was supposed to be a strict sovereign. I really enjoyed episodes 1-9 and starting from when she gained ML's sense of touch, things went downhill. FL going from being the cool bad-ass sovereign to being a giddy childlike mortal was such a turnoff. Other people dropped after episodes 16 and 28. Midway thru episode 11, I was starting to think about dropping it too. Wouldn't wanto force myself to watch something when there are so many many more other dramas to watch. I like both the main actors and it's really such a shame they were given a project with messy writing.
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Season 1 was incredible, while this season was just (barely) okay.
Season 1 was, in my opinion, close to a masterpiece. It was so beautiful and well-written. (Maybe I'm reaching a bit far. This is just my opinion, so don't hate on me if you didn't feel the same.)Season 2, unlike Season 1, was a letdown. The script was chaotic and weird. The characters felt unlike themselves.
The "final battle" was so... interesting, let's say that.
Despite all that, the cinematography, the acting, and especially our main couple, saved this season from being a total disaster.
I'm so, so sad how they handled Season 2. It was disheartening since "Flourished Peony" was my favorite C-drama.
I'll still give this a 7/10 or 7.5/10 for the acting, cinematography, and our main couple. And well, even though the writing felt so messy, we did have some really nice scenes.
Season 1 is a 9/10 or 10/10 for me, though I also understand it's not everyone's cup of tea.
Now, if anyone is unsure whether to watch this after hearing about the negatives this season, I'd still very much recommend it. At least give it a try. :)
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A Hidden Gem Worth Sticking Around For
Another Taiwanese drama that seems underrated on MDL, Agent from Above is a series that deserves more attention than it’s currently getting. Hopefully, being on Netflix , it will get more viewership.Set in a world where gods, spirits, and humans coexist almost matter-of-factly, the show wastes little time explaining its mythology. Instead, it drops you straight into a universe rooted in Taiwanese mystical culture, where the male lead, Han Chieh serves a god, the Third Crown Prince to maintain balance between realms . I like this immediate immersion where the supernatural is treated as an everyday reality.
At its core, the story is a classic struggle between good and evil. Han Chieh, a flawed ML bound to his duty and debt to the Third Crown Prince, acts as the human guardian, empowered with magical artifacts to take on supernatural evil and disturbances, while grappling with his own past and guilt . The narrative may begin somewhat confusing in episode one—but once it finds its footing, it becomes much more engaging and cohesive.
Where the series really shines is in its tone and execution. Taiwanese productions have a distinct flair, and this drama leans into that strength:
Visual effects are impressive, enhancing the fantasy without overwhelming it.
Humor is cheeky and well-timed, adding levity without undermining the more emotional moments.
There’s a lingering bittersweetness throughout the story—an acknowledgment that not every innocent can be saved, and not every evil needs to be eradicated.
The ending, in particular, strikes a satisfying balance. It feels grounded, almost realistic within its fantastical framework, while still offering a sense of hope. It doesn’t tie everything up too neatly, which works for me in this case, and even leaves room for a potential second season.
Overall, Agent from Above may not be a flawless series, but it’s engaging and visually strong. It is a hidden gem for viewers who stick past the first episode, and definitely for those who enjoy supernatural dramas with a touch of humor.
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Uncut = Too long. Could have been so much better if edited out fillers
Who will enjoy “Duang With You”? This drama is probably not for everyone but a pretty selected audience. Here’s what I think. “Duang With You” is best enjoyed if:1. Are a lover of fluffy and cute romance and don’t mind sound effects to add on the cheese.
2. A fan of love-at-first sight
3. A fan of persistent, almost stalkerish type behavior to pursue a love interest
4. Looking for a stress-free drama to not think about the craziness in the real world
Honestly, I don’t quite hit all these categories myself but I was in search in the #4 category and I knew what I was getting myself into. So, with expectations calibrated, I dive into Duang’s world.
