One of the things I loved most was the female lead. Her acting was natural, charming, and very lovable. She brought so much warmth to her character that it was impossible not to root for her. The male lead was also excellent, and the chemistry between the two leads was one of the biggest highlights of the drama. Their relationship felt genuine, sweet, and comfortable, making every scene between them enjoyable to watch.
Another adorable part of the drama was the child character. The kid was incredibly cute and added so much happiness and warmth to the story. The interactions between the characters felt natural and family-oriented, which made the drama even more special.
What I appreciated most was that there were no truly evil characters and no unnecessary conflicts. Unlike many dramas that rely on complicated love triangles, repeated misunderstandings, or multiple breakups, this drama keeps things simple. The story focuses on relationships, personal growth, and everyday moments rather than creating drama for the sake of drama.
The plot is not overly complex, which is actually one of its strengths. It tells a beautiful and meaningful story without making viewers emotionally exhausted. Every character has a satisfying development, and the ending is amazing and fulfilling for everyone.
Overall, this is a cute, wholesome, and feel-good drama with wonderful performances, great chemistry, and a heartwarming story. If you are looking for a simple drama with lovable characters, a sweet romance, and a happy ending, this is definitely worth watching.
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Not enjoying this.
Okay I watch this first before the long drama version and it was....bland. I tried so hard to not compare to long drama but ML characterization was quite lacking and have no charm and Yue Yuting puts same seductive expression in her costume drama. The chemistry between Wu Zixe and Yue Yuting looks artificial despite they got intimate scene. This drama lacks authentic charm and i was on verge on dropping this drama so i just fast forwarding. The only good part in this drama is the costume. I wont recommend this and suggest to watch long drama instead.Was this review helpful to you?
Long Live Cinema, Friend!
Not Friends tells the story of Pae, a high school student who wants to make a film about his "friend" Joe who just passed away.A fun coming-of-age film with classic Thai comedy + strong high school nostalgia vibes that makes you laugh while keeping your heart warm. I thought the trailer spoiled everything, but the film still had a lot to show about character growth, the meaning of friendship, and chasing dreams.
Overall, even though some parts drag a bit, it’s a really enjoyable watch.
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Filing our hearts with love
The 12-episode drama was made with heart, and it shows. The story of two people falling in love in the workplace has been told again and again, yet somehow this drama managed to create one of the most endearing work couples in K-drama history.The main couple was everything (not to be dramatic). It was easy to follow their journey and feel exactly what they were feeling in every moment, and I commend both the acting and the directing for that. I was genuinely happy when they were happy and anxious when they were at odds, which is saying a lot because the characters felt like real people.
Gong Myung and Shin Hae Sun did justice to what is now my favourite couple in any Korean drama, their chemistry was off the charts. The director went above and beyond in telling a story that had me excited for every episode. The writing and dialogue were excellent. The characters spoke like real people, mature people.
Even after multiple rewatches, I still do not really understand what an auditor does. But then again, I would never have cared about audits in the first place if it were not for Filing for Love.
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Hometown Romance does exactly what it sets out to do...
It delivers a light GL romcom built on class contrast, charm, and effortless chemistry. What I especially appreciated was its rural atmosphere, which gave the series a distinct flavor and made the setting feel warm and refreshing. Klao and Si’s dynamic is not predatory, but rather a reversal of expectations, with the rural side holding the stronger position from the outset. The humor leans into intentional slapstick, which may not work for everyone, but is clearly part of the show’s tonal identity rather than a flaw in execution. And Jiu, along with the animals (the children of Klao’s world), brought a great deal of charm and humor I genuinely found myself laughing through their little adventures. It is not a show that aims for heavy psychological depth or intricate dramatic construction, and judging it by those standards misses the point. Within its own genre, however, it is thoughtfully made, carried by a soundtrack that adds warmth and lift, and by actresses who, as always, demonstrate remarkable talent and presence.If Si’s jealousy felt abrupt, I’d read it as emotional residue rather than a tonal shift... Someone who has been betrayed and made to feel displaced will often react to small triggers as if the old wound is happening again. That makes her arc feel less like inconsistency and more like a wound being reactivated.
