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Law and the City korean drama review
Completed
Law and the City
2 people found this review helpful
by introverted kdrama lover
Aug 11, 2025
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

Cases Won, Lives Rewritten.

I didn’t expect Law and the City to grab me the way it did. On paper, it’s just another legal drama, but once you start, you realize it’s as much about people as it is about the law. At the start of it is the clash between Ahn Ju-Hyeong, the cool-headed lawyer who plays by logic, and Kang Hee-Ji, whose heart always leads the way. It was like watching two sides of the same coin...both right, both wrong, and both painfully human.
The cases aren’t filler…they dig into real issues like tenant rights, workplace ethics, and the messy moral gray zones we see in everyday life. And it’s not just the leads who shine. Bae Mun-Jeong completely stole my heart. She’s quietly battling her own issues about applying for maternity leave in a high-pressure law firm, yet she still manages to deliver some of the show’s most satisfying courtroom wins. Honestly, I cheered every time she proved you can be both vulnerable and unshakably strong.
One of my favorite touches? The mealtime scenes. Sounds simple, but those lunches and dinners gave us some of the warmest, funniest, and most honest moments between the characters. It’s where walls came down and real connections showed especially how they both silently comforted Ha Sang Gi when that misunderstanding happened to him.
And about that ending…I loved it. Every character found the courage to go after what they truly wanted, even if it meant quitting a stable job or stepping away from a familiar path. It felt like a quiet but powerful statement: comfort shouldn’t come at the cost of your own happiness. It left me with a smile and a sense of closure.
If you want a drama that’s intelligent without being cold, heartfelt without being sappy, and full of characters you’ll actually care about, Law and the City is worth the watch. It reminded me that law isn’t just about rules—it’s about the lives those rules touch.
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