Plot/Pacing:
As the title of my review suggests, this drama could have been so much better if it’s edited to be shorter and tighter. A drama that relies on the romance between Duang and Qin and nothing much, having 12 long episodes is just too much. Some of these episodes are 1 hour and 20 minutes long. We’re not watching a Thai lakorn with twists and turns, or birth secrets. There is just not enough to fill all those hours. I was under the impression that the uncut version means steamy scenes not being edited for public TV broadcast. But in this drama, I think uncut simply means the director includes everything and nothing is edited out, steamy scenes or not. There are actually some very meaningful conversations between the leads that are important to the character development. Yet, those don’t come often and are overshadowed by filler scenes of friends fighting for snacks, leads nose kissing each other, banter about doggy jealousy, or minor characters having too much screen time. I wish time was better spent, esp with Qin’s family drama and the secondary romance.
Acting:
Acting is a mixed bag here. I personally think TeeTee is the best of the bunch. He is Duang! Cute and charismatic and you just can’t not like him. Unfortunately, Por needs a little more practice. I distinctly remember a scene where Por/Qin sat next to young Qin and both of them were crying. The contrast in that crying scene was so evident that the young child actor did way better than Por. The rest of the cast did fine. None is exceptional and also none is a disaster.
Characters:
Duang is cute, no doubt about it. TeeTee is a better actor as Duang, than Por as Qin. TeeTee is already such an adorable actor that I don’t think the drama needed to add extra cheesiness and sound effects. They should let TeeTee shine on his own. Duang is the greenest flag and I am fine with him having Qin as the center of his universe, since he’s young and this is a rom-com. However, I am not a fan of his stalkerish and persistent behavior (not a fan of this in general). But that’s his charm in this drama and I’ll look past that as well. I wish Qin would just give us a little more instead of a nonchalant bitchy look. I think this might have to do with Por’s acting as he’s quite new to the industry. I am glad to see him slowly open up and really grow. Qin has the biggest character growth, and I do enjoy that part of him. I also really like Duang’s friends, Jamie and Pae. They are fun, chaotic and true friends of Duang. They stuck by him during his stalkerish pursuit (and explain when he could cross the line) and call him out when he’s out of line. Although they weren’t hopeful that Duang will win Qin’s heart, they accept his ‘unique stupidity’ and cheer him on. One of the best scenes of this friend group was when they were singing “Do Do Re Mi” when they sneaked into the Music Department. I actually laughed out loud at their silliness! Duang’s family is also hilarious. We can totally see where he got his personality.
Main Romance:
Even though I might not agree 100% on the persistent pursuit, I do think it takes a Duang to break down the walls that Qin put up. This is a classic case of opposites attracting and complementing each other. I would have loved to see more scenes of Qin being jealous and pouty, instead of bitchy and indifferent. This is actually quite a slow burn romance. It took them forever to get to the ‘talking stage’. I’m an old lady, and I have no idea what a ‘talking stage’ is. At first, I thought it’s like flirting and seeing each other, but not actually dating. Kinda like the some some relationship in K-dramas. But Qin and Duang did more than talking and flirting, and it got intimate and also calling each other partners (not lovers or boyfriends). I guess that’s how young people define relationships these days and I have a lot to learn! Although I love their real kiss scenes, I got beef with those supposed cheek kisses. The lips never touch the cheek. It’s a nose kiss! Many might love the intimate scenes, I am in the minority. I am glad that the drama doesn’t shy away from telling us Duang and Qin are not virgins and are horny young men. But the director doesn’t seem to be able to pick between sweet and sensual intimate scenes, or sexual and horny. In the end, the actors did their best, but the intimate scenes feel confusing and indecisive. But to end on a positive note, I really love the last scene at Freshy Night when Qin was on stage at Freshy Night. The lyrics of the song, paired with flashbacks, brought tears down my cheeks. That was a great ending to recap everything that happened in the last year.
Secondary Romance:
Jamie and Marvis could have been such an interesting and contrasting romance to Duang and Qin’s. They are sexier, flirtier and have such sizzling chemistry. Yet, not enough time is dedicated to their sexy beginning, and how they might be falling for each other. Their interaction lacks depth, even though they make such a good-looking couple. I wish they were given more time instead of all the fillers we get.
Production:
The drama does look pretty. With nice big apartments and houses, some interesting and unique clothing choices for Qin and Marvis. They also have money to go to Japan! I’m glad the characters are not always in their university white shirts, but also have some cool casual wear. Since it’s a Thai drama, there are product placements, too much lipstick (though thank goodness not bright pink). Lastly, I want to applaud the OST. This drama has really great and lovely songs, sung by the cast. I got the OST playing while I’m writing this review.