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Still watchable despite chemistry was almost gone
I watched this drama years ago and this is another version from Charon-Liu Lange version. I need to confess i was quite liked this version but when i rewatch again i realized Chen Luxi but her expression is to stiff and her chemistry with Yang Yubin was somewhat below minimum. This version tends to be serious compared to first version but at least the good thing about this drama the child acting was not unbearable to watch..The plot was quite meticulous until the "twist" part, they failed to execution the story and it feels like you build a card tower but you accidentally touch the middle part. and the tower was collapsed.
At least, i would recommended this drama to hardcore fans of the actors.
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well, this drama came to me.......
I will gonna express my experience and 'Deja vu' that i encountered thought of series.What i mean to say from subject is that, I opened the app looking for something to watch, and this drama came across my home page and catch my eye (i really loved the poster).
As i love loved poster where 'Park Hae Soo' as 'Kang Tae Ju' and 'Lee Hee Jun' as 'Cha Si Yeong' standing beside a car and clearly visible at background where cop were searching for something in farm like. I instantly clicked it as some what related to the case around movie 'memories of murder' and as the series went on and when i saw that 'scarecrow' and read the city name 'Hwaseong', i got confirmed it is inspired form 'Hwaseong serial murders' and my intersect spiked instantly.
And when i am at 10th episode and more yet to come, it feels like story has gained so much of momentum as whenever we looked back when detective 'Tae Ju' got to know this series of murder is serial murder, never though that we will reached into this place where everyone has lost so many things that it can't be recovered. I personally like both story and performance a lot though out the series.
And i got deja vu many times like (and its not good),
When 4th victim's (school girl) best friend (school girl) died and it shows doctor find particles (chocolate here) inside her private part, likewise in 'memories of murder' doctor find pencil (i guess) instead of chocolate .
when serial killer, 'Jung Moon Sung' as 'Lee Gi Hwan', choose '8 year old girl' as a target instead of 'Tae Ju's' sister, likewise in 'memories of murder's' serial killer choose school girl as a target instead of Detective's wife.
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"Promising series completely, got butchered in the editing room"
The plot, cast, and production team clearly put a lot of effort into recreating the 1999 setting, and that was one of my favorite aspects of the series. The nostalgic atmosphere felt authentic and immersive. The cast also delivered strong performances throughout, especially the trio whose comedic timing and quirky humor were genuinely entertaining. It has been a long time since I enjoyed a drama that incorporated comedy so naturally into its storyline.However, this series had the potential to be something truly brilliant but ultimately fell short because of its inconsistent screenplay and editing. While the director stated that Cha Eun Woo's scenes were not intentionally cut, Episodes 7 and 8 made it feel as though a significant portion of his storyline was removed. His character gradually faded into the background, almost becoming a supporting character rather than one of the leads.
As a result, the doctor storyline and several villain-related developments also felt sidelined. By Episodes 7 and 8, the drama focused heavily on the trio, and I found myself almost forgetting Cha Eun Woo's character altogether. The narrative became increasingly messy after Episode 6, and many scenes appeared rushed or disconnected, likely due to the limitation of fitting everything into only eight episodes.
At several points, it felt as though the focus shifted entirely to Mr. Son, Eun Bin, and Ro Bin, while other storylines lost their momentum. The transitions between scenes often lacked proper continuity, making the final episodes feel like I was watching a completely different series rather than a continuation of the same story.
Overall, Wonder Fools is still a one-time watch. The comedy works well, the cast is talented, and the 1999 setting is charming. However, the plot felt heavily familiar to me, combining elements that reminded me of Stranger Things and Blind. While the series had all the ingredients for greatness, the screenplay and editing prevented it from reaching its full potential.
