Pattaya, pop psych, real psych, pastries, planes, and bike pedals--lots of bikes to pedal
This series swirls around three adoptive brothers. One is a psychologist. One is a former pilot suffering from PTSD after an accident. Now he works as as a bike mechanic. The third brother works at a host bar, where he sells his companionship to the highest bidder each night. The family, which also includes their mother and a much younger sister, operates a combination bike shop and cafe. The brothers' love interests turn out to be an exchange student suffering from PTSD related to childhood trauma. A baker so deeply in debt that he will take any job at all. And a client at the host bar harboring a secret. The series makes good use of its setting in the beachfront city of Pattaya--in fact, it makes such good use of scenic overlooks and city beaches that one surmises that the Pattaya tourism office helped underwrite the production. Not a complaint, since that is how BLs get produced in Thailand, but the city promotion was quite noticeable here. In nearly episode, after all, one or more characters spends the episode biking around the city and its environs.
Somehow, the psychologist fails even to notice his brother's PTSD, but he induces his new acquaintance the exchange student into therapy by episode 3. Then, he promptly passes the new patient off to another doctor in the same practice. Unfortunately, it takes until the finale before the student realizes the doctor punted on his treatment for ethical reasons, even though everyone in the audience twitted to that reality almost immediately. On the bright side, let us cheer a Thai BL production that acknowledges professional medical ethics so directly instead of building a fantasy romance around a psychologist dating his own patient. Will eight episodes be enough to cure the patient's PTSD? You've seen BL before. Guess for yourself.
Meanwhile baker and bike mechanic enter into a tempestuous relationship. (The story drops the pilot angle after e 2, until it abruptly resurfaces in the finale. Silly me. I had forgotten it existed at all.) Ostensibly, this duo manifest an enemies-to-lovers story frame, but the enmity comes across as artificial, even forced. Their early interactions consist of throwing punches, then fucking. Naturally, true love will not be far behind. The debtor's financial situation drives the most dramatic scenes in the eight episodes, as the whole family deploys familial solidarity to defeat the cruel debt collectors. Does any of it make sense? Shh. We are watching BL, and all that matters in the end is the good guys win. Oh, and that baker and bike mechanic grow closer because of the crisis. That matters, too. But they will still throw punches in the finale, just for the nostalgic callback value.
Finally, we have the host and his owner--err, his client. I don't have much to say about this plot, as it is the least compelling of the three and least impactful on the other characters. In keeping with the rest of the series, this couple's sublot also features a serious problem that requires fixing. Like all other problems in this series, the solution arrives too easily, too prettily, and with too much reliance on a convenient deus ex machina. The result proves less than completely satisfying. But it's nice they went through the motions.
In short, Love Like a Bike ranks as a below average BL. Not terrible, but in the end, the final result lacks the complexity in execution that the ambition of its multi-faceted storylines would suggest. To its credit, the series manages to feel different from most of Thai BL, whether by escaping the environs of Bangkok or by focusing primarily on adult non-students. I would not dismiss it out of hand as a complete waste of anyone's time. Well, unless you have important things that need doing. But if you're looking for a brainless lark while on holiday or just want an excuse to procrastinate, you could do a lot worse than this one.
One other note: Netflix has suddenly decided to grace North America with proper BL series. That gives an additional motivation to watch this series--so they keep giving us more. Sooner or later, they're bound to buy an excellent one, right?
Somehow, the psychologist fails even to notice his brother's PTSD, but he induces his new acquaintance the exchange student into therapy by episode 3. Then, he promptly passes the new patient off to another doctor in the same practice. Unfortunately, it takes until the finale before the student realizes the doctor punted on his treatment for ethical reasons, even though everyone in the audience twitted to that reality almost immediately. On the bright side, let us cheer a Thai BL production that acknowledges professional medical ethics so directly instead of building a fantasy romance around a psychologist dating his own patient. Will eight episodes be enough to cure the patient's PTSD? You've seen BL before. Guess for yourself.
Meanwhile baker and bike mechanic enter into a tempestuous relationship. (The story drops the pilot angle after e 2, until it abruptly resurfaces in the finale. Silly me. I had forgotten it existed at all.) Ostensibly, this duo manifest an enemies-to-lovers story frame, but the enmity comes across as artificial, even forced. Their early interactions consist of throwing punches, then fucking. Naturally, true love will not be far behind. The debtor's financial situation drives the most dramatic scenes in the eight episodes, as the whole family deploys familial solidarity to defeat the cruel debt collectors. Does any of it make sense? Shh. We are watching BL, and all that matters in the end is the good guys win. Oh, and that baker and bike mechanic grow closer because of the crisis. That matters, too. But they will still throw punches in the finale, just for the nostalgic callback value.
Finally, we have the host and his owner--err, his client. I don't have much to say about this plot, as it is the least compelling of the three and least impactful on the other characters. In keeping with the rest of the series, this couple's sublot also features a serious problem that requires fixing. Like all other problems in this series, the solution arrives too easily, too prettily, and with too much reliance on a convenient deus ex machina. The result proves less than completely satisfying. But it's nice they went through the motions.
In short, Love Like a Bike ranks as a below average BL. Not terrible, but in the end, the final result lacks the complexity in execution that the ambition of its multi-faceted storylines would suggest. To its credit, the series manages to feel different from most of Thai BL, whether by escaping the environs of Bangkok or by focusing primarily on adult non-students. I would not dismiss it out of hand as a complete waste of anyone's time. Well, unless you have important things that need doing. But if you're looking for a brainless lark while on holiday or just want an excuse to procrastinate, you could do a lot worse than this one.
One other note: Netflix has suddenly decided to grace North America with proper BL series. That gives an additional motivation to watch this series--so they keep giving us more. Sooner or later, they're bound to buy an excellent one, right?
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