Monthly Archives: September 2019

My First First Love Season 2

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Disclaimer: this is a review, and as such it contains spoilers of the whole series. Please proceed to read at your own risk if you still plan on watching this show or if you haven’t finished it yet. You have been warned.

My First First Love
(첫사랑은 처음이라서 / Cheossarangeun Cheoeumiraseo / Because It’s My First Love)
MyDramaList rating: 7.0/10

Before starting a new long drama, I decided to go on Netflix and quickly bingewatch the second season of My First First Love. I’d been postponing it for a while and I was finally in the mood.
For my review on the first season, please check it out here.
The reason I’m making two separate reviews is because I watched the two seasons separately. If I’d watched it one go, I would’ve probably made it into one extended review. However, as I did with the separate review for Good Morning Call’s second season, I found it interesting to write an individual review, as it expresses the best how I felt watching this after it had been a while since I watched the first season.

So, what do we remember from season 1?
Yoon Tae Oh (played by Ji Soo), is a rich boy who for his 20th birthday gets a house from his father and stepmother and due to extenuating circumstances, three friends come to live with him in this big house with many rooms. These friends are his childhood friend Han Song Yi (played by Jung Chae Yeon), his extra aspiring musical actor friend Choi Hoon (played by Kang Tae Oh) and little princess who walked away from home Oh Ga Rin (played by Choi Ri).
Song Yi secretly gets involved with Tae Oh’s other good friend Seo Do Hyun (played by Jin Young) and Tae Oh gets together with popular aan free-spirited aspiring film editor Ryu Se Hyeon (played by Hong Ji Yoon).
Season 1 ended when all six of them went on a trip together to Gangneung, and Tae Oh found out that Song Yi and Do Hyun were dating.
It was the plan for the couple to tell everyone during that trip, but a couple of things happened: Hoon experienced a low moment after failing again for obtaining a role, and Ga Rin accidentally let it slip to Se Hyeon that they, excluding Do Hyun, were all living together at Tae Oh’s place.

Season 2 begins with a very happy couple, Song Yi and Do Hyun, happily spending time together. We can see that Tae Oh isn’t too happy about it (it was already shown that his feelings for Song Yi were changing after he saw them kiss in Gangneung), but for the sake of both his friends, he keeps his dismay to himself and tries really hard to get rid of his feelings for Song Yi.
The couple still has to tell the others about their relationship, though.
In the meantime, Tae Oh tries to patch things up with Se Hyeon, but discovers that she’s not as angry about those people living with him as she is with Song Yi living with him. She gives Tae Oh an ultimatum to save their relationship: make Song Yi move out.
On the other hand, the deep friendship between Tae Oh and Song Yi is starting to bother Do Hyun as well. He keeps missing chances to come to Song Yi’s aid because Tae Oh gets there faster and starts feeling inferior as Song Yi’s boyfriend.
So both Tae Oh and Song Yi are faced with dissatisfaction from their respective love interests in regards to their friendship with each other.
But they find that they can’t deny how much they mean to each other – in some natural way, they just know each other inside out and they always seem to prioritize each other. When Tae Oh is upset, Song Yi feels bad too and vice versa.

In the meantime, there is more development in Hoon and Ga Rin’s relationship as well. Hoon makes a stupid mistake in his despair for money as she keeps failing at auditions and he dials the number from the missing person’s flyer that was given to him by the people looking for Ga Rin.
At the last minute, but already after the money has been wired to him, he decides this isn’t right and still helps Ga Rin get away. However, when he tells her the truth, she gets really mad at him, as does everyone else.
He does keep trying to make it up to her and she is eventually eased by sincerity of his regret.
Just when he gets back his motivation to keep auditioning, Hoon receives a hopeful phone call from his dad – but it turns out to be an unfair way to get him into a promising musical and he doesn’t feel good taking the opportunity purely based on connections. He gets into a fight with his dad, gets slapped by his dad, and when he calls Ga Rin, even though he says he’s fine, Ga Rin can hear that he needs her and she runs to him.
They confront each other there and realize they’ve always been there for each other and there’s this adorable scene where they kiss and from that moment on they’re dating as well.

As this season also only has 8 episodes, the story goes really fast and what basically happens is that both Song Yi and Tae Oh experience a situation concerning their mothers in which the other stands by them. Tae Oh stands by Song Yi as she finds out the whereabouts of her mom who ran away from her and as she confronts her. Song Yi stands by Tae Oh after she finds out his mother has been alive all this time and this has been kept a secret from him for 20 years. She takes him to the address and they meet again.
These moments truly show how deep their friendship is – they both gave up on their respective ‘dates’ because this was a situation that was important to their best friend.
Tae Oh and Se Hyeon are the first to break up, though not on entirely bad terms. Do Hyun gets angry at Song Yi for prioritizing Tae Oh and thinking more than about him than about her boyfriend.
Although this was also because Song Yi was really beating around the bush about what was going on with Tae Oh which sounded to Do Hyun as if she was leaving him for Tae Oh, I have to agree.

In the end, due to the worsening financial circumstances of his dad’s dumpling shop, Do Hyun decides to take up the offer and move away for a while with his dad to get everything back on track.
Hoon finally lands a leading role and Ga Rin becomes an independent entrepeneur (she gets her own building in which people can rent their own spaces to get together for hobby workshops and meet new people with the same hobby’s), they both move out and Song Yi stays with Tae Oh and despite the fact that the switch from friends to lovers is a bit awkward, they start dating.

Okay, so I basically mentioned everything that happened in the series.
I have to say that the main reason I postponed watching this was because I knew what was coming. No thanks to the major spoiler thumbnail on Netflix, thank you very much (the image is of Tae Oh and Song Yi kissing).
When season 1 ended, my friend and I were kind of disappointed because we thought Song Yi and Do Hyun made such a great cute couple that we actually were against Tae Oh and Song Yi ending up together. I mean, it was obvious, but at that point I thought it would feel really unnatural to force Tae Oh and Song Yi together because Song Yi didn’t show any romantic intentions towards Tae Oh.
However, I have to say that after watching season 2, I think they did a very good job building it up. Except for the sudden mutual decision in the end to start dating, I didn’t feel like they were forced together. They both gave each other their blessing in their respective romantic relationships, but they just discovered that they kept prioritizing other people.
Sometimes things are just not meant to be. I mean, for me it felt a bit weird to see Song Yi switch from Do Hyun to Tae Oh. But when looking at their friendship, there were no weird feelings.
As I’ve noted many times before: feelings do whatever they want. If something happens and you want to tell someone, you don’t have any control about who you want to tell first. For Song Yi, that person was always Tae Oh. At least when it came to serious things, and when she was upset.
For things about dates and when she got out of school and ask to have lunch together, of course she texted her boyfriend. But when it came to the important things, she would always call Tae Oh. And Tae Oh always came running. And afterwards he would ask Do Hyun why he didn’t come running, and Do Hyun would just feel bad. But Tae Oh couldn’t help it. Because it had always been that way.

What I really appreciate about this series is that everyone is so real with each other. Everyone talks to each other. When they have a secret or a lie, they never hold it in for long. I loved Hoon for confessing what he did to Ga Rin the minute he got her out of the situation.
And the struggle Song Yi had about telling Tae Oh when she found out about his mother also was really relatable. On the one hand you know he needs to know the truth, but what if he really didn’t want to know? Will it bring him joy or pain knowing the truth? Anyways, I think everyone was very honest with each other and I really liked that.

