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No Tail to Tell korean drama review
Completed
No Tail to Tell
0 people found this review helpful
by YOLO
8 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 7.0

A Heartfelt Fantasy About Choices, Consequences, Love And True Self.

How should I put this, this series is one of its kind. On paper it looked like a cliche story but in delivery it stands complete on its own, This story need attention and time not quick jumps- and that's what makes it special.

Lets start: 
The story follows Eunho, a 900-year-old gumiho, who refuses to become human and stays true to her choice until the very end. At its heart, the series is about living life on your own terms, owning your choices, and facing the consequences — no regrets.

The plot is structurally-written. There are no loose ends, and unnecessary plots, every character gets a satisfying conclusion. Every scene connects seamlessly, so the audience isn’t left questioning “what just happened?” It’s neatly packed. The direction is good too, though there are a few sudden cuts here and there — noticeable, but not enough to ruin the experience.

Acting & Chemistry:

Kim Hye Yoon as Eunho is an absolute delight. Portraying a 900-year-old gumiho, she adopts an older, more structured tone and speech — and she nails it. Her comic timing has always been strong, and it lands perfectly here as well. Her sly, foxy attitude and bratty charm are a joy to watch, and that heartbreaking outburst in ep 11 and that beautiful, strong silent emotional delivery in ep 12, IYKYK are just Chef’s kiss 💯😍.

Lomon shines as Kang Siyeol, taking on a sensitive and delicate character for the first time. He delivers a nuanced and convincing performance, showing real promise as a young actor.🫶

Even though this isn’t your typical romance drama, the chemistry between the leads feels like a perfectly layered cake — consistently engaging without ever feeling forced. With each episode, you keep wanting more of “them.” The rest of the cast also delivers strong performances, and the OST complements the mood beautifully, even if it isn’t particularly groundbreaking.

Verdict:
If you enjoy reflective, emotional fantasy with light romance and comedy, I completely recommend this but if you’re chasing high-stakes, steamy romance, out of the box oscar level story telling look elsewhere.

The review ends here.


But this is something I personally wanted to address.

I came across a Reddit comment claiming Eunho didn’t learn anything by the end because she chose to remain a gumiho — I strongly disagree.

Some people missed the core point of this series. In episode 12, Eunho recalls her unnie’s words and admits that living life her own way, owning her choices, is exactly how life should be. That’s the real narration — not just for her, but for all of us watching.

This drama is about making your own choices and facing the consequences. Every character — Eunho, Siyeol, Woo Seok, Lee Yoon, Jang Do Cheol, and Gumho — navigates their own decisions and outcomes.

Eunho chooses both kang Si yeol (her love) and her life as a gumiho at the end, and Kang Siyeol chooses Eunho too. Both of them know the consequences of their choices, yet they make them anyway — because they’re trying to stay true to themselves and to each other. They love themselves and each other in every form and shape, leaving the rest to life to play out as it will.

By the end, it’s clear what Eunho learned — and what we, as the audience, can take away too:
If you don’t stay true to your core identity, no amount of convincing yourself you’re happy will truly work. But if you choose to be true to yourself first, and then love others from that place, the relationships will bloom. True love starts from within.

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