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Taxi Driver 3 – A Moral Breakdown with No Discussion
I loved Taxi Driver Seasons 1 & 2. Vigilante justice with a code. Batman-style revenge: brutal, clever, cathartic — but they didn’t kill people. That was the point.Season 3? Apparently that memo got lost.
Somewhere along the way Rainbow Taxi stopped exposing villains and started… burying people alive, leaving others to drown, and very much letting characters die without a blink or a single line of self-reflection. No debate. No guilt. No acknowledgement that they’ve crossed a line they spent two seasons carefully avoiding.
And that’s the problem.
If you’re going to abandon the show’s moral backbone, you need to say something about it. Instead, Season 3 just shrugs and moves on. The writing seems to assume “they’re evil enough, so it’s fine,” which is lazy and honestly a bit disappointing.
The plots were darker, sure. Some cases were still compelling. Lee Je-hoon remains excellent. But the emotional and ethical coherence that made this show satisfying is gone.
I didn’t hate it. I just finished it feeling confused, unsatisfied, and slightly betrayed — like watching Batman suddenly become The Punisher and no one mentioning it.
Season 1–2: sharp, righteous revenge.
Season 3: vibes, violence, and a raised eyebrow.
Underwhelming. And a bit shit.
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Fantastic Characters
I've just finished this. I currently have tears flowing down my cheeks. I will miss these characters so much. It was truly wonderful. No peril, no violence, a gentle flowing story about people and their stories. Be sure to read the blurbs at the end of each episode, they're a fantastic insight into the ML's and FL's thoughts. Like a book.Every time I watch anything romantic, it makes me doubt that real love even exists in the world. I've certainly never felt it. At the age I am now, I really doubt I ever will...
...but I HOPE it does.
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This review may contain spoilers
Lee Jun-ho and the supes are great... but...
I kept watching Cashero waiting for it to tell me what it was actually about. By episode 8, I was still waiting. There’s no clear goal, no real direction, and the plot mostly consists of things happening and then being quietly brushed aside. The power rules are especially baffling: Cashero needs cash and clearly pays a price, while Nathan appears to have unlimited abilities powered by… vibes? determination? sheer narrative convenience? Nathan’s motivation is never convincingly explained, and he often feels more competent and powerful than the supposed protagonist, which makes the central conflict hard to take seriously. Overall, it’s a show with an interesting idea that never commits to its own rules or point, leaving it oddly flat despite all the effort.Was this review helpful to you?
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All in all just a great little rom-com
Everything you could want really. OTP great chemistry. 2nd leads, bravo. Bad guys were dealt with. Lessons were learned.Woo-shik is just wonderful isn't he? Jung So-min is always so lovely to watch. Woo-ju 2 (Seo Bum-june) is one to watch his story in this was a rollercaoster and I was convinced by every bit of his acting. Kim Young-min is a little weasel in this but I could never hate him after CLOY, he's a fantastic actor. All the cast were played their parts well I think. I'll probably put this in my "comfort rewatch" list.
Anyone else been singing Soda Pop to the theme tune?
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