I just love Kang Tae Oh, he might have had some annoying traits in the beginning, but I just found him so endearing as Hoon. I really want to see more of him as an actor.
I’m also really proud of my bean Ji Soo. His acting became so much better! It feels like I’m watching him grow with every drama and I love it.
I also liked Chae Yeon better, even though she can still improve her acting. But the scene where she confronted her mother and threw a tantrum was really good and heartfelt.
It was nice to see how Ga Rin got this character development, she stood up against her mother for her own freedom, found something she was interested in and started her own organization to bring people together as they were brought together by staying at Tae Oh’s together. It was all wrapped together very nicely.
I enjoyed it when Hoon and Ga Rin finally got together. Because even if they were insufferably cheesy with each other, the true depth of their feelings for each other made it seem like more than just a cute romance, it really came from somewhere. That’s a beautiful thing to have.

Actually it’s interesting to see that Tae Oh and Song Yi were eventually ‘brought together’ by their friends. If it had been for Tae Oh, he would’ve probably gone on hiding his feelings from Song Yi to make sure she and Do Hyun would’ve stayed happy. However, Se Hyeon and Do Hyun were the ones who pointed out to them that they actually liked each other. So in the end, you could say that they were ‘forced’ together, but not by the writers in order to fulfill their trope – because from the start it was clear that they would end up together – but by the people around them. Se Hyeon and Do Hyun accepted reluctantly that they weren’t being prioritized and chose for themselves, even though it hurt.
As for Do Hyun, I had hoped for him to be a little bit more understanding because he had been friends with Tae Oh for a long time as well. And while he was always asking Song Yi to keep him informed about things, he didn’t tell her either about how his family/father’s business was in serious trouble. And there were some cases in which Song Yi did contact him first before Tae Oh, but he still wasn’t able to come in first.

As for Se Hyeon, by the way, it was never explained what the deal was with Se Hyeon and her rumored rendezvous with all these other guys. When she was with Tae Oh it really seemed like she was serious about him, but she never mentioned anything and it was never discovered by Tae Oh. We only ever saw her get into other guy’s cars through Song Yi’s eyes.
I actually wondered what that was about, but it wasn’t explained in the end. Ultimately I actually liked Se Hyeon’s character. She might’ve acted high and mighty to Song Yi, but she proved that she was a good person and not just the bitchy type. She even helped Song Yi with the first clue that led her to her mother’s whereabouts. No one asked her to do that and there was nothing she could gain from it, she did it from the existing goodness in her heart. I like that the characters in this series were all relatable in some way.

Now that I’ve finished this, I do feel content. Although I still don’t completely feel all the way for Tae Oh and Song Yi as a couple, it was undeniable that their friendship outweighed all their other relationships and this was probably the only way to go.

So, I will now start a new longer drama and keep you posted about my future drama watch activities!


About Time

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Disclaimer: this is a review, and as such it contains spoilers of the whole series. Please proceed to read at your own risk if you still plan on watching this show or if you haven’t finished it yet. You have been warned.

About Time
(어바웃 타임 / Eobaut Taim)
MyDramaList rating: 5.5/10

Hello again! Back with another review. I have been trying to get my act together again after being prematurely sent away from my new job but I managed to and I even got a new job only a few weeks later. I will be able to combine this with my hobbys more so I’m feeling lucky and this means I have more time to watch my needed dose of drama again as well!

This series was on my list for a while as I’m a big Lee Sung Kyung fan. Each and every drama I’ve seen of her so far, she shows a completely new and different side of her and she’s also stunning and a total style icon. My favorite up to date of course is Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok Joo in which she also didn’t shy from portraying a female character that was not included in the standard category of ‘pretty popular girl’.
It was the first time I saw a drama with her in which she played the typical sweet girl heroine, and it was also the first time I was seriously annoyed by the character she portrayed. But more of that later.

First of all, the story.
About Time is a 16-episode drama about an aspiring young musical actress named Choi Mikaela, nicknamed Mi Ka (played by Lee Sung Kyung). She has had a special ability since she was a child, which is that she’s able to see people’s ‘life clocks’. Somewhere on their bodies, everyone has a digital clock ticking down the time they have left to live and Mi Ka can see these. Not too long ago she also suddenly became able to see her own life clock – she herself has less than a year to live (about 104 days) when the story begins. That’s why she’s determined to make her dream of becoming a musical actress a reality and has been drowning herself in auditions one after the other. The only one who knows about her special ability is her best friend Jeon Seong Hee (played by Han Seung Yeon), who works at a musical agency. She has been supporting Mikaela, especially since she gained the ability to see her life clock.
On the other hand, we have Lee Do Ha (played by Lee Sang Yoon), the director of a company that manages musicals (I think?). He suffers from an anxiety syndrome and isn’t really the affectionate type. He has been attempting to propose to Bae Soo Bong, nicknamed Beth (played by Im Se Mi), a good friend and business ally, but she has been playing coy and hasn’t accepted a single proposal yet even though she calls him ‘Honey’ and it seems like they’re dating. It’s suggested that they are practically engaged, anyway.
One day Mikaela is on her way to an audition and gets into an accident when Do Ha bumps into her with his car.Eventually she makes him drive her to her audition. The director currently searching for competent actors to star in his new original musical, Cho Jae Yoo (played by Kim Dong Joon), comments on Mi Ka’s audition that while she captures the excitement of the character, she lacks the emotional empathy of someone who is in love.
She boldly steps up and kisses Do Ha, who is in the hall, to prove to the director that she at least has the guts, but he is still not impressed.
Mi Ka and Do Ha meet a couple more times, and Do Ha increasingly gets more intrigued by Mi Ka, as she sometimes seems all happy and careless, and sometimes gets this really sad look in her eye.
When they happen upon each other again -Do Ha has to meet a Chinese investor and make a good impression so they go diving in the ocean to please him and Mi Ka is coincidentally asked to accompany them as a diving instructor – Do Ha almost drowns and Mi Ka saves his life.
In this moment, she suddenly realizes that her life clock (located in her case on her left wrist) stops when she’s near Do Ha.
In the weeks that follow this discovery, Mi Ka tries to seduce Do Ha, or at least tries anything in her power to remain close to him in order to stop her own ticking time.
The story of course results in the two falling in love, but then the life clocks reveal a cruel hidden trait as Mi Ka discovers the reason why she’s been getting extra time is because she’s been gaining Do Ha’s time. When they get intimate, his time starts ticking down real fast as hers accumulates.
Will they be able to figure this strange twist of fate out?

To drop the bomb, I have a lot of frustrations and criticisms about this drama but as I have done before, I will try to keep it nice.
I would like to start with these criticisms before I end on a positive note, because there certainly was a good message at the end.

First of all, what surprised me from the start was that the build-up in the relationship between Do Ha and Mi Ka was very fast. Normally, it takes about 10 episodes to get to the point where the male and female lead finally confront each other’s feelings and/or kiss. In About Time, when Do Ha tells Mi Ka he’s in love with her, it’s episode 3. It went so fast that I actually remember saying to my computer screen, ‘slow down people, it’s only episode 3’. But yeah, in episode 3 Do Ha has already been mesmerized by Mi Ka. Mi Ka, on the other hand, after actively pursuing him, at this stage has chosen to keep her distance and she initially takes a step back.
I have to admit I found his confession quite premature and I didn’t feel like they were both on the same page yet.
But all in all, I found the development of their relationship very odd. Because in the beginning Mi Ka was all like ‘damn I gotta get close to him, I need him so that I’ll have more time’ (quite a selfish reason), but then when Do Ha suddenly starts falling for her she’s like ‘oh now wait a second’. But the next moment she suddenly liked him back. It was a bit confusing for me to follow.
Anyways, they were already together within the first 5 episodes of the series, so I thought ‘great. if their relationship has been established so early on, it can only go down from here.’ And it did. It really did.

