How many endings does this drama have? And why does it have a bunch of em? Even if I don't always like the endings of some dramas, I still think it's better when they choose one and stick to it. It would've been better if they focused to fill in the blanks instead, e.g. why was he chased by that trio of women at the beginning of the drama and who ordered those assassins at the end?
What's the name of the style? Reminds me of a type of japanese trend with those shoes and flowery patterns. But I just can't relate that people would wear that kind of clothes to work, regardless of the style when off work. Seems like this actress gets all the fads in her dramas :)
OMG the first episode, I felt embarrassed just watching it, the action and the "serious/dramatic" moments felt so over the top and silly - I had to either cringe or look away. Still gonna give it another try with a couple of next episodes.
Anyone else thought that Yoo Jung's decision to leave Seol was rather cowardly and selfish after everything they went through? Time does not always solve everything, what - he went off to see the world to become a better person? Will he leave each time he needs to work on his issues? He could've stayed, I think Seol's influence could've helped him more, rather excluding everyone from his emotions as he has done all this time. But I guess that's kinda the standard drama ending - after unleashing a sh*t storm in people's lives everyone involved are always given a couple of years to cool off.
I kinda liked that this drama showed that no one is purely good nor bad and that everyone make mistakes, have biases and other unresolved issues that they try not to acknowledge, let simmer under the surface or just not realize about themselves. That being said, some parts felt a bit unrealistic and the last five minutes of the final episode was kinda meh, but still one of the best dramas I've watched in a long time.
Feels like this drama is from like early 00's… there is a certain timeless style to J-dramas that still prevails in many new productions but this was really on the bad side of it all. I guess, I'm not gonna watch this after all.
5.5 and that only out of charity. I too do not understand why No Min Woo continues to take these oddball rolls.…
I found this drama hard to watch as well, as much as I was excited to see No Min Woo in it I just couldn't get it if his character was supposed to have some type of mental issue or if we were to pretend that he is just that innocent? I found it cute at first but it got harder to watch with the increasing "adult" scenes… It just felt like they were torturing a small animal. It would've been better if the premise from the start was that he's got some mental issues (e.g. Joo Won's character in Good Doctor), then there would've been some more realistic backdrop to the character's behavior… but I only watched up to ep. 4, maybe there's an explanation later on for his childish innocence, sadly I wouldn't get to know that since I have already dropped this drama twice and I don't think I'm going to try watching it again.
Loved this! Rather refreshing that they had actually scary ghosts/sprits and didn't make a comical relief out of that since the whole mystery concerning the death of our lead ghost was rather sinister which added something new to the adorable romance. I guess that everything can't be just rainbows and sunshine.
Just so stifle my curiosity, anyone hating on Cheese in the trap yet? And why? x) Personally, I love it but would be fun to read some other opinions other than praising.
Haha, I could be one those haters that you mention ;) no, but seriously, if I dislike one drama then I don't usually see why I should waste my time commenting on it - so no hateful lurking here at all, promise.
But to share my opinion with the crowds: I really liked the beginnings and premises of 'you who came from the stars' as well as 'the master's sun' but halfway through both of these dramas started to feel kinda "meh" to me as the leads weren't as relatable anymore - I just couldn't see any realistic grounds in their actions. I think that I fast forwarded the last two episodes of 'you who came from the stars' just to actually see the end of his mysterious existence and never actually finished 'the master's sun' (come on, is that how two grown up people behave?). And I found myself thinking the same for the korean version of 'boys over flowers' and 'she was pretty' amongst others, I just couldn't make myself finish them. I mean there are a lot of dramas I've watched for the silliness of it (e.g. hana kimi or you're beautiful) so it's not that, but when an actually original premise turns out to be something else entirely halfway through and with a couple loose ends to boot, well, then imma probably drop it. For me it's more like setting a tone for a drama (whatever that might be) and then actually fulfilling it. It's kinda odd that the worry over drama writers' quality/competence/insightfulness (this can be rather subjective too I guess) can keep me on my toes as much as a good storyline. But the important part is that the beauty is in the eye of the beholder, everyone sees different values in many different things.
But I really did love 'reply 1997', it was the thing you disliked that actually charmed me - their daily lives made me feel rather nostalgic.
But to share my opinion with the crowds: I really liked the beginnings and premises of 'you who came from the stars' as well as 'the master's sun' but halfway through both of these dramas started to feel kinda "meh" to me as the leads weren't as relatable anymore - I just couldn't see any realistic grounds in their actions. I think that I fast forwarded the last two episodes of 'you who came from the stars' just to actually see the end of his mysterious existence and never actually finished 'the master's sun' (come on, is that how two grown up people behave?). And I found myself thinking the same for the korean version of 'boys over flowers' and 'she was pretty' amongst others, I just couldn't make myself finish them. I mean there are a lot of dramas I've watched for the silliness of it (e.g. hana kimi or you're beautiful) so it's not that, but when an actually original premise turns out to be something else entirely halfway through and with a couple loose ends to boot, well, then imma probably drop it. For me it's more like setting a tone for a drama (whatever that might be) and then actually fulfilling it. It's kinda odd that the worry over drama writers' quality/competence/insightfulness (this can be rather subjective too I guess) can keep me on my toes as much as a good storyline. But the important part is that the beauty is in the eye of the beholder, everyone sees different values in many different things.
But I really did love 'reply 1997', it was the thing you disliked that actually charmed me - their daily lives made me feel rather nostalgic.