Do I recommend “Duang With You”? Only if you fit what I listed in those 4 categories above. This is a young romantic-comedy with a lot of cheesiness and fluffiness. It’s not for everyone. But if you can get past that, it’s a story of how two opposites attract and complement each other is the best possible way. I just wish the drama is a lot shorter, and edited in a way to tighten the storylines and give more screen time to others that are not the leads.
Completed: 4/18/2026 Review #683
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This review may contain spoilers
An overhyped script that leverages on actors' popularity for advertisements.
An unbelievably childish and old-school plots in this 21st century drama.Seems like the TV station is putting huge investments into paying the actors, costumes, the magnificent backdrop and scenery rather than giving the audience a well-directed story.
Even the PPLs are over the top - it's ridiculous to see that they forced scenes into the drama just to sell a sandwich chain, and i think we'll be seeing more PPLs as the drama progresses.
Many of the scenes don't really make sense and to me, it just seems like they are just leveragjng on the actors' popularity to drive the ratings and bringing in the advertisements. It's no wonder there are now so many negative criticisms from the Korean viewers themselves.
It's a also a pity that too much comedy is built into a magnificent monarchy story setting which I didnt find the comedy funny at all.
Even the main actors' acting leans in more on cheesy side which makes immersion hard.
Will only recommend to watch if you like looking at beautiful objects or if you are fans of the actors or have nothing else to watch.
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Why Chinese Wuxia Outclasses Modern Action Films
Western action often asks, “How can we keep you excited?” Chinese wuxia often asks, “How can movement itself carry meaning?”Watching Blades of the Guardians is not just another wuxia film, it feels like a full-scale revival of martial arts cinema at its highest level. Exceptional fight choreography that Western films will never match: long, fluid sword fights with real weight and timing, emphasis on physical skill, rhythm, and spatial clarity. Large-scale battles (desert ambushes, duels in storms) feel organic, not like CGI-heavy spectacle. Here, every hit is readable and meaningful, almost like dance choreography with lethal consequences. The desert combat feels grounded and creates a level of tension many Hollywood blockbusters no longer achieve; you can feel the danger instead of just seeing effects. The film’s landscapes, deserts, ancient cities, war-torn borders are not just backgrounds; they function like characters. Sandstorms become battle arenas. Fire and dust shape the rhythm of combat. The cinematography leans into mythic, almost legendary imagery, which paradoxically feels like art rather than violence for the sake of it.
Blades of the Guardians offers visible technique and training, clear fight geography, real impact in every strike, emotion tied directly to combat, and a respect for martial arts as an art form, not just spectacle. It feels “more real,” “more intense,” and even “more cinematic” than most Hollywood action films today. It leans fully into what wuxia does best: honour, betrayal, survival across impossible landscapes, and combat that feels like storytelling itself. It is not just an action movie, it is a reminder that cinema action can still be handcrafted, elegant, and emotionally charged at the same time. If Western action represents controlled spectacle, Blades of the Guardians represents chaotic poetry with blades.
I loved it because the wuxia approach stays intimate even when the scale is large. It feels like watching internal codes of life and death being tested in real time. In contrast with the peak of modern Western action design, fast, engineered, and globally oriented, Blades of the Guardians represents a more traditional, almost philosophical approach to action, where movement itself carries meaning beyond plot function. That is why they feel so different to watch, and I loved it. One is built like a high-speed machine; the other feels more like a crafted ritual.
The Chinese wuxia approach won me over because it treats action as expression rather than logistics. In wuxia, and in Blades of the Guardians, a fight is not just a way to move the plot forward, it is the emotional and narrative moment. You feel character, history, and philosophy inside the choreography itself. The pacing is slower, but that slowdown is intentional: it allows tension, body language, and spatial awareness to become part of the storytelling. Instead of cutting away from complexity, it leans into it. The rhythm is carefully balanced, with moments of wit and humour that lighten the intensity without breaking immersion.
