Omg, I think that's the best acting I've ever seen from Ohm. That scene gave me chills.
(EDIT: I just realised some people haven't seen the whole episode yet and might not know which scene I'm referring to. I'm talking about something that happens 46 minutes into episode 5.)
Seen Episode 1 and I must say this series has got a lot of potential. It's plot is unique and it's cinematography…
I don't know if GMMTV has said when/if they'll upload the episodes to YouTube, but they typically upload the first episode of a show once 4-6 episodes have aired.
is it Met/Thun or Mes/Than? The eng translation eps use Mes/Than
The official name is Thun. It says it on the back of his jersey. I don't know about Met though. (Oops, I didn't read the reply above mine before I commented.)
The cinematography is really great in this series. Props to the director. So many shows just overuse the basic shot reverse shot, with a few long shots mixed in here and there. But this show has a lot of interesting angles! I can watch it without sound and still find enjoyment because it was shot well. It's nothing outstanding or innovative, but you can tell effort and care was put into this work, and I appreciate it.
Lets take an assumption that Met born before his death on 2540 (1997) and taking now is 2019, so 22 years since…
I know that his physical age and maturity have stayed the same, but that doesn't change the fact that Thun wasn't even alive yet when Met became an adult. I'm not saying this is an issue. I'm just saying that when I think about it for too long, it makes me uncomfortable. It's like with my parents. When my dad was in college, my mom was only a few years into elementary school. I'm not disgusted by their previous relationship (especially since they were both adults when they met), but when I think about the age gap for too long, I feel weird.
What kind of a mental age gap? I mean, Met hasn't actually had more experiences in life than Thun because it's…
I'm not saying Met has matured more than Thun. I'm saying that mentally (rather than physically) Met is older. He was an adult when he first saw Thun, who was only a child. So I'm not saying it's wrong for them to be together. I'm saying that if I think about their ages for too long, the plot makes me uncomfortable. But as I already said, it's something I can look past.
I just started watching this now (I tried to wait a bit so I could watch multiple episodes at once), and now I'm really excited to find out how Met died. Also, I find the mental age gap between the main characters a bit odd, but I can look past it.
EDIT: Apparently, my wording was confusing. I'm not trying to imply that there's some huge age gap between the characters. I was just referring to the fact that Met became an adult before Thun was even alive, and it's pretty weird to think about in that way.
(EDIT: I just realised some people haven't seen the whole episode yet and might not know which scene I'm referring to. I'm talking about something that happens 46 minutes into episode 5.)
EDIT: Apparently, my wording was confusing. I'm not trying to imply that there's some huge age gap between the characters. I was just referring to the fact that Met became an adult before Thun was even alive, and it's pretty weird to think about in that way.