Until this point, Mi Ka has not been able to spot Do Ha’s clock. That’s the first puzzling thing. In the beginning he doesn’t seem to have a clock, but when he’s near her her time stops and when he touches her (holds her hand or something), her time increases. He doesn’t seem to be aware that he has this effect.
However, when they are at a point in their relationship when they’re living together (Mi Ka has become Do Ha’s personal driver) and they are doing happily well, one time when she fixes his tie she suddenly sees his life clock, located in his neck. And then she suddenly sees his time rapidly decreasing from the 60 years he has, and her own time rapidly increasing, adding extra days within several minutes.
And the way she chose to handle this, was my biggest frustration of the drama. Honestly, I haven’t been this frustrated since Switched.

Before I go on to jot down all my frustrations, I first want to mention my favorite characters. I don’t want this review to be only negative comments and frustrations, so I’ll try to mix in some things and people I thought where nice and funny and good.
Most and foremost, KIM HAE SOOK. Ladies and gentlemen, Kim Hae Sook is a treasure of the Korean acting industry and I hope she keeps on acting until the end. What an incredibly talented actress. I just wish she was my next-door neighbor who would bring me cookies everyday.
She portrayed Madame Oh So Nyeo, an elderly lady in the hospital Mi Ka used to volunteer at. She seems like the typical lovely middle-aged lady who still had a youthful glint in her eye and a love for mischief, but we find out later that she too is able to see life clocks. Once the viewer discovers this, in-between Mi Ka and Do Ha’s relationship troubles, there are occasional scenes of Madame Oh comforting other people in the hospital and teaching them about life and how important it is to enjoy as much of it as possible within the time we have.
She briefly dates an elderly man she also met at the hospital and their romance was just so endearing. And it stung, because we see from the beginning through Mi Ka’s point of view that he doesn’t live as long as Madame Oh. Despite knowing this, Madame Oh enjoys their relationship as long as it lasts so to have no regrets. As she’s aware of her own impending end, at one point she pulls a prank where she sends a message informing of her obituary notice, which brings people crying to her house expecting a funeral – only to find her there very much alive with a prepared party.
One of the scenes I enjoyed the most was the one where she met up with some old friends and they reminiscined and apologized for whatever lingering feelings of resentment there were from the past. Madame Oh’s character was filled in by Kim Hae Sook so beautifully and warmly that I just wanted to hug her every time she had scenes. Whenever she’d appear, I’d find myself smiling. This woman is the best.
I have seen several other roles portrayed by Kim Hae Sook (I Hear Your Voice and Pinocchio), and the drama Room No. 9 is also on my list. I look very much forward to watching her shine there as well.
Furthermore, I really liked Do Ha’s older brother Lee Do San (played by Jung Moon Sung). He was a bit of an outcast in the family because he had a different mother than Do Ha and his other brother. He liked to travel and write stories. He walked with a limp that he acquired during childhood when the mean brother pushed him down the stairs once.
Mi Ka finds out one time that he has less than a month left to live and urges him to go to the hospital. When he does, he finds out the disease he’s been diagnosed with before but of which was said it wasn’t spreading too fast, indeed had suddenly been spreading so much that he didn’t have much time left. I just loved how sweet he was to Do Ha. Besides Do Ha and their sister-in-law, he was the only nice person in their family. I had feels when he passed 🙁
By the way, Do Ha’s family is worth describing a bit. He was the youngest of two brothers, Do San and Do Bin (played by Min Sung Wook). Do Bin is married to Kim Hye Young (played by Kim Sa Hee), but their father has never really approved of her and keeps criticizing her or ignoring her. I felt bad for her too. I felt bad for her that she was married to Do Bin, he wasn’t very nice either.
The father, Lee Sun Moon (Jung Dong Hwan) only cares about the legacy of his family and urges Do Ha to marry Bae Soo Bong because she’s from a wealthy family and they need to keep up appearances most of all. Do Ha isn’t really close to anyone in his family, he only had Do San to talk to so it was really sad that his most trusted person had such an unfortunate fate waiting for him 🙁

