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Love Me korean drama review
Completed
Love Me
1 people found this review helpful
by Hanan Anf
10 days ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 10
Story 10.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 8.5

A Story About Love, Loss, Loneliness… and Healing

A Story About Love, Loss, Loneliness… and Healing
Some dramas entertain you. Some make you cry. But Love Me does something more — it heals while it hurts.
From the first episode, I was emotional. I cried, I smiled, and I felt deeply connected to every character. This isn’t a loud drama. It’s soft, slow, and incredibly human. Every character is broken in some way. But through connection, forgiveness, and love, they begin to mend.
Why Love Me Feels So Special....This drama doesn’t shout. It doesn’t rely on shocking twists. It moves gently… and that’s why it hits so deep. It treats emotions with respect. It shows that love is not always exciting; sometimes it’s quiet, patient, and full of care. And in the middle of all the sorrow, there is something warm:
Hope. Healing. Human connection.
This wasn’t just a drama I watched. It was a story I felt and one that left my heart a little softer.

A Father Learning Love After Loss
The father’s storyline is one of the most powerful parts of the drama.
After losing his wife, he lives with silent grief and quiet loneliness. When he opens his heart to someone new, it feels warm and hopeful… but life is not always kind. She develops Alzheimer’s, and we watch him love, care, and stay even as memories begin to disappear. It’s heartbreaking, but also beautiful. It shows a love that doesn’t leave when things get hard.
This storyline is about pain but also about healing through devotion.

The Daughter, Strong Outside, Lonely Inside
She looks confident, successful, and independent. But inside, she is carrying emotional wounds, guilt, and fear of getting close to someone. Her love story is not dramatic; it’s about learning to trust, to open her heart, and to stop running from her own loneliness. Her journey reminds us: Healing sometimes begins when we finally allow ourselves to be loved.

The Son — Heartbreak to a Gentle Love
After being betrayed by his girlfriend, the son feels lost and hurt. But slowly, his longtime friend, the one who was always there, becomes something more. Their love grows quietly and naturally. No chaos. No drama. Just comfort, understanding, and emotional safety. It’s the kind of relationship that feels like home.

The young actor Moon Woo Jin was absolutely incredible.
Especially in the last episode, the way he cried didn’t feel like acting at all. It felt real, raw, and heartbreaking. He carried so much emotion in such a natural way that you forget you’re watching a drama.

Honestly, every character in this show felt real. No one felt exaggerated or fake. They felt like people you might know in real life , truggling, loving, hurting, healing.

• Love after losing someone
• Loving someone who is slowly changing
• Family wounds
• Loneliness at every stage of life
• Emotional struggles
• And most importantly… healing
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