There is also a stronger sense of visual clarity and craftsmanship. The choreography is designed so you can actually read what is happening: footwork, distance, weapon control, rhythm. That creates a different kind of engagement. You are not just reacting to explosions or edits; you are following a physical conversation between characters.
Western blockbusters often build tension through external stakes: preventing a global disaster, stopping a bomb, outrunning time. It’s exciting, but it’s structural. Chinese martial arts cinema often builds tension through internal codes, honour, loyalty, betrayal, destiny, sacrifice. That makes even smaller moments feel heavy, because the conflict is not just physical but moral and personal.
There is also a philosophical layer that I find richer. Wuxia traditions often come from ideas about discipline, balance, fate, and the meaning of violence itself. The action is not just spectacle; it is connected to identity and worldview. That gives the film a kind of depth that feels less common in many Western action franchises, which are often more focused on momentum and entertainment efficiency, and for which is the reason I don’t go to the cinema anymore. Blades of the Guardians has artistic depth, visual readability, emotional weight inside action, and choreography as storytelling. I highly enjoyed it.
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Queen of Eliciting Tears from the Male Lead
My rating: 8/10I almost feel generous saying 8/10. Maybe more of a 7 in terms of the story itself. If it wasn’t so well acted and beautifully filmed, I would have rated it lower. It just wasn’t my thing. I never reached that “oh good, I can watch an episode (or two)” feeling—it was more like enduring it, hoping Hong Hae-in’s character would turn around. I think it was aiming for a bit of a Notebook vibe: “I love you even if you don’t remember me.” She is terminal throughout most of the show, so if that kind of heavy sadness bothers you, maybe pass. This is one of those shows where, if I see it on someone’s list of “good shows,” I’m going to question their entire list. Oh, you prefer highly dramatic, overall emotionally draining dramas? I mean, it is complex—I’ll give it that. But, in terms of the romance, I am not sure the writers had any idea what good, healthy love looks like. I think they might have been going for “there are all types of love, including imperfect love.” I don’t want to watch imperfect love, though. Would I watch it again? Absolutely not. I had a hard enough time getting through it the first time. Recommend it? It depends. Do you like emotionally heavy shows about people who probably should be better off apart but somehow keep landing back together? Does that messy, “real” feeling appeal to you? Then maybe you’d like it. Personally I would leave the room if it was on or turn the channel. I’m not sorry I watched it—I was very curious, and it shows up pretty often on “shows to watch” lists. But it will now be an indicator for me. If someone likes it, I will assume our taste does not align.
Spoilers
The Backstory of Their Marriage and Hong Hae-in’s Coldness
I waited nearly the entire series to understand how their relationship got so bad as reflected in the beginning of the series. Why they were sleeping in separate bedrooms, why her family treated him like a servant, why Hong Hae-in didn’t do anything about it, and why she was the queen of cold. The show tried to explain it way too late with flashbacks to when they were first considering marriage. She tells him her family is very different from his and that no matter how lonely he becomes, she won’t be able to take his side. That was supposed to exonerate her from how she treated him early in the marriage and explain how they became so cold and distant. It was also supposed to show it was partially his fault because, after all, she did warn him. I think they wanted to portray Hong Hae-in as a tsundere—cold on the outside but warm on the inside—and they tried to make that an okay or even good thing. The flashbacks and her “warning” were meant to paint her behavior as understandable or even romantic, like she was always secretly caring deep down. I did not buy that at all. She did not have to be that way—she chose to be. It was emotional abuse. And, even after the surgery, she never significantly change. Even in the last episode she says something about him proposing but that she doesn’t know him that well again yet. He did take a bullet for her, though, so she would have to find a way to turn him down without hurting him. She was still being somewhat distant. I just saw her as cold and selfish from beginning to end.