I’m going to go back to my story for a little bit, trying to mix the frustrations with other topics I can talk about. The main thing I wish to talk about is my frustration about the incredibility of Mi Ka’s character. This expressed itself in several different aspects, I will categorize them in two little chapters: ‘Mi Ka the Musical Actress’ and ‘Mi Ka’s Way of Handling Things’.
1. Mi Ka the Musical Actress.
It was a nice extra addition to include the trials and tribulations of a small original musical in-the-making, even though it was probably only to create a place where Mi Ka and Do Ha would be forced to meet on a regular basis. Putting them in the same workspace was needed as a plot tool.
From our first meeting with Mi Ka we see that she loves singing, she’s all about taking auditions and she wants to be on stage. However, I still can’t help wondering about the choice for casting Lee Sung Kyung, who isn’t a professional singer, in a role that needs to prove she’s a good singer. Because, and I know this sounds awful, and maybe it was because of the acoustics of the rooms she practiced in, but on several occasions I didn’t actually enjoy her singing.
There’s one point in which she becomes the understudy for the main female lead, the actual role being performed by Kim Joo Na (played by Kim Kyu Ri), Do Ha’s first love, who is brought in by Beth in order to sabotage Mi Ka and Do Ha’s relationship and put extra tension between the three of them. Kim Joo Na’s singing was really good, and I was a bit taken aback when Mi Ka would suddenly criticize her – because in my opinion Kim Joo Na’s singing was way better than Mi Ka’s. Mi Ka eventually acquires the leading role when Joo Na chooses to step back because her vocal condition isn’t up to par and also because she’s done with Beth using her as a revenge tool to break apart Mi Ka and Do Ha. I liked Joo Na’s character, she was real and she stood up for what was right, even if that meant being an occasionally strict mentor.
Anyways, I didn’t believe Mi Ka as a musical actress. Not just because of the singing – and let’s look past the cutesy little songs and dances she’d perform during practice, she only sang the two same songs throughout the series as if she didn’t know anything else to practice – but also because of what happened when she was cast as the understudy.
Now, okay, I have done a lot of acting and musical myself, so maybe it will sound arrogant, but as excited as she was to be the understudy, she didn’t seem to have a clue what it meant. During script reading and other rehearsals, she literally just sat there. When someone asked her what she was doing – because the understudy needs to be able to perform the leading role if the leading actress is unable to, she would just blink her eyes and look all confused and I was like, does she not know what an understudy is? You can’t just sit there and think ‘oh, this doesn’t apply to me, I don’t need to practice this’. Uhm, guess what, you DO. The director would ask her questions about what she thought about the lead role and Joo Na and she’d be just like ‘oh I don’t know, I think she did well’, and the director actually had to point out to her that she had to pay attention as well. Also, for someone whose dream it was to star in a musical, she didn’t look all that excited to me during rehearsals AT ALL. I was seriously wondering if she even liked being there. It seemed like she was this naive girl with a dream of being a musical actress because she liked singing, but when it came to it, she actually fell on her face. I just found it such a waste that Lee Sung Kyung, the QUEEN of facial expressions, just fell flat expressing her emotions as Mi Ka. Honestly, each time she was asked a question, she would just look back at that person with a blank expression, not even answering. Such a shame, I know Sung Kyung can do so much better. Maybe it was just badly written, I don’t know.
Anyhow, those were aspects that made me question the choice of putting Mi Ka in the story as a musical actress, because it seemed like she hadn’t even heard of what being an understudy entailed. Whenever she got a clear compliment she got all happy, but whenever someone gave her some feedback to work with, she was just like ‘Oh wow these people really know their stuff’. Girl, the point here is that YOU know your stuff.
There was this one moment where Choi Jae Yoo complimented her on not just focussing on the song lyrics but actually reading through the lines and expressing the emotions behind it, and she literally looked at him like ‘???’ and when he walked away, she whispered to herself, ‘ “Reading between the lines”? …Wow, he must be a real genius…’ GIRL. It’s not rocket science. It’s the basic thing to know about singing – conveying a message, not just singing prettily. If you don’t even know this, how are you going to do this?
It just wasn’t realistic.
2. Mi Ka’s Way of Handling Things.
As I mentioned, I was very frustrated with the way in which Mi Ka dealt with the discovery that she was taking Do Ha’s time away to add to her own all this time.
This is what happens: she takes it upon herself to stop Do Ha’s time from spilling into hers, and she does this by suddenly, out of the blue, declaring to him that she can’t stand him anymore and wants to break up. She doesn’t explain anything, she just decides to stay away from him.
Do Ha, of course, is confused. One night they’re cuddling, kissing on the couch, she even tells him she loves him – the next she’s suddenly gone and when he meets her she tells him she doesn’t like him anymore. Initially he doesn’t believe her and keeps trying to talk with her and confront her, but every time it only results in her pushing him away even harder.
And the most angering thing was this: He already knew about the life clocks. Mi Ka had already told him that she needed him because he made her time stop. He already knew about it.
They’d also just had the whole arc with Do San in which she informed him of his brother’s decreasing time and that he had less than a month to live. Do Ha knew about the life clock phenomenon, so he would’ve probably also grasped the situation if she’d told him the problem honestly.
‘I can finally see your clock now and I discovered that all this time I’ve actually been taking your time away from you. The time that’s been added to my life is coming from yours. I can’t let this happen because I love you too damn much. How do we face this problem?’ < this is how it should’ve gone. It was their problem, something that had to do with both of them. But Mi Ka took it on as her own, not even telling him. And sure, it was to “protect” him, she did it to “save” him from herself. But the way she went about trying to accomplish what she wanted (I’m not sure what it was she wanted to accomplish because it made zero sense to me) was just wrong.
After she just plain lied to him about why she wanted to break up, when he confronts her again, she lies to him again saying that she discovered HER time was suddenly decreasing and it was because of him. Heck, she tells him he is going to kill her if he stays close to her. She literally guilt-trips him into staying away from her, she guilt-trips him into believing he’s an actual physical danger to her. She never once shows any intention to tell him the truth. Even though he would’ve believed her, he would’ve been informed about the severity of the situation and he would’ve done everything in his power to figure something out somehow BY HER SIDE. But no.
Instead of trusting him and telling him the simple truth, she just piled up a lie on top of another lie, making things worse and worse.
And here’s where I lost all respect for Mi Ka’s character. She acted so incredibly selfish. While maybe she thought she was doing it for him, not once did she think about how this would make him feel. That didn’t matter. She was actually causing more damage than necessary.
One time she said something like, ‘I’m just so terrified that one day I’m suddenly going to be gone and he’ll be so hurt.’ Uhm, excuse me? The way she treated him instead was way more hurtful and damaging than any of the ‘what might’ve been’ scenarios.
It just wasn’t fair to Do Ha. He deserved to know the truth. He deserved to know what was happening, at least. It wasn’t just her problem, it wasn’t just her secret. Do Ha kept proving again and again how much he was willing to do for her and she still kept running away whenever things got a little complicated, never confiding in him once.
I pitied Do Ha a lot. He just wanted to know why his girlfriend broke up with him all of a sudden, he had the right to an explanation. And instead of just giving him the truth, she kept making up lie after lie. I mean, it’s not like she’d have to explain the whole life clock phenomenon to him from the beginning. It just didn’t make sense to lie.
The only two people aware of Mi Ka’s situation were Madame Oh and Mi Ka’s best friend Seong Hee, but Mi Ka made them lie for her as well. Do Ha went to see the two of them multiple times for answers, but all they said to him was things like, ‘All you need to know is Mi Ka actually still loves you very much’. How the hell does that help? That made it even harder for him to understand why she broke up with him. Mi Ka went about telling everyone else how much she loved him, but in his face she would just push him away and tell him she didn’t want to be near him anymore. How is that taking care of things?
I mean, she even made Seong Hee lie to her family. She was so caught up in disappearing from Do Ha’s life that she didn’t even stop to think what might happen to her own mother and brother after she’d leave. Honestly, do you really think you mean so little to your friends and family that you think it’s okay to just decide by yourself to disappear and die quietly in your own time without notifying anyone?! What the hell was she thinking, I really couldn’t figure out what Mi Ka was thinking.
And although I loved Madame Oh the most out of every single character in this drama, I honestly wished she would’ve been the one to cut the crap and just tell Do Ha what was going on, but even she only gave him abstract advice. The greatest one was when she told him to ‘find the answer within himself’. Wow. How the hell do you expect him to do that when literally no one wants to tell him what’s going on?!
In the end, it actually takes for Do Ha to semi-figure it out by himself. He figures out that it has to be something to do with HIM, not Mi Ka. And even when he confronts her again with this, and when we finally think ‘Ah, now she’ll have to admit it finally!’, she STILL pretended she didn’t know what he was talking about. Girl. He’s literally spelling it out for you, he figured it out by himself because YOU wouldn’t spare 10 seconds to do so. And you’re STILL not going to be honest with him?! He gained the most damage out of this whole process, she was only worrying about how hard it was for HER to stay away from him. All the other people just had to deal with their own feelings.
And then finally, in the last two episodes, after Mi Ka successfully completes her musical adventure, they ultimately decided not to worry about the time they’ve got, they cover their respective life clocks and get together again and enjoy their time together. As Madame Oh had been telling her from the beginning, don’t worry so much and just enjoy the time you have together. They finally do that, they spend the night together, and he leaves the room for one second and I said out loud to my screen, ‘yep aaaaand she’s going to look at her clock’. Aaaand she looked at her clock. She panics, and the next chance she has, she sneaks away. Literally, they are in the supermarket together, they are briefly separated by a trolly, and she takes her chance and sneaks away without saying a word. Leaving Do Ha in panic and worry to look for her. In the meantime she just went to Madame Oh and is having a calm conversation with her while Do Ha is worrying sick. Like, what is wrong with this girl? Does she really have no notion of the fact that you can’t just sneak away without an explanation? Especially in the case where you’re with someone else who’s going to wonder where you went?
This is what I mean by selfish. She just made matters so enormous in her mind while she could’ve stayed calm and asked for help. But no, she keeps lying, even about the fact that she still looked at her clock even though they promised not to. She just kept running away from things, and when people finally found out (never through her honest personal explanation, tho), she would suddenly be the bigger person and comfort the people she would be leaving behind. Honestly, Seong Hee seemed more upset than Mi Ka about Mi Ka’s situation.
Mi Ka actually comforted Seong Hee saying stuff like, ‘take care of my family and yourself, eat well, be healthy, live a good life and join me later on’. Like, WHAT? You think it’s in Do Ha’s advantage that you’ll disappear but you don’t stop to think about how your mother will feel about you dying in a couple of weeks? What is wrong with you, Mikaela?!

