
This review may contain spoilers
When Narrative Disorder Masquerades as Depth
The idea is great, but not new.We’ve already seen it to exhaustion.
Whenever a drama wants to explore “deep female friendship,”
they almost always throw in terminal illness
as the narrative glue.
The only truly remarkable part here
are the performances of Kim Bo Min and Park Seo Kyung
as the younger versions of the leads.
They deliver the real emotion, much more than the adults.
The real problem is the narrative structure.
That tendency in K-dramas to tell the story all over the place:
they start in one year,
jump back 40 years,
then 10 years forward…
and on top of that, insert another story inside a story.
If it had been told in a linear way —
childhood, youth, adulthood, and finally the blow of cancer —
the impact could have been brutal.
But they chose to fragment it.
There’s no accumulation of tension,
because they show you the consequences
before you even understand the causes.
The difference between narrative complexity and narrative disorder is clear:
this drama seems to believe that fragmenting the timeline is art,
when in reality it’s sacrificing emotion.
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This review may contain spoilers
Mobius: A Waiting Line Disguised as a Thriller
Mobius has a huge problem: its time loops kill the tension. The show makes it clear that everything only gets solved on the 5th loop. So what about the other four? Just rehearsals. Pure filler.Even the main character admits there’s no fear of dying. And if the hero himself doesn’t care, why should the audience? When he dies in the 2nd loop, it doesn’t matter, because you know he’ll be back anyway.
On top of that, the plot is overcrowded with suspects, but that’s not real intrigue — it’s just confusion disguised as mystery. What could have been suspenseful ends up feeling like waiting in line.
Mobius turns what should be tension into simple waiting, and that kills its own suspense. Because if everything is decided on the 5th loop, it’s nothing more than an hourglass that only cares about the last grain. Not a thriller, but a waiting line disguised as mystery
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