This review may contain spoilers
Romance, Action, and Heartbreak Done Right
I write really long reviews but here's a summary. Keep in mind this is just my opinion and I don't mean to offend anyone ❤️
This one's a bit long- so if you like slightly detailed reviews, you're gonna (hopefully) love this.
❗SPOILERS AHEAD❗
The Good
Plotline Perfection (aka Genre Soup That Actually Worked)
This drama blended so many genres—romance, action, suspense, and even comedy—and somehow pulled it off. The pacing picked up fast, and once it did, it never lost momentum.
And the twists? Unhinged in the best way. That final one with Man Dong? I was gagged. Freedom was right there, and they missed it because of him? Genius-level chaos.
Jisoo’s Acting Debut = Slay
Jisoo really surprised me. For her first drama, she held her own against a cast full of seasoned actors and never broke the immersion.
Sure, there were moments Hae In had to work a little harder to sell their chemistry, and that kiss felt more like a polite nod than passion—but overall, she did well. Respect.
The Romance: Chaotic, But Cute
I really liked Soo Ho and Yeong Ro’s love story. It was sweet and soft without overpowering the main plot.
It felt real—awkward at times, but in a good way. And Soo Ho didn’t turn into a fool for love, which automatically makes him elite.
The Ending (A Beautiful Tragedy)
That ending… whew. Of course I wanted them to end up together, or at the very least have him survive. But honestly? I’m not mad at how it played out. It was beautifully done and, more importantly, believable.
I’m so glad they didn’t go the unrealistic route where he jumps out the window, dodges bullets, and somehow lives. His death actually meant something.
And that epilogue? The "what if we met under normal circumstances" callback? I was done. Beautiful, heartbreaking, unforgettable.
Bun Ok: Annoying, But I Get It
She was frustrating, but her actions made sense. Everything she did came from a place of survival and desperation.
And her quiet thing with Comrade Joo? The unspoken looks? The subtle softness? Honestly, one of the most underrated dynamics in the show.
The Bad
Slow-Motion Start-Up
I get the need for setup, but this one dragged its feet. The first few episodes were painfully slow—like, “am I watching the right show?” slow. Cute moments popped in here and there, but overall? Snoozefest.
And the wives? Please. Their boutique gossip sessions were filler at best and dead weight at worst. The “13 virgins” subplot? Completely irrelevant. Their scenes killed the pace and made the early episodes hard to sit through.
Plot Convenience (AKA The Spy Personality Swap)
Soo Ho’s sudden moral awakening made zero sense. These people were raised and trained to follow orders no matter what—especially spies. But the moment things got dicey, they all just… switched sides?
Comrade Joo was the only one who stayed true to his conditioning. Everyone else? Way too soft, way too fast. I get drama magic, but Soo Ho risking his sister’s safety for a girl he barely knew? That’s not love, that’s lazy writing.
Can Someone Please Die Already?
No, I’m not heartless—just honest. For a “high-stakes hostage crisis,” the show weirdly avoided actual stakes. Nobody died for most of it, which killed the tension.
Soo Ho and the spies hesitated way too much. Even Gang Mu surviving made no sense. You can’t sell us intensity with constant threats and zero follow-through. At some point, the hostages should’ve realized there were no real consequences.
Final Thoughts
As you can probably tell, I loved this drama. “The Bad” section was honestly me nitpicking—none of it ruined the experience.
Yes, the beginning dragged, but once the plot kicked in, it stayed in. Every episode had me glued to the screen, the twists kept landing, and the romance felt just right—soft but never sappy.
And that ending? Devastatingly beautiful. The epilogue lives rent-free in my mind. I know there was a lot of controversy around this show, which is why I focused on the hostage plot, not the politics. But from a storytelling perspective, it was stunning.
The romance was grounded, the stakes were real, and Soo Ho had me emotionally unwell for days. I fully plan to rewatch—just be warned: come for the thriller, stay for the emotional destruction.
This one's a bit long- so if you like slightly detailed reviews, you're gonna (hopefully) love this.
❗SPOILERS AHEAD❗
The Good
Plotline Perfection (aka Genre Soup That Actually Worked)
This drama blended so many genres—romance, action, suspense, and even comedy—and somehow pulled it off. The pacing picked up fast, and once it did, it never lost momentum.
And the twists? Unhinged in the best way. That final one with Man Dong? I was gagged. Freedom was right there, and they missed it because of him? Genius-level chaos.
Jisoo’s Acting Debut = Slay
Jisoo really surprised me. For her first drama, she held her own against a cast full of seasoned actors and never broke the immersion.
Sure, there were moments Hae In had to work a little harder to sell their chemistry, and that kiss felt more like a polite nod than passion—but overall, she did well. Respect.
The Romance: Chaotic, But Cute
I really liked Soo Ho and Yeong Ro’s love story. It was sweet and soft without overpowering the main plot.
It felt real—awkward at times, but in a good way. And Soo Ho didn’t turn into a fool for love, which automatically makes him elite.
The Ending (A Beautiful Tragedy)
That ending… whew. Of course I wanted them to end up together, or at the very least have him survive. But honestly? I’m not mad at how it played out. It was beautifully done and, more importantly, believable.
I’m so glad they didn’t go the unrealistic route where he jumps out the window, dodges bullets, and somehow lives. His death actually meant something.
And that epilogue? The "what if we met under normal circumstances" callback? I was done. Beautiful, heartbreaking, unforgettable.
Bun Ok: Annoying, But I Get It
She was frustrating, but her actions made sense. Everything she did came from a place of survival and desperation.
And her quiet thing with Comrade Joo? The unspoken looks? The subtle softness? Honestly, one of the most underrated dynamics in the show.
The Bad
Slow-Motion Start-Up
I get the need for setup, but this one dragged its feet. The first few episodes were painfully slow—like, “am I watching the right show?” slow. Cute moments popped in here and there, but overall? Snoozefest.
And the wives? Please. Their boutique gossip sessions were filler at best and dead weight at worst. The “13 virgins” subplot? Completely irrelevant. Their scenes killed the pace and made the early episodes hard to sit through.
Plot Convenience (AKA The Spy Personality Swap)
Soo Ho’s sudden moral awakening made zero sense. These people were raised and trained to follow orders no matter what—especially spies. But the moment things got dicey, they all just… switched sides?
Comrade Joo was the only one who stayed true to his conditioning. Everyone else? Way too soft, way too fast. I get drama magic, but Soo Ho risking his sister’s safety for a girl he barely knew? That’s not love, that’s lazy writing.
Can Someone Please Die Already?
No, I’m not heartless—just honest. For a “high-stakes hostage crisis,” the show weirdly avoided actual stakes. Nobody died for most of it, which killed the tension.
Soo Ho and the spies hesitated way too much. Even Gang Mu surviving made no sense. You can’t sell us intensity with constant threats and zero follow-through. At some point, the hostages should’ve realized there were no real consequences.
Final Thoughts
As you can probably tell, I loved this drama. “The Bad” section was honestly me nitpicking—none of it ruined the experience.
Yes, the beginning dragged, but once the plot kicked in, it stayed in. Every episode had me glued to the screen, the twists kept landing, and the romance felt just right—soft but never sappy.
And that ending? Devastatingly beautiful. The epilogue lives rent-free in my mind. I know there was a lot of controversy around this show, which is why I focused on the hostage plot, not the politics. But from a storytelling perspective, it was stunning.
The romance was grounded, the stakes were real, and Soo Ho had me emotionally unwell for days. I fully plan to rewatch—just be warned: come for the thriller, stay for the emotional destruction.
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