I will keep it at that for my frustrations regarding Mi Ka’s character. I would like to lastly talk a bit more about Beth and Seong Hee.
On a general note, except for Madame Oh, almost all the women in this series displayed traits of selfishness.
First of all, Beth. Beth is the second female lead character in the series, so I have to cover her no matter what. Beth is a very whimsical and interesting character, not to mention slightly twisted. I think it’s easy to say that she’s been a princess all her life, daughter of a rich family and used to getting her way. She has been playing coy to Do Ha’s proposal attempts, but when Mi Ka enters the picture and Do Ha’s attention switches to her, Beth realizes she should’ve accepted his proposal when she still had the chance.
Instead of admitting her defeat, she uses (or abuses) the influence and power that she has to create situations that will be hard on Mi Ka. She sends people by Mi Ka’s house with a suitcase of money to make her family persuade her to stop seeing Do Ha (the classic Hana Yori Dango move), she buys Mi Ka gifts and tells her she can have everything she wants if she just stays away from Do Ha, she brings in Do Ha’s first love as a tool to create tension between them, and ultimately she starts sabotaging the musical production to get her revenge. She literally tries to force marriage onto Do Ha, even until the point where their parents meet and everything. She became very childish in her greed. She was a little girl that didn’t get the doll she wanted so badly and so she wanted to make sure that no one else did. She resorted to trying to break Do Ha as a way of revenge and when he officially rejected her, she suddenly didn’t know what to do anymore and just headed for the rooftop. She couldn’t handle a single rejection, and that alone already made her want to commit suicide. I say dramaqueen. And when she was crying her eyes out afterwards all I could think was, get over yourself girl. This is not the end of the world, not the only doll in the store, and definitely not something you should even consider taking your own life for. Have some more self-respect. She seemed like a strong enough character, I mean, the lengths she went to? She even managed to manipulate Do Ha’s father into threatening his son into marrying her. She learned her lesson the hard way. And then, in the last episode, she suddenly saw the light I guess, and she came to see Mi Ka’s performance and afterwards she was like supernice and I was just like… only one episode ago you literally threatened to ruin the lives of every single actor in the musical and now all is forgiven and forgotten? People are being forgiving to an unrealistic degree. Anyhow, her selfishness first seemed to come from an innocent place, because she genuinely didn’t know any different than to use her wealth to treat people. But after Do Ha fell for Mi Ka, her selfishness came purely from her jealousy. She just had to have Do Ha, and I don’t know why because I didn’t even feel like she was actually in love with him. So there were some twisted moments there.
Secondly, Seong Hee. Seong Hee got herself an upgrade from just being the female lead’s best friend when Mi Ka’s younger brother starts expressing romantic interest in her and she gains her own love story. However, even though it’s clear she has the hots for Choi Wi Jin (played by Kim Ro Woon), she keeps denying it and she keeps pushing him away as well. In the end it apparently only had to do with the fact that he was younger than her and didn’t have a job yet, because as soon as he got a job she was all like ‘let’s do this’. Anyways, she acted quite selfishly without a clear reason. Why take so much time to waste it on irrational worries like ‘I can’t fall in love with this person’. Dude, if you fall, you fall. You can try to stop it, but you can’t. That’s how feelings work, they do what they want.
I did find Seong Hee and Wi Jin cute together, I actually rooted for them more than I rooted for Mi Ka and Do Ha at a certain point.

One last frustration concerning Mi Ka and then I’m going to conclude my review.
At a certain point it occurred to me that it could be considered unfair for Mi Ka to have this power. She can see other people’s remaining time but she never tells anyone, while at the same time she knows her own time and is able to fully organize her life so that she can have no regrets before her time runs out. Isn’t that kind of selfish as well? I mean, of course, people maybe wouldn’t like to know what time they have left, but the fact that she had this power and had the power to decide what to do with it herself, seems kind of unfair to me in retrospect. Why not give other people the chance to plan the last couple of days/weeks/months before their time runs out?
One particular example lay with one of Mi Ka’s fellow actors in the musical. She was running against this lady in the auditions for the understudy and she won, even though Park Hye Ran (I think that was her name) was a better singer in my opinion. At a certain point Mi Ka spots Hye Ran’s clock and sees she only has 29 days left. However, she doesn’t do anything with this information, she doesn’t even tell Hye Ran to go be checked out at a hospital or to take a break – she just looks at it and then just goes on smiling as if nothing’s wrong. All the while leading up to the main performance, and especially when Hye Ran is cast as Mi Ka’s understudy, I was wondering what was going to happen to Hye Ran. Her time must be running out, why is Mi Ka not bothered by this. It almost seemed as if Mi Ka forgot about it or something. We even meet Hye Ran’s adorable little daughter who also mentions that her mother has been going to the hospital a lot.
On the day of the first performance tryouts, Hye Ran passes out on stage and is brought to a hospital… and that’s it. Apparently she just died like that.
Afterwards we only see Mi Ka walking home saying things to Do Ha like, ‘yeah, I knew she had little time left but I at least thought we’d make it to the performances together’ as if it were NOTHING. I’m sorry, was it just me or did Mi Ka show ZERO empathy for Hye Ran after she suddenly passed away? Compared to how her character was established in the beginning I thought at least she would be worried about Hye Ran throughout the rehearsals, but she did nothing and even after she’s gone she’s like ‘oh well’.
It made even less sense to me because in the end, after Mi Ka loses her ability to see the life clocks, she tells Madame Oh about the ‘positive’ sides of seeing the clocks. She says, ‘they enabled me to comfort people in their last moments’ or something. Well, while that might’ve been a positive and joyful experience for you, I can assure you the people dying had no idea you were comforting them, and I think it didn’t have real value to them either because they were in shock and panic. And this power she had to ‘stand by people in their last moments’ didn’t seem to occur to her in Hye Ran’s case. I don’t know, sometimes there were these weird unrealistic moments that completely went against the characteristics of the characters in my opinion.
The only thing I liked about this was when Hye Ran’s husband and daughter came to see the performance and the little girl saw her mother’s spirit dance along with the other actors, smiling happily.

The only moment that gave me watery eyes in the series was the flashback at the end which explained how Mi Ka and Do Ha’s fates got entertwined. Mi Ka’s grandmother passed away protecting young Mi Ka from getting hit by a car, which turned out to be Do Ha’s father’s car. Do Ha was in the backseat. From this moment on, Mi Ka became able to see people’s life clocks and she became able to see her own after unknowingly being bumped on the street by Do Ha in a crowd of people before they officially meet each other.
Anyways, little Mi Ka crying her eyes out about her grandmother and little Do Ha crying with her, apologizing and holding her hand was very heartwrenching. It gave me the most feels out of anything else that happened in the whole series.

I want to give a special shoutout to Kang Ki Doong, who played Do Ha’s assistant. I’ve seen him before in Moonlight Drawn by Clouds, Tomorrow With You and Fight For My Way, and I really like him. He was kind of victimized by Do Ha in this drama, though, poor guy. But I had a lot of sympathy for his character.

