The dialogues in the first episode was okay but in the second one the script is poor. I'm a fan of Hyoseop and I liked Yoo Jung in The Eight Night so I wanted to watch more of her dramas. But for some reason her delivery of dialogues feels unnatural in this one. Also, Hong Chungi seems to be a completely different person after 19 years as if there's zero similarity between her childhood self and now. Getting your vision back doesn't make you a whole different person. It doesn't work that way.
CALLING IT A HUMAN HEALING DRAMA IS FAR FETCHED WHEN THEY DIDN'T EVEN ADDRESS THE ISSUES PROPERLY!!
First, of all the toxic relationship throughout the initial episodes is hard to ignore. Yes, the main leads are eye candy for most of the people and the drama has top tier OSTs, very good chemistry and aesthetics but it doesn't cover up a lot of the irrational things that happened throughout the drama.
The female lead is made too dramatic to be a children's book writer. She has several mental health issues but she recovered overnight by getting a man in her life she was overly obsessed with. And honestly that haircut wasn't convincing at the least. No consultation or treatment from a psychologists for someone who is suffering from mental problems for years. How ridiculous!! Where's medication? Where's therapy? They never made it a point to highlight that she needed to visit a doctor and no a lover can't do that work. She has issues herself but she is the one teaching the patients at the hospital. Exactly why?
Also, the fact that she dresses like she is about to walk on the ramp of New York fashion week is the most ridiculous of all. Her publishing house went bankrupt, she was living in a rural area, her employees were barely getting salary, eating at subway because there's no food at home. What nonsense was going on? In which world a writer does these things?
A rather foolish and dramatic portrayal of mental health I would say and the way they have romanticised and painted a rosy picture was a major let down. So, if you're dealing with sensitive topics in kdramas at least try to be realistic.
randoms always hating on the FL in dramas begone tbh
Excuse me. What is hating? I'm an audience and if I'm not pleased or entertained with the acting I can criticize. Kdrama audiences like you are so weird because I have never seen ppl who criticize someone's acting in hollywood terming it as "hating."
And why would you call me a random? You're also an audience just like me maybe you have got different taste or you're personally attached to the actress because of some reason therefore you can't think critically of her performance. Most importantly, I'm not a high school teenager who is into hating actors. I am a cinephile and I'm allowed to show my criticism when I'm disappointed. So, don't jump on strangers on the internet to defend your favourite just because you're personally attached to her.
The title of your review shouldn't be that. Thanks, to this drama finally ppl agreed and recognised what a great actor Seo In Guk is because all these years you all kept him in the shadow even if he had put out brilliant performances in the past.
First, of all the toxic relationship throughout the initial episodes is hard to ignore. Yes, the main leads are eye candy for most of the people and the drama has top tier OSTs, very good chemistry and aesthetics but it doesn't cover up a lot of the irrational things that happened throughout the drama.
The female lead is made too dramatic to be a children's book writer. She has several mental health issues but she recovered overnight by getting a man in her life she was overly obsessed with. And honestly that haircut wasn't convincing at the least. No consultation or treatment from a psychologists for someone who is suffering from mental problems for years. How ridiculous!! Where's medication? Where's therapy? They never made it a point to highlight that she needed to visit a doctor and no a lover can't do that work. She has issues herself but she is the one teaching the patients at the hospital. Exactly why?
Also, the fact that she dresses like she is about to walk on the ramp of New York fashion week is the most ridiculous of all. Her publishing house went bankrupt, she was living in a rural area, her employees were barely getting salary, eating at subway because there's no food at home. What nonsense was going on? In which world a writer does these things?
A rather foolish and dramatic portrayal of mental health I would say and the way they have romanticised and painted a rosy picture was a major let down. So, if you're dealing with sensitive topics in kdramas at least try to be realistic.
And why would you call me a random? You're also an audience just like me maybe you have got different taste or you're personally attached to the actress because of some reason therefore you can't think critically of her performance. Most importantly, I'm not a high school teenager who is into hating actors. I am a cinephile and I'm allowed to show my criticism when I'm disappointed. So, don't jump on strangers on the internet to defend your favourite just because you're personally attached to her.