My biggest disappointment was not the cast or the performances, but the way the story was ultimately executed.
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Too good!
I was contemplating for a while whether to watch this. I’m glad I did, the first episode was a bit weird, there’s a fair bit of explaining going on and setting the stage. Though once it gets going the drama is definitely one to watch. I ended up watching it all in one go - that’s how good it is!Loved all the actors and their characters they were perfect for their roles! I’m glad they didn’t portray the superhero’s as experts instead they are completely clueless and all over the place. This made them more interesting and intriguing. For Eun-Woo I think this drama was a good career development choice. It’s so good to see Choi Dae-hoon doing different characters since watching him first in Crash landing on you, he fits every role really well.
Loved this and I’m hoping they’ll do a season 2!
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UNWILLINGLY FUNNY.
This is drama that takes itself to seriously and by doing that achieves the exact opposite. this was unwilling funny. I laughed my ass off at the absolute ridiculousness.🤣
PLOT:
A girl meets a man and falls in love with him just by listening to his voice. She then traced him down and start courting him. Will they end up together?
THE ROMANCE:
The ridiculousness starts right from the very beginning.
This girl meets a man in a hair salon. He is washing her hair and chit chatting with her.
She is suddenly so mesmerized by this 2 minutes long interaction that she literally stalks him, finds out where he lives and keeps showing at this unknown man's place.
He isn't any better though. this little girl shows up constantly and instead of sending her her way, he basically "tolerates" her presence for no reason.
She even keeps showering at his place many many many times.
She is thirsting over this man constantly and the drama emphasises this by showing little gestures, like he drinkinkin a beer, with exaggerated appeal.
I kid you not , he drinking a beer looks like a fricking commercial.🤣
Moving forward it is clear that these 2 like each other but there is actually no reason.
She tells us he is a mysterious man which he is not. He is just a quiet dude and pretty boring to be honest.
She on the other hand wants to be taken seriously by this guy but dresses and behaves like a 5 years old.
In my opinion he is kind of a creep. In the drama many AGE APPROPRIATE women show their interest in this man but he chooses the most childish, barely adult one... Kind of sus if you ask me , especially because he emphasises he wants someone "willing to stay and not date him out of a wimp". Sure. I am positive this 5 years old looking 19 years old is absolutely adamant and has her life all figured out.😬
THE DRAMA:
As said before , the drama takes itself too seriously. Never ending shots of these 2 longing, crying.
Some "artistic choices" made me laugh. In one scene the main guy is looking at fish in an aquarium and by the way the camera moves, it looks like he is making out with said fish. I couldn't hold it🤣🤣
Later on we see a painting she made of him and it was so cringe I laughed once again.
THE CHARACTERS:
What to say. He main lead is boring as hell and the main girl is basically an unlikable brat. She has guys falling for her left and right, but she treats everyone like shit. I bet if she was ugly noone would talk to her because she is very rude to everyone. Her mom, her nanny. Her CHILDHOOD FRIEND. everyone.
The actors:
I didn't like the characters but the actors were fine. At first I had the feeling I already knew the main guy and later I figured out he was the guy from the first METEOR GARDEN. what a throwback guys.
Conclusions:
I am dropping this drama mid way because there is nothing that interesting to keep me watching. Sure, I might find other hilarious stuff, but 11 more episodes of this might be the end of my already thin patience.
Should you watch it?