Lastly, a shoutout to two underrated characters of this show: Do Ha’s doctor friend Park Sung Bin (played by Tae In Ho) and Mi Ka’s mother Jin Ra Hee (played by Na Young Hee).
First of all, Doctor Park didn’t have a lot to do in this drama and I genuinely wonder about the meaning of his character. He was shown as Do Ha’s doctor in the beginning, but after a couple of episodes we never really heard about Do Ha’s ‘anxiety syndrome’ again (until he collapses from shock after Mi Ka pushes him away for the fiftieth time). Honestly, he didn’t have a real purpose in my opinion. And one time I questioned his credibility as a psychologist when he just picked up the phone because Do Ha was calling him, even though he was in the middle of a session with a severe case patient. Like, I don’t think you are allowed to do that as a professional? And even though he knew this patient was borderline, he still didn’t anticipate he would snap? Like, it was obvious to ME in one glance, but not to the person who had been treating him for who knows how long?
Just another little badly written thingie.
And I wished Mi Ka’s mother would’ve had a little more priority in Mi Ka’s life. I actually liked how she was portrayed as a spoiled woman who had to figure out how to survive by earning her own money and taking care of her two grown kids like that. I felt sympathy for her as well and she also didn’t deserve to be treated less by Mi Ka. I mean, one time she found Mi Ka’s bankbooks and she got all sentimental, thinking that Mi Ka had been saving up money for them and she spent a little of it to treat her as a thank you. And Mi Ka just lashed out at her. Of course, she saved that money for after she was gone, but how the hell was her mom supposed to know that? She didn’t have the right to scold her mother, if so she should’ve told her from the start. And in the end she was even going to just disappear from her family without even saying anything and it was Seong Hee who couldn’t bear keeping the truth from them. Quite the daughter you are, Mi Ka.
You think what you are doing is the best for everyone, but you don’t stop to actually ask them what THEY think is best before you make a decision. Taking it on yourself can sometimes be considered courageous, but in this case I just found it cowardly and selfish. Making these kind of decisions about your LIFE for god’s sake, it’s not something you should be allowed to do without considering other people’s views, especially the ones that are closest to you and care about you the most.

One more thing I have to note, the use of product placement was no joke as well. I know Lee Sung Kyung is the new face of Laneige beauty products, but to actually showcase them so obviously like this really started to stand out. Sometimes when using the product they would even emphasize ‘Oh, what’s that new product?’ ‘Oh, my skin feels so soft and hydrated after using it!’ as if it were an actual commercial. Holding these moments against the already weakly story, it just made it worse for me.

Anyhow, what I did like about the drama was that the title was very well chosen. ‘About Time’. Despite all the dramatic events that occurred, the story was generally about time. About time, and how to spend it.
The message to me was conveyed the strongest when Mi Ka lost her ability to see the clocks and returned to being on the same page as everyone else: we don’t know how much time we’ve got left, and it’s up to us to spend it wisely and enjoy every minute of it. The mysterious thing about time IS that we don’t know how it works. It’s a very relative concept and we fill it in as we choose. I would consider it unfair if there were people who knew about everyone else’s time, I don’t know if I’d want to know about my own life clock. So it’s best to keep it hidden for everybody. That’s the thing about life, it’s special because we get to decide how we fill it up ourselves. The fact that everyone has their own view on time and how to spend it is what makes it so special.

I hope to be able to write more honest reviews from here on and I hope, despite the occasional frustrations and criticisms, my reviews will continue to be insightful and relatable. If you disagree with me, feel free to leave comments but let’s please respect each other’s opinions 🙂 I’m not here to quarrel or anything, just to share insights and opinions.
I will still keep watching Lee Sung Kyung’s dramas because I know she’s a great actress and she can do way better than this! Stay strong, queen!

On to the next one!



100 Day Husband

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Disclaimer: this is a review, and as such it contains spoilers of the whole series. Please proceed to read at your own risk if you still plan on watching this show or if you haven’t finished it yet. You have been warned.

100 Day Husband
(백일의 낭군님 / Baekilui Nanggunnim)
MyDramaList rating: 7.5/10

Hello hello! I’m back with a new review, this time for a historical drama. It’s been a while since my last historical drama and I believe it’s the first one since starting to write reviews, so here goes!
First of all, I’d like to add that I’ve had a bit of a rough week, my contract with my brandnew job was broken before I even finished my trial period, so I’ve been dealing with some things, partially emotional stuff. I need to get my stuff together before I can find something new, and finishing this drama helped me calm down a bit. So that’s it for the background story, on with the review!

This drama was on my list ever since I found out Nam Ji Hyun would appear in a new one – Nam Ji Hyun is bae, I am striving to watch all her dramas because she’s one of my favorite actresses. Also, I hadn’t seen anything from D.O. before but I heard that his acting is very good, so I was curious. And I also like historical dramas, so all in all I was interested.
It turned out to be a nice and enjoyable drama, with all the standard tropes, but still some intense events and surprises.

The story is about a fictional Crown Prince named Lee Yeol (played by EXO’s D.O. /Do Kyung Soo). He is a very cold and apathic, and doesn’t seem to care for anything. This wasn’t always the case. As a child (played by Jung Ji Hoon – who plays almost every male lead’s younger version these days) he would always play with his best friend and pretend to be a general and bully the kids from lower statuses. One day he is scolded by a young girl (played by Heo Jung Eun), a general’s daughter. Although their initial meeting is as enemies, they get closer and Yeol falls in love with her.
One fateful night, his father the King forbids him to leave the palace. Mischievous as he is, he escapes to give this girl a present, only to be disrupted by a sudden ambush of soldiers. The girl and her brother are forced to flee while having to watch their father being stabbed to death by Vice Premier Kim Cha Eon (played by Jo Sung Ha), the King’s trusted advisor. Yeol is shocked to see that this man his father trusted kills the father of the girl he likes and tries to go against him but he’s just a little boy and he’s only scolded for leaving the palace while he was forbidden to do so. Not long after, Yeol’s mother mysteriously passes away and he is forced to marry Kim Cha Uhn’s daughter. Since then, he starts becoming colder and colder until his current state.
The girl he loves and her brother are believed to be dead, however, this is not true. Now 28 years later, Yoon Yi Seo (played by Nam Ji Hyun) is living in a lower village called Songjoo as Yeon Hong Shim. After she escaped when she was little, her brother left her alone in the woods to protect her and she was found by Mr. Yeon (played by Jung Hae Kyun), who raised her as his own daughter. Although she remembers everything of her heritage and previous life, Hong Shim is happy with her life in the village.
The two grow up not knowing what became of the other. Crown Prince Yeol is now married to Kim Cha Eon’s daughter So Hye (played by Han So Hee), but has no love for her at all and refuses to consummate the marriage.
For So Hye, this is a problem since she is secretly pregnant with another man’s baby and needs to consummation as a cover to prove it’s the Crown Prince’s. On the other hand, there’s a serious drought going on in the land and as a means to satisfy the gods, Yeol gives the command for all singles under 20 to get married immediately. This also stretches to Songjoo Village. Hong Shim, being the oldest maiden in the village, is one of the few to be selected for this arrangement, but she holds it off claiming she’s promised herself to a boy from another village, Won Deuk, who is currently fighting in the army. She hopes this story will keep the officials off her back, but they’re not very patient.
While already facing several happenings at once, Yeol still has to deal with facing Kim Cha Eon every day, knowing fully well that he is evil. One time, Yeol is forced to go to a rain ritual and is ambushed on the way by mysterious soldiers dressed in black. He has to flee for his life and agrees with his best friend Dong Joo (played by Do Ji Han – had to mention him despite his minor role) to switch clothes and attempt a diversion. This fails, Dong Joo is killed wearing the Crown Prince’s clothes, and Yeol is injured and left alone hidden in the bushes unconscious.
He is found, what are the odds, by Mr. Yeon, Hong Shim’s father. At that very moment, Hong Shim is being punished by the officials for disobeying the Crown Prince’s orders of getting married. When Yeol comes by, he has no idea who he is or what happened – he has lost his memory. In a moment of desperation, Mr. Yeol convinces him that he is Won Deuk, Hong Shim’s ‘fiance’ who has returned from the army and has him save her from the official’s.
Despite this save, Hong Shim and Won Deuk are still forced to marry and this is how their marriage arrangement starts. They will be married for a 100 days until they both discover who they really are and are faced with the truths of each other’s fates.
One more important detail, even though Yi Seo hasn’t heard from her brother in 10 years, they made a promise to meet every 15th of the month on a bridge in Hanyang. Despite the fact that he has never showed up once, Yi Seo still persistently dresses up and travels to Hanyang once a month for this occasion. It is on one of these nights that she is seen both by Yeol (who is strolling around town with Dong Joo) and by Magistrate Jung Je Yoon (played by Kim Sun Ho). Yeol recognizes her immediately (or believes what he wants to see) as Yi Seo, and Jung Je Yoon is struck by love at first sight.

