This show was surprisingly entertaining. I say this because the "contract" marriage trope is overdone...but this show was able to put a fresh spin on it. I love that there was really no talk of an actual "contract" and the love between the pair was genuine. It's much more believable as to why the FL agreed to the marriage vs in other "fake" marriage dramas.
The kids, oh my. They found such great children to play these two roles. Both kiddos play a huge role in moving the plot forward and just aren't used as cute props. There were many scenes where the kiddos tug at my heartstrings and for that I applaud this cast.
The plot overall was good. Nothing was super dragged out for multiple episodes. The male lead wasn't toxic and although our female lead was a little gullible, she stood her ground and didn't get push around.
The plot that lacked development was the male antagonist and the story of the deceased brother & sister. I was left quite confused as to what really happened between them before the accident. The male antagonist could've been better developed so that audiences could fully empathize with him because I think he is a product of his environment. Unfortunately, they didn't dive more into his character.
Overall, I enjoyed the drama and would recommend it.
This pairing of Joss & Nune is interesting... I don't know how I feel about them yet. She's 15 years older than him....I'm not sure why they didn't choose a younger actress. I hope they grow on me as a pair....but right now I'm not feeling it.
This drama surprised me in a good way. Normally I don't enjoy slow-burn drama like this but love the storytelling and how the directors choose to do each scene. I especially appreciate that they don't over-romanticize skinship! The chemistry and interactions of the two leads are so natural you feel like you're watching a real couple fall in love.
I love the writing of Wu Lei's character. We get to see all aspects of him. We see him as a growing young adult (who sometimes throws a tantrum) when he's with his father, we see him as a determined athlete with his team, and we get to see him as a loving partner.
Hats off to the script, directors, and the two leads. They did an awesome job telling such a beautiful and relatable story.
I'm trying so hard to like this lakorn but the storyline is lacking. Everything is so surface level and the two leads (I love Mook + Mike pairing) but so far (I've watched up to ep 6) there is no chemistry.
We're all just supposed to believe they somehow have feelings for each other? The two leads barely have any interactions. Where is the relationship development? As the audience we're just supposed to buy that just because they're "soulmates" ...therefore they must be in love? Lazy script writing.
I normally get butterflies with this pairing...and this storyline just has not done them justice. They deserve a better script.
I'm so disappointed. What a waste of two amazing talents.
The kids, oh my. They found such great children to play these two roles. Both kiddos play a huge role in moving the plot forward and just aren't used as cute props. There were many scenes where the kiddos tug at my heartstrings and for that I applaud this cast.
The plot overall was good. Nothing was super dragged out for multiple episodes. The male lead wasn't toxic and although our female lead was a little gullible, she stood her ground and didn't get push around.
The plot that lacked development was the male antagonist and the story of the deceased brother & sister. I was left quite confused as to what really happened between them before the accident. The male antagonist could've been better developed so that audiences could fully empathize with him because I think he is a product of his environment. Unfortunately, they didn't dive more into his character.
Overall, I enjoyed the drama and would recommend it.
I love the writing of Wu Lei's character. We get to see all aspects of him. We see him as a growing young adult (who sometimes throws a tantrum) when he's with his father, we see him as a determined athlete with his team, and we get to see him as a loving partner.
Hats off to the script, directors, and the two leads. They did an awesome job telling such a beautiful and relatable story.
We're all just supposed to believe they somehow have feelings for each other? The two leads barely have any interactions. Where is the relationship development? As the audience we're just supposed to buy that just because they're "soulmates" ...therefore they must be in love? Lazy script writing.
I normally get butterflies with this pairing...and this storyline just has not done them justice. They deserve a better script.
I'm so disappointed. What a waste of two amazing talents.