10/10- A Masterpiece Of Beautiful Trauma
Read This Before You Watch 🌊🍂
I am writing this through blurred vision because I honestly don’t think I’ve stopped crying since I hit play on the first episode. I absolutely loved Mr. Plankton, but please take this as a serious warning: this drama is a soul-shattering experience. It is a 10/10 masterpiece, but it’s the kind of show you watch once, get the trauma, and then lock away in your heart because you can never put yourself through it again.
The "Anti-Fluffy" Slice of Life
If you are looking for a lighthearted, fluffy rom-com to relax with, turn around right now. This is not that. This is a raw, gritty, and devastatingly beautiful slice-of-life story that explores the darkest corners of loneliness and existence. It tells the story of the "saddest life" imaginable, and it doesn't pull any punches. I found myself crying every single episode—not just a few tears, but full-on sobbing.
A Warning to My Fellow Watchers
Please, if you are currently going through a hard time in your personal life, do not watch this yet. It is heavy. It deals with terminal reality and the feeling of being unwanted in a way that is almost too much to handle. You need to be in a stable headspace to survive this journey, because once it gets under your skin, it stays with you forever.
Cinematography & The "Plankton" Vibe
I am completely obsessed with the visuals. The places they traveled to were so breathtakingly pretty—the vast landscapes, the quiet roads, and the coastal views were like a fever dream. It makes the sadness even more poignant because the world is so beautiful while the characters are hurting so much.
And then there’s the music. "All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray..." Hearing California Dreamin’ will never be the same for me again. Every time that song played, it felt like a physical weight on my chest. It perfectly captures that drifting, "plankton" feeling of being lost at sea.
[Minor Spoilers] The Heartbreak of the Journey
Seeing Hae-jo, a man who feels like he was a "mistake" from birth, literally wandering the earth to find a drop of belonging is gut-wrenching.
The way the drama handles his terminal diagnosis isn't just a plot device; it’s a ticking clock that makes every second of "found family" feel like a knife to the heart.
Jae-mi being the only person who truly sees him, even while she's dealing with her own premature heartbreak, is the most tragic kind of love.
Final Thoughts
This drama is a work of art. It’s a 10/10 for the acting, the scenery, and the sheer emotional honesty. But it is a heavy burden to carry. Watch it for the beauty, watch it for the "California Dreamin'" vibes, and watch it to feel alive—but have your tissues ready, because it will break you.
Rewatch Value: 0/10 (Because my heart would actually explode, but once was enough to change me forever).
I am writing this through blurred vision because I honestly don’t think I’ve stopped crying since I hit play on the first episode. I absolutely loved Mr. Plankton, but please take this as a serious warning: this drama is a soul-shattering experience. It is a 10/10 masterpiece, but it’s the kind of show you watch once, get the trauma, and then lock away in your heart because you can never put yourself through it again.
The "Anti-Fluffy" Slice of Life
If you are looking for a lighthearted, fluffy rom-com to relax with, turn around right now. This is not that. This is a raw, gritty, and devastatingly beautiful slice-of-life story that explores the darkest corners of loneliness and existence. It tells the story of the "saddest life" imaginable, and it doesn't pull any punches. I found myself crying every single episode—not just a few tears, but full-on sobbing.
A Warning to My Fellow Watchers
Please, if you are currently going through a hard time in your personal life, do not watch this yet. It is heavy. It deals with terminal reality and the feeling of being unwanted in a way that is almost too much to handle. You need to be in a stable headspace to survive this journey, because once it gets under your skin, it stays with you forever.
Cinematography & The "Plankton" Vibe
I am completely obsessed with the visuals. The places they traveled to were so breathtakingly pretty—the vast landscapes, the quiet roads, and the coastal views were like a fever dream. It makes the sadness even more poignant because the world is so beautiful while the characters are hurting so much.
And then there’s the music. "All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray..." Hearing California Dreamin’ will never be the same for me again. Every time that song played, it felt like a physical weight on my chest. It perfectly captures that drifting, "plankton" feeling of being lost at sea.
[Minor Spoilers] The Heartbreak of the Journey
Seeing Hae-jo, a man who feels like he was a "mistake" from birth, literally wandering the earth to find a drop of belonging is gut-wrenching.
The way the drama handles his terminal diagnosis isn't just a plot device; it’s a ticking clock that makes every second of "found family" feel like a knife to the heart.
Jae-mi being the only person who truly sees him, even while she's dealing with her own premature heartbreak, is the most tragic kind of love.
Final Thoughts
This drama is a work of art. It’s a 10/10 for the acting, the scenery, and the sheer emotional honesty. But it is a heavy burden to carry. Watch it for the beauty, watch it for the "California Dreamin'" vibes, and watch it to feel alive—but have your tissues ready, because it will break you.
Rewatch Value: 0/10 (Because my heart would actually explode, but once was enough to change me forever).
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