Can somone elabrate on the 'The seal only appears when im excited' .......how does he get 'excited' when he needs…
I did wonder. It seems a weird way to have to activate a seal during a solemn official moment. Perhaps the stress of a hugely important moment is enough. It would be hilarious if he had to show the seal at a moment when he was feeling indifferent, and had to throw a sudden tantrum to get it to show up.
This ML must have magical healing powers. Within a few days he has been shot multiple times and stabbed, but he recovers almost instantly. By rights, his chest ought to look like a colander.
Episode 3. I love how when she's doing her presentation the neighbourhood lady stands at the other side of the board and "translates" for her, as if the legal words are a foreign language. π€£
I'm on episode 11, and I know people's main focus when watching this drama is "who is Big Mouse?" but right now I'm enjoying how the writers are showing the complexity of human psychology. Every person in this drama changes their viewpoint depending on the new information they receive and the new situations they find themselves in. Changho has gone through hell and come out stronger. Yoongab has discovered that money and power can be snatched away within an instant. Everyone thinks they know what they're doing with their life until one little twist changes it all. Great writing.
I'm not quite sure why everyone hates this type of low-budget comedy. It's a fun, silly plot, with nice characters and is fine to watch with the family. Not everything has to be ultra-realistic, gritty and authentic, just because the ability to create that now exists. Sometimes a bit of bright jollity makes a nice change.
A light drama was definitely needed for the main leads after The Red Sleeve and Mouse
Yes, this seems promising, as a light, fun, unchallenging drama. First episodes are always full of explanations and introductions, so episode 2 should give a clearer idea of what the rest of the drama will be like.
Oh I didnβt thought first season was story from her comic and second season was her real lifeβ¦. I must had…
Somewhere at the beginning of series 2, it's explained that FL is being sued because she used the "real life" ML as a basis for the hero of her comic, and we're led to believe that the plot of series 1 was the comic.
Damn that's a really good theory and I am really convinced by your points for real. But it would help to put your…
Nice theory, and you give some good arguments. I do think you should mark it as a spoiler, since you've mentioned a few parts of the plot that people scrolling past might not have watched yet.
I actually liked that this wasn't a continuation of series 1. Like the second series of "Well Intended Love", the writer took the best parts of the first series and created a completely new concept that used them in a better way, removing a lot of the annoying things, and making others make more sense. For example, this series has a sensible reason why he's in a wheelchair at the beginning, but can stand at the end, whereas in the original they pretty much just managed to find a miracle cure. Since the first series was the story in her comic book, and the second series was real life, it even made perfect sense not to have the same actors.
Except leads being couple It's completely different from FOE,
Since you rarely see the couple together in Big Mouth, there is less romance than Flower of Evil. If you liked Flower of Evil, you probably will enjoy this.
How do you look down on that thought though? There is only 3 characters credited as main leads. And big mouse…
Why would the minor/support character make more sense as an evil BM than a benevolent BM? I do agree that BM (whether a person or an organisation) is doing dodgy-looking things in order to show up the actual evil. However, I still don't see why it *must* be one of the people credited as a main character in the drama's listing.
I hope we haven't made you fall off your office chair and get fired.