Fated Childhood Connections
The show piled on way too many “destiny” moments, and it started to feel silly. For the main couple, there were two big ones. First, the childhood angel story where he saves Hong Hae-from drowning as kids. Then later their encounter as teen-agers over the music player. The villainous second guy even tries to get on the destiny action by claiming he was the one who saved her from drowning. And, as if that was not enough, there is the real incident between 2nd villainous guy and her where he bashes the dog with a rock to keep it from attacking her. Where did the dog even come from? Why was it attacking her? And since he had already mentioned killing dogs like a psycho earlier, was that an accident or just an excuse for him to bash a dog with a rock? It felt forced and weird. On top of that, they had to pile another destiny like encounter with Hong Hae-in’s brother and his wife and some fated childhood connection at the orphanage with the strawberry shortcake story. So you end up with multiple overlapping destiny flashbacks for the main couple plus side characters. It made the whole “meant to be” theme feel overdone and ridiculous.
Unbelievable Plot Elements and Medical Realism
So many things in the show stretched believability. Hong Hae-in has an initially inoperable brain tumor that causes her to go into dreamlike states and lose track of time and where she is. Yet she has these really long lucid stretches where everyone acts like she’s relatively normal. And, knowing she has these episodes, they let her drive and just go about herself. That would not happen. With a brain tumor like that, you wouldn’t be well enough to go about your normal life. The people who cared would notice and be sure they did not leave you alone. So, her whole brain tumor thing was strange. But, they seemed to like the theme of people having a horrible illness or injury and just shrugging it off. When he gets hit and they say it broke a rib and virtually destroyed his liver—he leaves the hospital to go after her. He would not have been able to function that well, even with adrenaline. He has a brain tumor, grandpa gets poisoned and that isn't enough they also have to add amnesia. I seriously dislike the amnesia trope, but it was particularly annoying here. She had written all these things for herself, and of course the villain/second guy gets ahold of them and tries to burn them. And of course, by some miracle, they don’t burn.
The Over-the-Top Sadness and Action Beats
I am not one for sad movies, but this was comically sad. You know how in a horror movie they try so hard to scare you that it starts to be funny? That’s how I felt about this. Oh, now he’s hit by a car. Oh, now he took a bullet for her. The hunting grounds scene where the villain is chasing them with a rifle (“If I can’t have you, no one will”) felt so cliché. When she is going into surgery and says “What if I forget who you are? What if I am mean to you?” and he says “Then it wouldn’t be the first time.” That is sad. I really felt like the world was saying they shouldn’t be together. Queen of Tears? She was the queen of his tears. Always making the man sad. Family Dynamics, the Villain, and Sad Side Stories
The villain’s mom horribly neglected him—that’s why he was so crazily addicted to Hong Hae-in. So it even felt a tiny bit sad when he got shot in the end. The grandfather being killed by the woman he so horribly misjudged—not listening to and preferring her over his own daughter—was still sad. Hong Hae-in’s mother being so jealous of her and being cold to her because the brother died and she lived. The mother says that later. How ridiculous that would be—angry at a child for living. Sad and unnecessary actions and behaviors throughout the show that just made the tone overall sad.
Redemption Arcs and Side Character Moments
I did like how Hong Hae-in’s brother learned to box and was a bit of a badass saving his wife. I liked seeing him get some redemption-type arc. His family was also very mean to him and then he married someone who thought he was an idiot. Their "romantic" fated arc was really her just conning him out of his things and bullying him. I mean, then later she just thinks he is stupid and sort of winds up loving him by accident.
Forgiving People
The main guy forgives main girl for her cold behavior all over the place and all the time. The way she was with 2nd guy even when they were still married was wrong. You don't let another man be that close to you when your spouse is right there. That is hurtful. But he never called her on it. They forgive Grace? Why? She was horrible and just did a couple of redeeming things here and there. But she tried to break the main couple up, made their relationship worse, helped embezzle money, and turned on them any time it benefitted her more. Nothing redeemable about her in my opinion.
The Ending and Final Reflections
He wakes up in his hospital bed after taking a literal bullet for her and she apologizes to him for once again treating him coldly and not remembering him—and he apologizes to her? For what? For forgetting how much he had wanted to be with her and how he should have just been willing for the family to treat him like a lesser human and for her to be cold to him? Yeah, I’m not okay with that. There is nothing romantic about one person showing love all the time so much more than the other. Whoever wrote it had the weirdest sense of love and romance. Then they have to end it with him being alone again. It is supposed to be beautiful—the old man putting flowers on the grave just like she envisioned. That is the saddest and loneliest time in anyone’s life: losing their life partner. It was supposed to be beautiful. She was there to greet him when he died. Why did we need that on top of all the other crud they put us through? No thank you. Did not like this. A sad and depressing take on life, love and relationships. Not at all the type of show I like to watch to feel joy in life.