Give it a try. You might find the story compelling or surprisingly hilarious like I did. You never know
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Wonderfools: Quirky Powers, 1999 Doomsday Vibes, and Flawed Heroes 7.5/10
Wonderfools drops us into 1999 Haeseong City, where doomsday panic meets an unlikely trio of neighborhood heroes suddenly gifted with unstable, imperfect supernatural abilities. When Eun Chae Ni, her neighbors Son Gyeong Un and Kang Ro Bin get tangled in a mysterious incident, they're thrust into a race against unexplained disappearances and a rising threat that tests both the city and their limits.Park Eun Bin is electric as Eun Chae Ni—spirited, chaotic, and endearingly human, she anchors the show's heart and humor. Kim Hae Sook shines as her grandmother Kim Jeon Bok, bringing warmth and grit that ground the story. Cha Eun Woo stands out as Lee Un Jeong, the principled, socially distant civil servant whose calm rationality slowly cracks under pressure, adding quiet depth. Choi Dae Hoon and Im Sung Jae round out the trio as bumbling-but-brave neighbors whose friendship feels real and funny.
The mystery hooks early, and the 1990s setting adds nostalgic flavor, but the show stumbles with uneven pacing and powers that often feel more frustrating than fun. Tensions rise against Ha Un Do's hidden agenda, yet some plot threads fade before landing hard.
Still, Wonderfools is a charming, character-driven ride with genuine heart and a fresh take on superhero chaos—just not quite polished enough to be great.
A 7.5/10 for fans of quirky, ensemble-driven K‑dramas who want humor, heart, and a little supernatural mess.
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One Bad Choice after Another
I never expected a drama starring Xu Kai to make me actively dislike the character he was playing, and I mean that as one of the biggest compliments I can give this show.We're so used to seeing big stars in idol dramas playing perfect green-flag male leads with endless plot armor. No matter what happens, they're usually written to stay likable and justified. Eight Hundred does the complete opposite. It gives Xu Kai a deeply flawed character who keeps making one terrible decision after another, and I found that far more interesting than watching another perfect hero.
I've always thought Xu Kai was a good actor, but most of his previous roles never really gave him the opportunity to show his full range. He often plays the same serious, reserved type of character. Here, however, he gets to portray someone far more complicated. Chen Hui is desperate, selfish, loving, reckless, sympathetic, and frustrating all at the same time. This is easily one of the strongest performances I've seen from him because it finally showcases just how versatile he can be.
What I found fascinating is that I felt bad for Chen Hui, but I never truly sympathized with him. Those are two different things. I understood why he was desperate. I understood his fear and his love for Song Ge. But understanding him didn't make me agree with him.
At first, I could see how someone might end up trapped in a situation like his. But there were multiple moments where he could have stopped. The biggest turning point for me was after the cough syrup incident. If he had gone to his father and confessed everything then, his life might have taken a completely different path. Instead, he kept digging himself deeper and deeper until there was no way back. Once he crossed the line into deliberately planning violence and involving other people in his crimes, I could no longer defend him. By the time people were dying, whatever sympathy I had left was gone.
That's why I never viewed Chen Hui as a tragic hero. He was a tragic character, but those aren't the same thing.
Interestingly, I cared far more about the father-son relationship than I did about the romance. The romance is the catalyst for the story, but it never felt like the heart of the story to me. What kept me invested was the cat-and-mouse game between Chen Hui and his father. Every confrontation carried more weight than any romantic scene.
I also found myself disagreeing with many viewers who blamed Hong Bin entirely. Was he a perfect father? No. But I couldn't help feeling sorry for him. Imagine dedicating your life to protecting people, only to discover that your own son is responsible for harming countless others. The disappointment, guilt, and conflict he carried throughout the story were heartbreaking.
I do think there were moments when Hong Bin's obsession with catching criminals overshadowed his role as a father. Part of me wonders whether a genuine heart-to-heart conversation much earlier could have changed Chen Hui's path. At times, it felt as though Hong Bin trusted his instincts as a police officer more than he trusted his son. Yet even with those flaws, I never saw him as the villain. He was simply a man trapped between his duty and his family, and there was no outcome where he could truly win.
The people I felt the most sorry for were actually the parents, especially the mother. She lost everything despite doing nothing wrong. Watching both parents suffer the consequences of choices they never made was devastating.
