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Dare You to Death thai drama review
Completed
Dare You to Death
0 people found this review helpful
by eualexy
10 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 6.5
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 5.0
This review may contain spoilers

The Viewer Was the Real Victim

Puifai (Pahn Pathitta) dies suddenly at a party with her boyfriend Champ (Chimon Wachirawit) and her friends Cher (June Wanwimol), Jay (Ohm Thipakorn), Time (Prom Teeprakon), Tonka (Ashi Peerakan), Tar (Aungpao Ochiris), and Bell (Earn Preeyapat). Things start to get complicated when everyone else begins to be tragically murdered; the new inspector, Kamin (Dunk Natachai), and Captain Jade (Joong Archen) are put in charge of the case.
First of all, what the hell was that I just watched?
The beginning was good, really good—I was hooked, wanting to know what would happen, who would die, and who the killer was. AT WHAT POINT DID THIS GET LOST?
The focus isn’t on the romance—clearly not—but the romance actually unfolded quite well; their dynamic isn’t common, and I think it worked in this series.
But at some point in the narrative leading up to the end, it seems like they completely let go of the mystery they’d been building up. The mystery they wanted DOESN’T EXIST.
They see it and say, “The suspect wears glasses.” THERE’S ONLY ONE CHARACTER WHO WEARS GLASSES IN THE SERIES
Then they spend episodes building up to show the woman before the final episode—by that point, everyone knew Puifai was alive. The last episode was a chore to watch; they wrapped up the series in a 20-minute episode, and we spent another 20 minutes watching them being happy on the beach, with the romance and character development. Everyone spends the whole series dying, only to get to the end and have everyone kill themselves. It was so clearly careless and rushed that it really brought down the overall opinion. Not even the actors clearly liked the ending, because it didn’t have the care that the rest of the series had.
Jade and Kamin worked out; I’m not the biggest fan of JoongDunk, but I’ll admit they did well within the dynamic of the bottom being a tough guy and the top being this softie. I think both of their performances are weak, especially Joong’s; I don’t feel the authenticity in the way he acts and speaks because sometimes he’s face-to-face with someone and you can clearly see he’s staring into space. Dunk has been going through a major evolution since *Star In My Mind*, but I still believe he has a lot to improve on. I think the character’s style suited him well, and the script supported that.
The way their relationship was built was simple—a basic setup that worked—and I think it fit the dynamic; it felt as natural as possible given that they were solving a crime.
You can see how the director (Dome Jade) tried to balance suspense and mystery 50/50, and I believe that’s what led to this final result—those who want everything at the end end up with nothing. He spent most of the series focusing on the crime and the suspense, and when he tried to make up for it with the romance, this is what happened.
I really think the series could have been much better. As someone who truly enjoys investigation and murder mysteries, you can see that this one was poorly done. Anyone who figures things out early on doesn’t do so because they’re super observant—it’s just because the production was sloppy and handed the answer to you on a silver platter. The viewer was treated like an idiot, and that was basically it.

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