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Perfect Crown korean drama review
Completed
Perfect Crown
5 people found this review helpful
by MickeyMouse
1 day ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 6.5
Story 3.5
Acting/Cast 6.5
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 2.0

Perfect Crown is costume jewellery in a velvet box.

*Perfect Crown* is honestly one of the biggest letdowns I’ve watched in a while. Almost everything about it felt painfully below average — the acting from the leads, the screenplay, the direction, the chemistry, the romance, and even the character progression. Nothing that actually gives a drama emotional depth or makes viewers genuinely invested was properly handled. But sure, let’s call it a “prestige project.”

And the “don’t think too much while watching it” excuse some netizens keep using makes absolutely no sense when the entire drama revolves around politics and power struggles. Because yes, clearly a political drama is meant to be watched like a vibes-only montage. Even by the finale, so many important questions were still left unanswered, but I guess we’re just supposed to smile and enjoy the aesthetics. And honestly, that might have worked if the leads had even basic chemistry — but instead it felt like two actors politely completing their contractual obligations, and all without sincerity. Truly groundbreaking casting decisions.

And before fans start saying “they did the best with what they were given,” I partially agree that the writing and direction were weak — but then how do Gong Seung-yeon, Non Sang-hyun, and several supporting actors still manage to deliver convincing performances in the very same drama with the same script and director? Their extra effort and better understanding of their characters were clearly visible on screen. So clearly, the problem wasn’t just the writing and direction. Some took it seriously, some just didn’t — simple as that, no hard maths.

The chemistry and romance between the leads felt forced throughout the drama too. The female lead just didn’t understand her own character. IU’s performance was either exaggerated or underwhelming, nothing in between, despite having nearly two decades of experience, while the male lead spent half the drama looking like he was shooting a luxury brand campaign in sponsored outfits and the other half daydreaming, . Occasionally, he also gave “Sunjae 2.0,” 🤣, but without the same charm and emotional weight. I get that he became famous because of *Sunjae*, but at this point let him go — obsession over it isn’t a good thing 😅. Instead, maybe try obsessing over improving acting skills; that might actually help.

At the end of the day, this felt less like a genuinely well-made drama and more like an overhyped project carried by fandom power, aggressive marketing, and visual aesthetics.

P.S. The production team of PC were giving serious Lovely Runner fan behavior because why did so many scenes feel straight-up copied from it 🤭.
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