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Dynamite Kiss korean drama review
Completed
Dynamite Kiss
3 people found this review helpful
by SanaRehmat
16 days ago
14 of 14 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 5.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 3.5

Great Chemistry, Questionable Writing

There is nothing wrong with clichés. I actually love them. When they are placed well and executed properly, they elevate a drama. The problem here is not that Dynamite Kiss uses tropes, but that in the second half it starts throwing everything in at once, hoping something will stick. Most of it does not.

Dynamite Kiss started phenomenally. It had the right amount of familiar rom-com setups mixed with small twists that made everything feel fresh. Ji Hyeok may look like the classic cold rich male lead, but he is actually goofy with a soft, puppy-like heart. Da Rim seems like the typical kind and pure heroine, but she is surprisingly assertive, witty, and fun to watch. Because of that, the clichés felt enjoyable instead of tiring.

The first half delivered lovable characters, great comedy, butterflies-inducing moments, proper pining, and well-structured internal and external conflicts. It made me excited to keep watching. Unfortunately, the second half replaced that charm with unnecessary stupidity. What bothered me most is that it mostly affected the female lead, and that is never a good writing choice.

Da Rim’s writing fell apart. She went from genuinely good and strong to unrealistically naive and careless. The writer turned her kindness into stupidity just to push a weak plot forward. That kind of downgrade is frustrating, because character growth should add depth, not erase intelligence. What could have been meaningful development became lazy writing.

Ji Hyeok was not as infuriating, but still disappointing. The drama introduced him with a solid internal conflict and emotional complexity, yet later he barely grows. He stays mostly the same: smart, loyal, kind, and capable. That sounds nice, but without challenge or transformation, it becomes boring. The story stopped asking anything interesting of him.

Ironically, the second leads were written with more nuance than the main couple. I liked how the drama explored different priorities, especially between people with and without children. The way responsibility shapes choices was one of the smarter parts of the script. Yoo Ha Yeong was especially memorable. She seems spoiled at first, but turns out hardworking, honest, and flawed in a human way. Her pushiness created both warmth and discomfort, which made her feel real.

One of the strongest parts of the drama was the mothers’ team. They were not instantly portrayed as perfect workers. They were entitled at times, tired, and unsure of themselves. With Da Rim’s leadership, they learned to see themselves beyond just the role of “mother.” That theme was heartfelt and genuinely well done. It reminded me that people are more than what society labels them.

Where the drama truly failed was with its villains and business conflicts. Ji Hyeok’s father, sister, and Tae Yeong were stock characters with little depth. Their arcs were poorly built and added almost nothing. Instead of forcing typical corporate drama, the story would have been much stronger focusing on family dynamics, emotional struggles, and how those affect love and work. Ji Hyeok’s mother, in particular, deserved much more screen presence because her story was one of the most emotionally compelling.

As for the romance, the initial misunderstanding between the leads was actually fun. Some characters knew the truth, others did not, and that created interesting tension. Ironically, the best part of the relationship was before they officially got together. Once they became a couple, the spark dimmed because the plot focused more on forced drama than emotional connection.

The final episode was especially messy. The memory loss trope felt unnecessary and rushed. Instead of deepening the story, it weakened the emotional payoff. Combined with overextended misunderstandings, lies, and “protect the family” clichés, the ending felt dragged rather than satisfying.

Overall, I truly loved the first half of Dynamite Kiss. The chemistry was strong, the characters had personality, and the tone balanced romance and comedy well. Once the leads got together, everything crumbled because the writer piled on clichés and made everyone suddenly incapable of smart decisions, pushing romance and humor into the background.

I am giving this drama an 8. The first half was easily a 9/10 for me. It was also my first time watching both leads, and despite knowing the issues from spoilers and reviews, I wanted to judge it myself because of the initial hype. I do not regret watching it. It is flawed, but its strong start, charm, and early chemistry still make it worth experiencing.

I might have been more disappointed if I had watched this for the leads, since that usually comes with higher expectations for the script. Thankfully, this was my first drama for both actors, so it didn’t hurt my rating as much as it could have.

Dynamite Kiss is a drama that shows how powerful a good beginning can be, and how fragile a story becomes when writing forgets to respect its own characters.

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