Quantcast

Details

  • Last Online: 18 minutes ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location:
  • Contribution Points: 0 LV0
  • Roles:
  • Join Date: May 17, 2026
Completed
The WONDERfools
3 people found this review helpful
4 days ago
8 of 8 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

So, where do I even begin.

This is honestly one of those rare dramas that gets better with every single episode to the point that I genuinely wish it had more than 8 episodes.

I’ll admit, the first 2 episodes tested me a little. Everything initially feels very loud, exaggerated, and almost cartoonishly absurd, not in a good way. Despite having a roster full of amazing actors, the trio’s personalities are written to be overly chaotic, childish, and messy to the point that I can understand why some casual viewers might struggle to adjust to the tone at first.

But then… Cha Eunwoo got punched by Park Eunbin and his face got completely distorted, and suddenly, I WAS SEATED.

Then came the tank top and garbage dump scenes. And before I knew it, I WAS SOLD.

What really helped ground the drama for me during those earlier episodes was Cha Eunwoo’s character. His performance acts as the perfect counterweight to all the surrounding chaos. If his character wasn’t there setting emotional boundaries and reacting like an actual sane person trapped inside this madness, I genuinely think the drama could’ve become too absurdist for casual viewers. And I have to say this: his acting is really good here. He's a good actor now.

As for the trio, I initially felt like the writing wasn’t fully utilizing Park Eunbin’s talents because her character starts off almost too much like a trainwreck. Choi Daehoon’s character was frustratingly selfish in the beginning, while Im Seongjae felt too much like a 5-year-old that watching the three of them together sometimes felt like swallowing dry sweet potatoes.

BUT THEN THE STORY STARTS SETTLING INTO ITSELF.

What initially felt like random bullets ricocheting everywhere finally starts aiming toward an actual emotional target. The trio’s dynamics become stronger, warmer, and surprisingly heartfelt as they begin interacting with more people and the worldbuilding expands. Slowly, the emotional core beneath all the ridiculous comedy starts revealing itself.

AND FROM THERE ON, IT ONLY KEEPS GETTING BETTER.

Park Eunbin eventually shines exactly like the incredible actress that she is, bringing warmth and sincerity beneath all the absurdity like a true center lead should. Meanwhile, Choi Daehoon somehow ended up becoming my favorite character by the end and honestly the highlight of the series. What impressed me most is that no character here feels wasted: villains, child actors, and aunties in the diner, they all leave an impression. So I really have to praise director Yoo Insik because the directing here is GENUINELY FANTASTIC. The balance between absurd comedy, emotional moments, and action sequences is handled incredibly smoothly. I especially love how every time the story starts getting too dark or emotionally heavy, Yoo Insik suddenly throws in something completely ridiculous to snap viewers out of the tension and remind us that this is still comedy, without ruining the emotional integrity of the story itself. The whole drama feels incredibly campy in the BEST way possible. And the fight scenes? Surprisingly well choreographed for a drama this comedic.

All in all, A MASTERPIECE.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?