A painful story, but the screenplay wasn’t strong because it kept things too banal. Similar stories have already been told, and in my opinion it could have been done differently. The attempt to go back to the past and change things is already quite cliché and boring. The story is still beautiful because it carries emotion, and maybe that’s why the ending felt very disappointing to me. The acting was excellent, but the main actor didn’t fit the role because he looked too old. Still, he performed well.
I’m honestly shocked by the actress’s appearance. I saw her about 14 years ago in Rooftop Prince, and she looks exactly the same—it’s so strange. What kind of facial treatments is she getting?
I’m on episode 3, and I couldn’t find episode 2. I’m skipping through a lot of the scenes, but I feel like the FL is very flat, kind of not fully human—too calm all the time, not expressing authentic emotions. It doesn’t feel like a real woman. Still, I do watch the dating scenes and interactions; I skip the rest.
I’m so bummed that today is the last episode, it’s such a cute series.
As for the age gap, I’m not against it in this case because they genuinely love each other and he’s not the type of person who’s been with lots of women—he’s quite innocent himself. Each case is different, and the gap isn’t that big. He’s also very respectful, patient, and willing to wait for her as long as needed, so I think the reactions are exaggerated—people are commenting before they’ve even watched it.
It’s simply a horrifying and shocking story. It’s hard for me to understand the Thai creators-they take such a disturbing, heavy story and flatten everything around it to a low production level, which is really unfortunate. Second, Tee ’s one of those actors you just feel some kind of connection to—it’s hard to explain why. I’ve felt connected to him since the beginning of his career, and I don’t understand it.
How did a fist fight become a make out session in public? That’s the most random thing I have ever witnessed.
This scene is bizarre; it made me not want to watch this couple at all and also hurt my experience of the series. If it weren’t for Tee, I wouldn’t keep watching it.
Tee is one of the cutest Thai actors there is, and most of the time the series he’s in are decent. For example, Triage is the last series of his that I watched and it was a good series at the time. But this series is trash; I skip all the scenes he doesn’t appear in, and that’s fine with me. Overall, the pairing with him is decent.
The drama is literally titled " Countdown to Yes". your complaints r invalid.
The series is excellent. It’s just that because the episode is short, it feels more dragged out. If it were two episodes together instead, it probably wouldn’t feel as problematic. Still, it’s good.
The main problem I can’t get past is that Shin looks about 30, and it just doesn’t work for me with him dressed as a student. I like the actor and everything, I’ll try to watch episode 3 and see how it works. For now, it’s distracting me.
It feels so strange to watch this. Even though only 9 years have passed, it already looks ancient. The shows from that time were already quite bad. The opening scene was frustrating
The film was difficult for me to watch. It began beautifully and completely drew me in, until the scenes became extremely violent and disturbing. It is definitely not for the faint of heart.
I got the impression that the screenplay was inspired by Death Note. There is a moral question here about how far one can justify what happens to another human being. At first, it is easy to identify with the idea — for example, getting rid of a cruel criminal may seem justified. But once a person takes justice into their own hands and decides who is good and who is evil, that sense of justice begins to unravel. It can end with a relatively minor immoral act receiving excessively harsh and unjust punishment. No individual should decide to take another person’s life without a sufficiently strong reason. Even if the reason seems valid, such a decision must be made with objective and rational considerations. This is one of the most difficult moral questions humanity faces.
The film seems to confront this question in a more romantic style. I was unable to watch the entire movie because of the violence and cruelty, but I understood that its purpose is to show how far love can lead a person into moral blindness. In other words, is someone willing to accept any act, even any crime, committed by the person they love? The film appears to argue that the answer is yes.
In this case, it is also very easy to connect to that idea because the actress is stunningly beautiful, gentle, and charismatic, and she appears to genuinely care about the boy she loves. Therefore, one could argue that this may be too easy a choice for the screenwriter. Perhaps if the actress were not so attractive, the moral conflict would not go down as smoothly.
It is difficult for me to rate the film, both because it is not my cup of tea and because I only watched half of it and the final scene. Still, I am grateful to the person who translated it.
I’m on episode 3, and I couldn’t find episode 2. I’m skipping through a lot of the scenes, but I feel like the FL is very flat, kind of not fully human—too calm all the time, not expressing authentic emotions. It doesn’t feel like a real woman. Still, I do watch the dating scenes and interactions; I skip the rest.
As for the age gap, I’m not against it in this case because they genuinely love each other and he’s not the type of person who’s been with lots of women—he’s quite innocent himself. Each case is different, and the gap isn’t that big. He’s also very respectful, patient, and willing to wait for her as long as needed, so I think the reactions are exaggerated—people are commenting before they’ve even watched it.
Second, Tee ’s one of those actors you just feel some kind of connection to—it’s hard to explain why. I’ve felt connected to him since the beginning of his career, and I don’t understand it.
I got the impression that the screenplay was inspired by Death Note. There is a moral question here about how far one can justify what happens to another human being. At first, it is easy to identify with the idea — for example, getting rid of a cruel criminal may seem justified. But once a person takes justice into their own hands and decides who is good and who is evil, that sense of justice begins to unravel. It can end with a relatively minor immoral act receiving excessively harsh and unjust punishment. No individual should decide to take another person’s life without a sufficiently strong reason. Even if the reason seems valid, such a decision must be made with objective and rational considerations. This is one of the most difficult moral questions humanity faces.
The film seems to confront this question in a more romantic style. I was unable to watch the entire movie because of the violence and cruelty, but I understood that its purpose is to show how far love can lead a person into moral blindness. In other words, is someone willing to accept any act, even any crime, committed by the person they love? The film appears to argue that the answer is yes.
In this case, it is also very easy to connect to that idea because the actress is stunningly beautiful, gentle, and charismatic, and she appears to genuinely care about the boy she loves. Therefore, one could argue that this may be too easy a choice for the screenwriter. Perhaps if the actress were not so attractive, the moral conflict would not go down as smoothly.
It is difficult for me to rate the film, both because it is not my cup of tea and because I only watched half of it and the final scene. Still, I am grateful to the person who translated it.