I have to say, it felt like watching a K-Drama like I used when I just started. There are 16 episodes that each last more than an hour, there are all sorts of plots and events that are somehow all connected to each other, the romance tropes like slowmotion hand-grab-turn-around movements… I’m secretly glad that not all the oldschool style dramas have disappeared yet.
The pace was nice, and the intense events were all postponed to the end of the series, followed still by a happy ending in which everything was (more or less) solved.

I would like to discuss the different storylines first, then give some comments on the casting and then point out some specific points of criticism.
As I said, I liked the story. It was easy to follow, and of course the development of the romantic relationship between Won Deuk and Hong Shim blossomed after taking its sweet time. The last couple of episodes suddenly took a turn for the intense, and for a moment I feared a Scarlet Heart Ryeo like turns of events, but it didn’t take too much time to be fixed, luckily.
The title ‘100 Day Husband’ or ‘100 Days My Prince’ as it is also called, refers to the time period that Hong Shim and Won Deuk are together. The whole story about how they knew each other as kids and all that follows afterwards not included, this is the period in which they literally both have a fake identity and get to know each other from scratch. In some way, you could say it’s the most important phase of a relationship in general. Therefore I think it’s a good name for the series. It’s not that the series is just about the 100 days, but these 100 days are key to their relationship. If it weren’t for these 100 days together, their relationship wouldn’t have developed as it does.

So, to talk about the several storylines this series offered. Apart from the events in Songjoo Village between Hong Shim, Won Deuk and their friends in the village, there’s a lot going on in the palace and around throughout the whole series.
First of all, there’s the story about Vice-Premier Kim. It is revealed that he is a cruel, ambitious man, who grew up in a lower family. His parents were unfairly brought to their ends, and he swore that he would not end up like them. He build his way up to the Royal Court and even got his daughter to become the Crown Princess. He is the evil advisor secretly planning a coup to dethrone (or in extreme case kill) the King and Crown Prince. He incapacitates, in one way or another, everyone posing a possible threat to his plans. He is the one who established the plan to ambush the Prince’s company on their way to the rain ritual, and in continuation to that silences everyone able to prove that Yeol was not killed. While Yeol is alive as Won Deuk in Songjoo Village, he keeps exercising his plans under the grief-striken King.
Then there is Jung Je Yoon, the second male lead of the story. As the son of a concubine, he was denied many privileges but still managed to become a magistrate. He falls in love with Yi Seo/Hong Shim the second he sees her in Hanyang one night and continues to pursue her. At one point he is sent to Songjoo Village as the new official and they meet again. He also meets Won Deuk there, but due to his incapability to recognize people’s faces, he doesn’t recognize him even though he has met the Crown Prince before. Despite his romantic intentions towards Hong Shim, he never crosses the line and remains a loyal friend and ally to the end.
Then, we have the story of the King’s current wife and Queen (played by Oh Yeon Ah) and their son Prince Seo Won (played by Ji Min Hyuk). The Queen is plotting her own strategy against Yeol, since she wants her son on the throne. However, she does not work together with the Vice-Premier, who attempts to silence her as well (no murder, just forcing laws and such).
The King at one point discovers Kim Cha Eon’s true intentions and tries to go against him, even though the whole court of officials is on his side.
Then, we have the Crown Princess and her secret lover. Although married to Yeol, she is secretly in love with one of the assassins working under her father, Moo Yeon. He is also the father of her baby. Moo Yeon later turns out to be Yi Seo’s brother Seok Ha.
Going on to his story, after escaping and leaving his sister behind in the forest, he hid his identity and started working under the man who killed his father in order to protect Yi Seo. He was able to distract the Vice Premier from looking for her, although he did have to cooperate in the ambush and attempted murder of the Crown Prince. Moo Yeon was the one who killed Dong Joo dressed in his royal garments and he also killed other people. Despite making a promise to his sister about meeting every month in Hanyang on the 15th, he never showed up in front of her, only to watch her from a distance. They only meet coincidentally when he is in Songjoo Village to search for the Crown Prince. After this encounter, he promises that soon he will be able to take her with him for good.
However, after Kim Cha Eon finds out he is his daughter’s secret lover, when the two try to run away together at the end of the series, Moo Yeon/Seok Ha is fatally injured and then killed by Kim Cha Eon himself.

I did find this scene to be particularly intense. I had mixed feelings about Seok Ha the whole time because on the one hand you ‘know’ that he’s a good guy, or he’s supposed to be – but I still couldn’t understand why he’d starting working for the man that killed his father and most of all why he’d agree to kill for him. Unless it was some sort of thought-out plan to gain his trust and then stab him in the back, but it didn’t come to that. So on the one hand I was like ‘bro you know you don’t wanna do this’ and on the other I couldn’t believe that he’d still continue to try and kill the Crown Prince, even after discovering his relationship with Yi Seo.
However, I was constantly curious as to how the relationship between him and the Crown Princess came to be. How and where did they meet? When was there an opportunity for them to sneak out together and conceive a child? We only see a couple of short scenes between them in the palace where they either pretend they don’t know each other or have nothing to do with each other or don’t speak to each other at all.
And then, when Yeol finds out the truth, he attempts to help them escape and transports So Hye out of the palace so that Seok Ha can meet her in the woods and for one moment there, when he suddenly appears in front of her and holds her while she cries, I finally felt that love between them.
And then it’s cruelly taken away by her father, who suddenly appears and stabs him in the heart while she’s watching.
I mean, I had mixed feelings but this seemed especially cruel and intense to me. I wasn’t prepared for Seok Ha to die like that. This scene really brought back some Scarlet Heart sentiments for me. I really wanted them to escape together and after this I really felt sorry for the Crown Princess. She wasn’t the standard historical drama second female lead who wanted the Crown Prince for herself even though he didn’t love her, she was actually a victim of her own father as well. I’m just glad she turned out okay and safely gave birth to her baby and named him Seok Ha (sob).

