Honour

아너: 그녀들의 법정 ‧ Drama ‧ 2026
Dropped 2/12
oppa_
13 people found this review helpful
Feb 3, 2026
2 of 12 episodes seen
Dropped 6
Overall 1.0
Story 1.0
Acting/Cast 1.0
Music 1.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

Episode 1-2 – The Hypocrisy of Plastic Empowerment

When Honour premiered, it tried to sell itself as a bold manifesto for female empowerment. The marketing promised complex women fighting a corrupt system and defending victims.

But even in the premiere, the cracks were obvious.

The show introduced three supposedly “independent” women, yet their independence quickly revealed itself to be either financially supported by others or morally shielded by the script itself. What was framed as empowerment often looked more like hypocrisy protected by plot armor.

Unfortunately, the finale only confirms those early concerns.

The "Independent" CEO

Take Kang Sin Jae.

The drama portrays her as the visionary CEO of a pro bono law firm, someone rebellious and independent. But the illusion collapses almost immediately when we learn that the entire operation is funded by her mother.

This creates a strange contradiction. The show tries to frame her as a rebel fighting systems of power, yet she is effectively a nepo-boss playing office with family money.

Instead of feeling like a strong professional figure, her constant rebellious antics often resemble a teenager acting out rather than a serious legal mind running an organization.

The Hypocrisy of Hwang Hyeon Jin

The most glaring problem of the show is Hwang Hyeon Jin (HHJ).

Promotional material describes her as an “elegant, fiery lawyer who resists anything that goes against her principles.”

The show itself proves the opposite.

From the start, HHJ is portrayed as a champion for rape victims. Yet her own actions consistently contradict the professional ethics and moral standards the drama claims she represents.

And as the story progresses, these contradictions only get worse.

The Professionalism Paradox

HHJ visits her ex-boyfriend’s house at night under the excuse of discussing work.

This is framed as normal behavior for a professional lawyer, but the scene immediately turns into an affair. The show unintentionally reinforces the very stereotype it claims to criticize — the idea that women cannot separate personal relationships from their professional responsibilities.

For someone who is supposed to be a serious attorney handling sensitive cases, this kind of conduct would be career-ending in any realistic legal environment.

Yet in the world of Honour, it barely matters.

The Cheating Narrative

The drama also tries to frame her cheating as a tragic “mistake.”

But cheating is not a single accident. It is a series of deliberate choices.

HHJ:

goes to her ex-lover’s house late at night

stays when things become intimate

continues the encounter fully aware she is married

returns home to a husband who is faithfully trying to build a family with her

Later she claims she “wasn’t in her right mind.”

That explanation might work for a moment of anger or panic. It does not work for a calculated sequence of decisions that lasts an entire evening.

Yet the show expects the audience to sympathize with her regret afterward.

The Ethical Collapse

Things escalate even further.

After her ex-lover is murdered, HHJ tries to protect herself by tampering with evidence and manipulating the investigation.

This isn’t just morally questionable behavior. For a lawyer, it is a serious crime that could end a career and potentially lead to prison.

And yet the story never seriously addresses these consequences.

The same character who is supposed to defend victims of sexual violence ends up jeopardizing legal cases and interfering with a murder investigation simply to hide her own mistakes.

The Finale and the Myth of “Realism”

After the finale aired, many viewers defended the ending by saying the drama is “realistic.”

Their argument is that in real life not every criminal receives justice.

That can absolutely be true.

But the problem is that this supposed realism never applies to HHJ.

Across the story she:

cheats on her husband

becomes pregnant from the affair

hides the truth

tampers with evidence

manipulates a murder investigation

behaves unprofessionally as a lawyer

Yet somehow she walks away from the story essentially untouched.

No legal consequences.

No real career fallout.

Not even a believable collapse of her marriage.

Instead, the narrative bends itself to protect her.

Her husband — who spent the entire drama loyal and supportive — is ultimately written into a doormat, accepting both the betrayal and a child that isn’t his.

The show wants the audience to believe that this outcome is realistic.

But it doesn’t feel realistic at all.

It feels like the writers simply refused to allow their protagonist to face consequences.

Final Verdict

In the end, Honour tries to present itself as a complex story about flawed women navigating a corrupt world.

But flawed characters only work when their actions have consequences.

Instead, the drama repeatedly shields its female lead while condemning nearly every male character as either a predator, a manipulator, or a pathetic fool. The result isn’t nuanced storytelling — it’s a narrative where accountability exists for everyone except the protagonist.

Ironically, the show ends up reinforcing the very stereotypes it claims to fight.

It calls itself realistic, but only when that realism applies to villains.

When it comes to HHJ, the story suddenly becomes fantasy.

And that contradiction is exactly what made the entire drama feel hollow from the beginning to the finale.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Brunhilde
2 people found this review helpful
8 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

Justiça Interrompida e o Mistério que Fica

A premissa de Honour (2026) é impecável ao mostrar a força de três amigas que transformam o trauma do passado em combustível para defender outras mulheres. O roteiro é ágil e as reviravoltas são muito bem construídas, mantendo o nível de interesse lá no alto do início ao fim.

Por que a nota 9?
Surpresas que Impactam: O dorama não tem medo de arriscar e entrega revelações que mudam tudo o que a gente pensava sobre as protagonistas.
Elenco de Peso: A conexão entre as advogadas é tão real que você sente o peso de cada decisão que elas tomam no tribunal e na vida pessoal.
Gosto de "Quero Mais": A nota não é 10 apenas porque o final deixa pontas soltas propositais. Fica claro que a história não acabou e que uma 2ª temporada é essencial para fechar todos os arcos.

É um dorama brabo que prova que segredos de 20 anos não morrem facilmente. Agora é torcer pra renovação sair logo porque a gente não aceita ficar sem o resto dessa história! 🌟

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Munira
0 people found this review helpful
4 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

دراما استمتعت فيها

بصراحه ماكنت ناويه اكتب مراجعة عن هذي الدراما بس استغربت من التقييمات السئه لها والنقد لهذي الدراما مع انها قدمة قصة حلوه وغموض وحماس من اول حلقه الى الحلقة 12 اشوف انها تستحق المشاهده ثم التقييم واشياء كثيره عجبتي منها القصة الاحداث الحوارات العلاقات غموض بعض الاحداث شدتي وبقوه
Was this review helpful to you?
Honour poster

Details

Statistics

  • Score: 7.8 (scored by 1,173 users)
  • Ranked: #4148
  • Popularity: #3750
  • Watchers: 5,321

Top Contributors

136 edits
25 edits
23 edits
16 edits

Popular Lists

Related lists from users
Korean dramas
133 titles 6 loves
HIGH PRIORITY
509 titles 16 loves

Recently Watched By