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Totally delightful, a true treat, a true HEALING ART
This drama is one of those classic masterpieces, 10 star drama with significant impact. Super great script, acting, camera, music, messages, everything.=====written after ep 9 =======
This drama is not about two ppl who quickly fell in love and jumped on each other
This drama is about two wounded ppl who ran into each other bc of work, and then started collaborating and helping each other, HEALING, and slowly falling in love.
SO THIS IS SLOW BURN EMOTIONAL WORKOUT
LIKE IN REAL LIFE
YOU SEE THE RELATIONSHIP PROGRESS
So.... This drama has no official dating and relationship, no steamy scenes YET
ML and FL are hanging out in a very close friendship, helping each heal, and slowly falling for each other...
and at this point they got so far that they are already known to the public as "dating" and dedicated to each other and liking each other.
He is already sure he likes her romantically and is already dreaming about it and flirting to self advertise...
She has some issues that perhaps prevent her from dedicating herself but she acts as his advocate and tells ppl she sees something in him...
But they never said I LOVE YOU or kissed yet or spent time in a private place just 2 of them.
BUT it is slowly getting there :)
THE WHOLE DRAMA IS ABOUT GETTING THERE
SO YES THIS IS A SLOW BURN ROM-COM AND PSYCH DRAMA AND EVEN THRILLER ALL ROLLED INTO ONE
====written after ep 1====
I am writing this after ep 1 because the summary writeup in MDL top page and the earlier MDL article for the drama does NOTHNG to convey what this drama is like.
This is absolutely delightful!
What a masterpiece! such a great story and acting, and filming. So creative.
Gods prevented me from bailing out on this drama by sending me an Angel user who wrote that the script writer for this drama also wrote My Mister, which is one of my top favs.
Based on the writeup in the MDL preview article long time ago, I thought this would be a gloomy psychological melodrama - no thanks!!!!!... - but heck no! There is humor, there is depression and hunger and loan sharks, and there is sunlight and fields of flowers and new experiences and love.
Totally charming and delightful. A real art piece :) Very deep, compassionate, painful, funny, such a treat!
I give Thanks to the Great Creator and drama production team that made this kdrama possible.
I trust that this will continue in all episodes :)
Helelujah baby we got a real kdrama to watch!!!!!!!
This is an event to be celebrated - we will be watching a masterpiece being born for the next 6 weeks. Also we will be watching transformation and rebirth of ML and FL, and hopefully all the commercially oriented 8 and their entourage.
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on the topic of humanity and love
i remember telling my friend we should give dwy a try as nothing else was really airing and i has seen one clip on tiktok that looked fun enough. that small decision led me into 11 weeks filled with these characters and their beautiful story.what started as a goofy bl ended up being one of the most realistic, natural and tragically lovely shows i've ever seen. i was a little worried about how the serious scenes would look with someone like duang around, but it is true that the goofier the start the more heartbroken you get to the end. i never expected to cry with this show, but cry i did. a lot of it. duang's love, far from being a childish crush, feels like an overwhelmingly warm ray of sunlight in qin's lonely world. everything about this show is an act of love - friends, family and lovers. love moves this show, and it does it so well.
i'd like to ask those who have dropped this to please give it a second chance to really learn who duang and qin are. i wish i could forget this show so i could watch it again. in just a few weeks duang with you has become my favorite tv show of all times.
to teetee & por, i hope we can meet each other again many times to come 🩷
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BORING!!!
Wow! What a great opportunity missed!The story was far too long, I think 12 episodes would suffice, after the 12th it was a drag!
The writer here had an interesting imagination: who in today’s society goes through all of that, works in a toxic environment like that, is stalked and assaulted, goes through hell with her mother and even renounces the love of her life just to live in the same house as her demonic mother, drunken father and her good for nothing brother??!! I mean come on?
It was so much so that I had to fast forward the last 6 episodes.
Don’t waste your time!
Music was actually quite funny, they only had 2 (TWO) songs the entire series!
