Pobmek est un jeune professeur, ayant choisit d'enseigner dans une école primaire pour être aux côtés de son amant Solar, également professeur. Malheureusement, contrairement à lui, il ne supporte pas les enfants et peine à se faire respecter. Alors qu'il commence à remettre en question son avenir professionnel, Solar a un accident de voiture lui causant une grave commotion cérébral. (Source : SensCritique) Modifier la traduction
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- Titre original: รักครูเท่าโลกเลย
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: Rak Khru Thao Lok Loei
- Scénariste et Réalisateur: Dome Jarupat Kannula
- Scénariste: Lemon Waneepan Huaphoklang, Pacharawan Chaipuwarat, Methus Sirinawin
- Genres: Comédie, Romance, Drame
Distribution et équipes
- Perth Tanapon SukhumpantanasanPobmek EkrakrakRôle principal
- Santa Pongsapan OudompochSolar / SunRôle principal
- Kay LertsittichaiJeeRôle Secondaire
- Coates Samantha MelanieSodchuenRôle Secondaire
- Patchanok Iamsa-ArdPrani [Solar's mother]Rôle Secondaire
- Tao Sarocha WatitapunPhafan [Pobmek's mother]Rôle Secondaire
Critiques
La comédie n'est pas une réponse à tout…
C'est définitivement le bon moment pour confier à Santa des rôles plus matures. Il était au-dessus de tout le monde en termes de jeu à ses débuts (Seven Project), mais ici ? Il excelle à donner vie à deux personnalités distinctes, grâce à sa gestuelle, son regard et ses micro-expressions. Son travail est formidable. À moins que le problème ne soit GMMTV...Rares sont les projets de GMMTV qui me marquent, car ils ont tendance à saturer l'intrigue de comédie lourde et de bruitages risibles. Évidemment, Love You Teacher ne fait pas exception. Malgré ses thématiques et son fond intéressant, la comédie étouffe le message, et les personnages.
Je ne pense pas qu'on puisse rire de tout, mais presque. La comédie peut amener de la légèreté, désamorcer des situations tendues, mais à aucun moment elle ne doit tourner au ridicule certains sujets. Le problème de GMMTV, c'est que la comédie ridicule semble être une marque de fabrique. Même si l'intrigue tente de rester mignonne, légère et accessible, elle se perd complètement.
En bref, Love You Teacher possède un potentiel prometteur, mais ne parvient pas à se maintenir face à une comédie lourde et des personnages peu sérieux, en dépit des thèmes abordés.
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Cette critique peut contenir des spoilers
A seemingly joyful world that hides traumas
Love You Teacher was not a drama that immediately caught my attention. Honestly, the trailer mostly gave me the impression of something a little too much, almost cartoonish at times. But the pairing, the setting, and especially the colorful aesthetic convinced me to give it a chance… and honestly, it turned out to be a really pleasant surprise.Right from the beginning, GMM does something refreshing by stepping away from the usual Thai BL setting. Instead of following university students, we are introduced to two teachers who have already been in a relationship for several years. I absolutely loved that choice. Rather than throwing us into an already established relationship and expecting us to instantly care, the drama takes the time to show us flashbacks of how they met and how their relationship evolved. It keeps that feeling of romantic progression that I really enjoy while still allowing the present storyline to remain the main focus.
And that present, which initially looks like a simple happy life between Solar and Pobmeck, two teachers who love both each other and their work, quickly turns into something much more complicated when Solar gets into a car accident. After the accident, he begins mentally regressing until he develops the mindset of a seven-year-old child. Needless to say, this creates an incredibly difficult situation for a couple. Pobmeck, who was never particularly comfortable with children despite loving his job as a teacher, suddenly finds himself having to deal with Solar’s condition, his behavior, both their students, and the pressure of keeping everything hidden.
One of the things I appreciated most about this series is that it never limits itself to Solar’s trauma alone. The drama explores a lot of sensitive themes such as the difficulties of being a teacher despite loving the profession, burnout, depression, toxic family relationships, abandonment, and childhood wounds. Unlike some series that throw countless themes together until the story suffocates under its own weight, here everything actually contributes to enriching the narrative. The result is a story filled with emotional nuance that remains engaging and easy to follow. You quickly realize that Solar must have experienced something deeply traumatic to erase his entire childhood from his memory, which naturally makes you want to uncover what really happened to him.
Fortunately, Love You Teacher also knows how to keep itself balanced. It never becomes overwhelmingly heavy psychologically. Instead, it constantly shifts between drama, romance, and comedy in a very natural way. Sometimes we dive deeper into the characters’ trauma and personal struggles, sometimes we revisit memories from their relationship, and sometimes we simply watch seven-year-old Sun completely exhaust Pobmeck with his antics. Because of that, the viewing experience stays emotional and touching without ever becoming exhausting.
That being said, I can’t deny that some story choices bothered me because of the lack of realism. Thai dramas often have a tendency to soften situations to make them easier emotionally, and as someone who loves psychological realism, even when it completely destroys me emotionally, I sometimes find that a little frustrating.
For example, while Solar’s psychological condition is handled surprisingly well overall, especially through smart details like him referring to Sun as a separate person by saying “his mother” rather than “my mother,” and thanks to Perth and Santa’s incredible performances, I personally would have preferred a complete regression rather than an alternating state every other day. I think it would have made Pobmeck’s emotional exhaustion feel even more believable and made the flashbacks of their relationship hit much harder. We would have felt his loneliness more strongly, along with the pain of watching the person he loves slowly become someone he can barely recognize anymore.
There are also certain situations that feel a little too convenient. The school administration and parents accept everything surprisingly easily considering one teacher does not even have a license while the other is dealing with a severe psychological condition. Realistically, they probably would not simply be “put to the test.” The same goes for some family conflicts that are resolved perhaps a little too quickly. Pobmeck’s mother, who essentially destroyed her son’s dreams and traumatized him regarding music, returns with a simple apology, and Solar’s father, who abandoned him after his coma, is also forgiven rather quickly. These choices certainly protect our fragile hearts, but personally I felt they softened the drama a little too much.
Still, despite these flaws, they ended up feeling secondary compared to my overall experience. What stayed with me the most was this incredibly supportive and healthy couple with a balanced relationship that honestly feels rare in BLs. Their romance feels deeply human and touching. The drama also creates a warm, colorful world with a strong identity of its own. There are plenty of adorable scenes, genuinely funny moments, a lot of emotional depth surrounding childhood trauma, and of course several moments that can very easily make you tear up.
Overall, Love You Teacher ended up being a really beautiful surprise that I would absolutely recommend because of its emotional richness, its balance, and the sincerity that comes through its characters. I was especially touched by how deeply human Solar and Pobmeck’s relationship felt. It was also a great opportunity to see Perth and Santa carrying a story entirely centered around them, allowing them to really develop their chemistry and dynamic together.
I can officially say now that this is a pairing I’m genuinely excited to keep following.
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