wdym? KSH is the ideal type of millions of women without a doubt gurlllll ðŸ˜â€‹ðŸ˜â€‹
But would he be if he wasn't famous?
He's not bad looking necessarily. But there are a lot of way better looking actors. And Kim Ji Won I feel like is one of the most beautiful active Korean actresses right now.
I've only watched 1 episode of Parasyte but it was surprisingly good.
I expected it to be extremely mediocre like Gyeonseong Creature or Sweet Home (though Sweet Home's first episodes were actually great before it went off the cliff).
The comments are making me want to check it out. The trailers give off that mediocre Gyeongseong Creature/Sweet Home type vibe, but it sounds like maybe it's better than that?
It was solid, but a pretty standard Hollywood-ish monster/action movie, even with its deeper character development. I don't have the urge to watch it again.
I'm not sure I'm a fan of Disney Plus' new cinematography style. Everything looks a bit plastic, like it has an Instagram filter over it. The Impossible Heir has this look too.
Compared to Revenant and Moving from last year, which almost have movie-level cinematography.
Disney is slowly establishing itself as a go-to for high quality K-dramas.
In comparison, I'm not even sure what Netflix's strategy is. Their last good K-drama was probably Squid Game. I'm way more excited for this and Light Shop than anything from Netflix's line-up.
Rest assured, since it's Korean, you can expect exceptional quality. As it's not produced by the US Netflix woke…
Sadly most Netflix content from any country is mediocre. The last good Netflix Kdrama was Squid Game imo, and before that, Kingdom. Not much else has been good.
He's not bad looking necessarily. But there are a lot of way better looking actors. And Kim Ji Won I feel like is one of the most beautiful active Korean actresses right now.
Like it doesn't feel believable they would be together in real life. Felt the same about the female and male lead in My Man is Cupid.
I expected it to be extremely mediocre like Gyeonseong Creature or Sweet Home (though Sweet Home's first episodes were actually great before it went off the cliff).
I'm not sure I'm a fan of Disney Plus' new cinematography style. Everything looks a bit plastic, like it has an Instagram filter over it. The Impossible Heir has this look too.
Compared to Revenant and Moving from last year, which almost have movie-level cinematography.
Netflix shows seem to just be getting worse overall.
In comparison, I'm not even sure what Netflix's strategy is. Their last good K-drama was probably Squid Game. I'm way more excited for this and Light Shop than anything from Netflix's line-up.
As a side note, Korean actors really need to stop doing the fist pose in photoshoots. They're not MMA fighters lol.
But I'm trying to remember the last good Netflix K-drama. I honestly think I'd have to go all the way back to Kingdom/Ashin.
EDIT: Actually, Squid Game.