I’d say both of them fall for each other at a similar pace, but FL is more open and expressive about her feelings. She shows clear signs of her affection early on, while ML is more reserved and introverted when it comes to relationships. His feelings are just as deep, but he takes a more subtle approach. So, if we're talking about who shows it first, definitely Shi Yi. But emotionally, they seem pretty in sync.
There’s a little romance, sure, but it’s like seasoning—not the main dish. The show’s about surviving…
Oh, I understand just fine. You have a flexible moral stance depending on personal feelings, and I pointed that out. That’s all. But yeah, no need to argue to the moon—agreeing to disagree works just fine. Have a good one!
There’s a little romance, sure, but it’s like seasoning—not the main dish. The show’s about surviving…
Ohhh, so it’s not about the actual age gap, just whether they ‘look’ old enough? Got it. Must’ve missed that section in the Official Morality Handbook on Fictional Relationships. My bad.
Guys is this show so good to justify a romance between a then 19 yr old girl with a 30 yr old man because I am…
There’s a little romance, sure, but it’s like seasoning—not the main dish. The show’s about surviving a time loop, not planning a wedding. If a brief moment of connection in the middle of life-or-death chaos is too much, then yeah, this one might not be for you. But hey i see your profile picture. Loving 'The Double' with a 34 & 22-year-old lead pairing? it's interesting to see where different lines are drawn..
From what I remember: Young = Cute and fluffy friendship/romance. Older = Mature and understanding romance, with both of them sticking to the 'Let's fight this together' mindset.
Fl acting so stupid cant watch, what chinnese directors think when they give all the power to FL and ML cant say…
She's definitely not a bad actress if you've seen her other dramas. So it's probably more of a 'director's instructions' issue. Also, I don't think it's due to a lack of acting experience since she's done quite a few dramas before this one.
It depends on whose perspective you're looking at. From FL’s side, she clearly breaks up with 2ML in Ep. 8, but because he’s stubborn and struggling to accept reality, he keeps meddling in her life.
Unfortunately, FL is quite soft in handling him, which makes sense given their long relationship—she wants to end things peacefully. But for viewers, his lingering presence might feel irritating. For 2ML, the breakup only truly sinks in toward the end, even though the leads have been together since midway through the drama.
Guys, im on 5 episodes right now, did kid sang zhi will appear in every episode? bruh i can't -_-
If you're talking about the young Sang Zhi played by the child actress, her presence ends early in the drama. But if you mean Zhao Lusi playing the high school version, her character enters university around Ep. 8-9, so she's 18 by then.
Producers would have to break the bank to get both of them together. JCW has always been an expensive cast, and now KJW too, especially after QoT's success. Not impossible, but definitely not easy to pull off.
The simplest way I can put it without spoilers is: FL leaves her job in the city and ends up in a countryside…
It has a mix of elements—some crime, a bit of past trauma, romance, etc. Personally, I wouldn’t call it a full-on melodrama. Some parts lean that way, but others don’t. In the end, it feels more like a feel-good drama, mainly because every aspect gets a proper, positive closure.
Young = Cute and fluffy friendship/romance.
Older = Mature and understanding romance, with both of them sticking to the 'Let's fight this together' mindset.
Unfortunately, FL is quite soft in handling him, which makes sense given their long relationship—she wants to end things peacefully. But for viewers, his lingering presence might feel irritating. For 2ML, the breakup only truly sinks in toward the end, even though the leads have been together since midway through the drama.