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proof that fans are ...
Every movie or series with a top tier good looking to be even called human cast that gets hyped from the start usually suffers from terrible storytelling. In this case, what makes it even more painful to watch is the acting if you can even call these 'fanservice' slow-motion poses acting. The story is absolute garbage; we have a rich CEO from an even richer family clan (how nice that chaebols still exist in an 'alternative' timeline) who wants to marry the second in line for the throne.The plot is the same tired formula from 30 years ago. Someone is against the marriage, and the second prince probably caused all the drama himself just by giving everyone that 'Zoolander' look. What’s even the point of an alternative monarchy if it’s just for the cosplay suits and sneaky ads for modern day franchises?
The excuses I’ve read on social media make me wonder, are people really that mentally numb for looks? Does only aesthetic count? To be honest, you might as well watch it with the sound off and the subtitles set to Martian. The story is trash just you’re only here to drool over the main leads and stop pretending this writing is worth praising."
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This review may contain spoilers
Love that turns to hatred & a pestering wound that pains & they suffer in silence
Love how beautifully this drama was made & offcours Bai Lu's acting & emotion display perfevt as always her pair with the male Lead is so perfect! Fell in love with A'Yue & Bai JiusiThe biggest and most heart wrenching part of this drama is that sometimes the heartbreak is so severe it renders you helpless even if you want to let go. And when you finally are ready the time has past. The drama isn't a reality you'll only get one single chance to let go of past heart wrnching soul breaking grudges if you want to grasp onto the same person who directly or indirectly might be a reason for that terrible pain. But when time heals and you can chose them. Chose them cus you might not get a second chance ever again.
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Yeah, no.
A relentless chase by an obsessed boy, towards a boy that's not interested in him whatsoever. Humor targeted towards teens and preteens.Watch at your own risk.
All BLs, including Thai BLs have progressively gotten worse every year. When we expected masterpieces, it's like the industry is going through a regression of sorts.
This bl screams 2016 when they were just starting to infiltrate the market. How is it that there's absolutely no progress, 10 years in?
If you're looking for something great to watch, this is not for you, especially if you're a veteran bl fan.
If you're a beginner and looking for something simple to start with, I would also not recommend, but it's better than nothing.
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This review may contain spoilers
definitely not recommanding it
I almost dropped it but I was believing something interesting would happened but you know what ? even the end annoyed me.I don’t even know what to say.. it was just mid, everything was SO MID, from the beginning to the end.
the main story seemed to be very interesting but it ended up mixed with unecessary love stories between the characters, I feel like the love moments were just a way to fill some void in the script.. it was too much.
don’t watch it if you’re searching for something interesting.
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Excellent acting and costuming, meandering story
Costumes and makeup stand out - I haven't seen many other dramas that do period makeup, hairstyles, clothing, and accessories as well as this! I'm not an expert, but everything seems to fit what I've read about Tang dynasty aesthetics and fashion. Some of the wigs look a bit awkward, but nothing noticeable. The background scenes containing dancing, martial arts, wrestling, performers, etc. fill the show with color and interesting sights.The actors all do a great job, but Miles Wei as Liu Chang is a standout. He plays his role with great subtlety and really brings the character to life. Most other "self-centered young master" characters are just boring and formulaic caricatures and they could never invoke so many disparate emotions - pity, fear, admiration, hate, disgust, and more. This is the most complex and interesting villain I've seen in a while. Tu Song Yan, playing Prince Ning, is also excellent. His acting and portrayal of the scheming royal are masterful and convincing.
The cinematography is nothing special, but the attention to detail is obvious. The care paid to the composition and juxtaposition of scenes was noticeable and lends aura to a drama without very many dramatic moments or emotional scenes.
The story is meandering and although many things happen it feels like there's little in terms of progression. It's quite realistic in a way, and it never really gets boring, but there's no "payoff".
The romance is understated and doesn't feel like a focus of the series. Women's rights and position in society, and the relations between nobles, merchants, commoners, and slaves, were brought to the fore many times. It's hard to tell where a storytelling with a commitment to historical accuracy ends and where modern social commentary begins, but these scenes don't feel pedantic or forced and are rather thought-provoking instead.
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