I like Kim Go Eun a lot, she is charming and has this really sweet and adorable presence, but I have to say this…
KGE has a lot of range and what makes her a great actress is that she transforms truthfully for each of her characters. She embodies them and convinces the viewer each time. The ML here is an intelligent, handsome fella - she's wary of him at first as she's very aware of the manipulative person he is but she still falls for him in the end.
Cringe and apparently, I didn't get the memo that cheating is fun, cool and the new in.Dropped, if you think this…
Nothing about Jeong-inâs situation is fun. Itâs tense, guilt-ridden, and has social consequences. OSN doesnât celebrate crossing lines, it shows how painful it is to even stand near them.
Why is a womanâs hesitation regarded as moral failure, while male entitlement is normalised and not frowned upon? The show is trying tp tighten the definition of making an honest choice, and living with that choice.
This girl is already thinking about someone else in the first episode, she is very unbelievable
If you're classifying thinking is already cheating, then women arenât allowed dissatisfaction. Lee Jeong is jot written here as a pure character. She comes up against a lot of conflict within herself.
If sheâs so mature and strong-headed that she wonât just get married because her father tells her to or because…
Her character is not a decisive heroine. She's written as a woman trapped by the pressure to keep the status quo, family obligation and fear of disruption. Her coming off as leading on the two males is more an avoidance behaviour.
In the end, Ah-jin's punishment is not death. Death would have been an escape. Instead, she must live with the…
I don't think Ah Jin is remorseful in the end. She is finally free of the two guys and their expectations of her. She doesn't live for anyone else but herself so to me, she's viewing this as a beginning yes, but not with remorse.
Blocking a number doesn't undo entitlement.
Why is a womanâs hesitation regarded as moral failure, while male entitlement is normalised and not frowned upon? The show is trying tp tighten the definition of making an honest choice, and living with that choice.