I would like to talk a bit about the casting.
As I said, Nam Ji Hyun is one of my favorite actresses. I really like the energy she always puts into her characters, she always gives this cheerful and hands-on mentality energy (gosh I’m on too many job vacancy sides lol). I’ve only seen Shopping King Louie and Suspicious Partner with her, but I liked them both and Suspicious Partner even made it to my top 3 list. I discovered that she’s starred with a lot more famous actors but it seems like she’s still a little underrated, which makes me appreciate her even more. To be honest, this role wasn’t the most spectacular role I’ve seen her in, but it certainly gave her opportunities to show much emotional variety. Hong Shim/Yi Seo has a lot of confrontations and personal obstacles to overcome. I would also like to simultaneously give a shoutout to Heo Jung Eun, the child actress portraying her younger version: this girl is going places. I’ve yet to see Oh My Geum Bi, but I’ve heard that she stole everyone’s hearts in that show. She’s going to be the next Kim So Hyun, I bet.
Also, as I noted before, Jung Ji Hoon, the younger version of Yeol, he’s going to be evolving as well. I see him now in almost every drama, even in the drama I watched before this one, Clean With Passion For Now, he was also the younger version of the male lead. I hope both kids’ futures are bright and full of opportunities.
I hadn’t seen any acting from D.O. before, but I think he did very well. He always seems like such a boy to me when I see him in EXO-related stuff, I think he has a very ‘young’ smile. But to see him in such an intense, cold figure as Yeol, it definitely changed my view of him a little. I heard from friends who are more familiar with EXO that his fellow members teased him after seeing him in this drama, but I think he did admirably.
There were not a lot of actors I knew, except for some villagers and the King, so in that respect it was very refreshing as well.
Kim Sun Ho made a very sympathetic second male lead. I genuinely liked his character. I saw on Dramawiki that he actually hasn’t done that many dramas yet, so I hope to see more of him in the future. What I liked about Je Yoon was that he always remained nice, even to the bad guys or people he didn’t agree with. So even if Hong Shim would’ve responded to his wooing attempts, I wouldn’t have blamed her, lol. He has a very kind face, I think.
I also didn’t know Han So Hee who played the Crown Princess. When checking Dramawiki I saw she also played in Reunited Worlds, which I saw, but I don’t remember her from that. Anyways, it’s nice to have a second female lead who isn’t a bitch for a change. Even though I didn’t have a strong opinion about her in the beginning, once all became clear about her relationship with Moo Yeon, I started rooting for her independent happiness. I think the actress did well, especially in the scene where Moo Yeon was killed in front of her. In the beginning she seemed to be clenching her jaws the whole time, but that was the one time she really let out all kinds of emotions and it had me teary-eyed in front of my screen.

There was one character that I really liked but who suddenly disappeared. This is Ae Wol, the gisaeng (played by Han Ji Eun) who kept making advances on Je Yoon. I would’ve really liked them to end up together. She was a nice side character and I would’ve liked to see her get a part of the action as well, as she was also helping Je Yoon get information before. But she suddenly wasn’t there anymore and they didn’t show her again in the end as well. I found that a pity, I would’ve liked to see her make a final appearance in Je Yoon’s life before the series was out. She was cool.
Another character that I liked he did make a comeback was Eunuch Yang (played by Jo Hyun Sik). He always plays a eunuch in historical dramas as far as I know, lol. I remember he was a eunuch in Moonlight Drawn By Clouds, too. He had a familiar face and so I expected him to have a more prominent role. He was the eunuch closest to the Crown Prince. His main feature was that he didn’t accompany Yeol to the rain ritual and therefore lived as a liability to mis-identify the prince’s body. He eventually gets suspicious because of a minor detail (he clipped the prince’s toenails not long ago and the corpse’s toenails don’t look the same), and he is foolish enough to entrust Kim Cha Eon with his detail, who then slits his throat and leaves him to die. However, Je Yoon brings his body to a healer outside of the capital and later brings Yeol to him. Eunuch Yang completely recovers from his near-death experience and continues to be a solid figure at the Crown Prince’s side. I liked that at least one person came back from the dead. He was too innocent to die.

Something else that amused me in this drama was the occasional references to modern-day customs. I’m not entirely sure how the people in the Joseon period really spoke to each other, but I often heard them talk in the same way as in regular modern-time dramas. One time there was even an occurance where Je Yoon made the ‘heart’ symbol with his fingers, which is of course really of modern times.
Maybe because of this, it sometimes felt like an extra big contrast when they discussed things such as the position of women in this old time period. I felt like the women in the village were all pretty progressive when it came to expressing their opinions. On the other hand of course women were talked about as the weaker sex, they should get married and have children early in their lives, etcetera. Hong Shim was mocked for being a single virgin lady at age 28, while she kept standing up for herself. As far as I know, women behaving like this in Joseon were being suppressed more. So there was a funny shift between the old-fashioned ways of the Joseon period and yet the progressiveness of women. I’m not sure if that’s what they were going for, but I found it amusing nonetheless.

Overall, the casting was nice and it was a nice story. I don’t have any major criticisms, except for maybe the way they ended it – but this might just be me. The ending felt kind of abrupt to me. After Won Deuk is brought back to the palace and slowly starts to regain his memories and get back into exposing the Vice-Premier, he realizes Kim Cha Eon has already put a trap in motion that causes a war that spreads to smaller villages as well.
After Moo Yeon is killed, Yeol challenges Kim Cha Eon to a duel and when he injures him, he tells him that he’ll be locked up in prison and be punished for all his crimes. However, the archers kill Kim Cha Eon when he makes another move. In his last moments he hands Yeol a letter from which becomes clear that a war is actively going on already and Yeol needs to go there himself to help. Then suddenly we switch to a scene that the series begin with – Yeol going off to war on his own. Until that point, I hadn’t considered that scene at all, I just figured it was a scene to introduce Yeol as the Crown Prince before going back to the flashbacks of when he was a child. Anyways, we see Yeol fight in the war and then suddenly BAM – there is a time jump to 1 year later. So the last thing we see is Yeol fighting and the Crown Princess being caught in an attempt to escape the palace.
1 YEAR LATER
And there we have Hong Shim’s friends from the village laughingly talk about the events after the war as if it is some juicy gossip. This abrupt switch from intense to light comedy was very sudden for me. Also, they said something about the Crown Princess having committed suicide and for a moment there I was like, ‘seriously? they’re just going to mention what happened to her in some light gossipy way? i was actually rooting for that woman’. In the end, fortunately, it turns out that this didn’t happen and she’s living hidden in the forest somewhere with her child and her loyal handmaiden. But still, I was surprised to hear it.
And the last part of the last episode suddenly just went back to that casual, comedy genre and I was still coping with the intense situation from 5 minutes earlier. So that was a bit weird, lol. But anyways, I’m glad that there was still a regular happy ending. I was a bit worried about what Yi Seo would do, because first she rejected Yeol’s offer of regaining her old status and name and live her old life again, but then suddenly she did get reinstated and I was thinking ‘I thought she said she didn’t want to?’ and she still kept Yeol at a distance. In the end it took reading his journals in which he described his love for her to get her to accept she couldn’t be without him, but I didn’t really understand what kind of final impact those journals had because he already told her his feelings for her so many times and she kept saying no. So Yi Seo’s capriciousness in the end confused me a little as well.
But apart from that I enjoyed watching it!

This series really put me back into the historical drama mood so I moved another to-watch historical drama up on my list, lol. I still need to see some more classic ones such as Sungkyungkwan Scandal etc.
Anyways, the next one on my list is another one I’ve been looking forward to a lot, starring another favorite actress of mine. I’m really psyched 🙂
I liked this drama for at the same time it’s refreshing aspects as its familiar aspects. I still can’t let go of the 16 episode series, even though the back-to-back ones are slowly taking over. It was nice to have the predictable tropes, but I still enjoyed waiting for that moment when they’d finally realize who they were and all truths would come out eventually. Korean dramas continue to entertain me, no matter the predictability.

Please bear with me until me next review! Bye-bye!