As for Chen Hui and Song Ge, I honestly didn't find them romantic. I found them tragic. Their relationship wasn't something I was rooting for as much as I was watching in horror. They loved each other, but they also destroyed each other's lives. Everything they sacrificed was supposedly for a future together, yet in the end neither of them got that future. He was executed, she received a life sentence despite finally getting the kidney she needed, and all the suffering ended up being for nothing.
The ending hit me harder than I expected. Not because I thought Chen Hui deserved a happy ending, but because of how young he was. Twenty-three years old, and his entire life was gone because of a chain of choices that kept escalating. It felt like watching someone repeatedly choose the wrong path until there were no paths left.
My biggest criticism is that the investigation sometimes becomes repetitive. There were moments when it felt like Chen Hui was always one step ahead and the story kept circling the same conflict. The pacing occasionally dragged because of this. However, the emotional payoff was strong enough that I stayed invested until the end.
In the end, Eight Hundred isn't really a romance or even a crime thriller. It's a tragedy about consequences. Every bad decision creates another one, every compromise leads to a bigger compromise, and eventually there comes a point where there is no way back.
It's frustrating, heartbreaking, and sometimes difficult to watch, but it also gave me one of my favorite Xu Kai performances to date.
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First impression
YouTube playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLszepnkojZI7uWKLBqfRqXvmH3uACl2iwEpisode 1:
So far, I like it a lot, and I'm excited to see more. But unfortunately I am one of those people who were wishing for a happy ending (because I believe that while realistically in real life this situation would've not ended necessarily well, people who have a religious background or religious trauma deserve to get their happy ending despite what their "God" wants), but from the way it started, I could sort of tell that it would either have a sad or a bittersweet ending.
Of course it's all just my theories, and it might end up with a happy ending regardless, but I am still a bit sad because I don't really believe it.
Still though, I can tell for sure that I will love this series regardless of the ending it will have because already I'm obsessed. It has a good acting, great cinematography and of course GeminiFourth chemistry is as always of charts. So yeah, I'm excited for more. I'm sure they won't disappoint.
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Seriously well produced
Surprisingly this is the first teen drama I’ve seen that really portrayed teen feelings, emotions, reactions and decisions in the best true way. It hits on point. You wonder how could other dramas miss these points. It’s refreshing, super sweet and genuine. One drama you want to watch at least once. Was it only me - but watching most of this drama my heart smiled.The actors are perfect for the roles. All their interactions and reactions are genuine and really well acted. Very mature in their acting. I could sense by watching Soo-bin turned out she is a child actress. I loved the homeschool teacher’s character and journey; stuck in all the mess with the students and parents, and how he navigates this space.
The director did very well in the storytelling so it told a new and heartfelt story that still feels different from other drama storylines that might overlap/ be similar. The drama gives the sense of unique, warmth, comfort and courage.
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Four distinct teachers, one chaotic writer and a whole lot of self-improvement
I went into this expecting the usual high school clichés, but it completely caught me off guard with how brilliantly self-aware and hilarious it is. Despite a few slower, slightly boring moments in the middle stretch, the overall plot remains surprisingly solid and well-constructed. A huge part of that is thanks to the teachers, who are genuinely interesting characters, each distinct with their own unique personality. What I appreciated most was how the student-teacher relationship was handled perfectly; it never romanticizes the dynamic, going straight to self-improvement, mutual respect, and genuine personal growth instead.Of course, the absolute highlight for me—and what literally had me dying of laughter—was how the show brings the web novel scenes to life. Cha Hak-yeon completely stole the spotlight; watching him switch from a stiff, robotic math teacher to dramatically impersonating the hyper-romantic fictional character "Si-on" was absolutely lethal comedy. The sheer second-hand embarrassment of seeing him act out those over-the-top, slow-motion fanfiction fantasies with a straight face is pure gold. Kim Hyang-gi is equally amazing, making her character's internal panic so wonderfully messy and relatable. The laugh-out-loud absurdity of those novel-vs-reality sequences made this an incredibly fun ride.
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