I find it hard to believe Han Yu Ri's character passed the law exam, went to law school, and has no separate work/life?…
She is dumbed down. Very cheap and repetitive way to portray moral dilemmas and different perspectives. The pattern of her not understanding a client and for Eun Gyeong to immediately understand and then have to explain to her, is really starting to frustrate me at episode 7 already.
“They’re literally family” lol they are literally NOT family. NONE of the three are related by marriage…
I'm not "confused", I have my own opinions. And I already have dropped it, that was my original comment. Why are you so pressed by a differing opinion? Jeez
“They’re literally family” lol they are literally NOT family. NONE of the three are related by marriage…
I stopped watching Go Ahead because of the romance :)
And I do know they're not related by blood, marriage or adoption, but they've lived like siblings. I think turning a familial relationship romantic is uncomfortable.
They were clearly going for Kim Hye Joons character as a "strong independent woman who doesn't need rescuing"…
I didn’t think that was what they were going for. And I personally think Ji Bin’s death fit the character well. Just as pathetic and unimportant as he was supposed to be.
I started this after My Mister because someone mentioned this was similar. Not even close. This is too slow and…
I don’t think it worships alcholism. It’s a slice of life drama. It shows how real life is in South Korea - and believe you me, South Korea as a collective drinks way too often. It’s reality, nobody said it was a good reality.
I didn’t think about drinking a single time because every time they drink it’s associated with negative feeings.
It again also is slow and stagnant because that’s how life is most of the time, especially in South Korea and Japan where so much pressure is put on work work work and depression rates are sky high.
Why did they kill off a main character already in episode 3? It's fine to kill off characters, but if it's a main character it usually happens toward the end and has an actual purpose and impact. His death did nothing. It's just like if any other random supporting character died. Dojin was my favorite character but I didn't feel shit all throughout the autopsy and funeral and so on, because he dies for absolutely no reason.
I just don't understand why they did this.
Also, how is he still listed as a main character for this season if he's dead by episode 3 of 12? This is the type of thing series do when an actor wants out. Kill them quickly, often resulting in an underwhelming death and a list of questions, and move on as if nothing happened in an episode or two. Was that the case here?
And I do know they're not related by blood, marriage or adoption, but they've lived like siblings. I think turning a familial relationship romantic is uncomfortable.
I didn’t think about drinking a single time because every time they drink it’s associated with negative feeings.
It again also is slow and stagnant because that’s how life is most of the time, especially in South Korea and Japan where so much pressure is put on work work work and depression rates are sky high.
I just don't understand why they did this.
Also, how is he still listed as a main character for this season if he's dead by episode 3 of 12? This is the type of thing series do when an actor wants out. Kill them quickly, often resulting in an underwhelming death and a list of questions, and move on as if nothing happened in an episode or two. Was that the case here?