Can someone tell me if this is worth the watch?? I took a break after ep 2, but seeing the reviews now I don't…
I honestly wouldn't. I feel like I might as well finish it now, but it's one of the worst BLs I've ever seen. And not in a "so bad it's good" way - in a very, very boring way. There's no real plot. Did you see Nitiman? Take that, make everything about it worse, and sand down what little plot there was in that, and you get Gen Y S2.
OK, I have to admit it grew on me, and after the first episode it stopped being quite as silly, and the laugh track and sound effects became a bit less intrusive (or I got used to it). Plus the boss is so hot I can't look away.
The first ep is terrible, but if you can get past it, it might be worth it. After Ep 4 they're just starting to head in the BL direction - I have a feeling they'll have good chemistry.
Does anyone find this funny? Why is 99% of Thai humor women and trans characters mercilessly and 24/7 sexually harassing people? It's kind of gross. On the other hand, the two main guys are hot and i'm shallow, so if they'd stop putting the unbearably obnoxious sister in every f#$%in scene I could FF to the good stuff.
All, only 13 people (as of right now) have voted. It's irrelevant and will be buried by the real rating when everyone sees it and votes. Some of the comments below make it sound like the voters are waterboarding Earth & Mix. They'll be fine. This is the same as when series have a 10 rating before they air - it always normalizes.
How can subtitles be that bad? It would make more sense if I just guessed what they were saying.
When Turbo goes to the hospital, Kaonah says "Let's not lurk to make a sound like this. Whoever it is, it is shocking." When Turbo gives him back the marble, Kaonah says "Looks like we need it more than you. Keep it. What document is in front of the camera? It's been."
At this point I'm just scanning through this to ogle Turbo's brother.
They're so bad that my mind wanders and I stop caring. It's rally unwatchable. It's weird because I've run Thai text through Translate and it comes out much more coherent than that. It's like they translated it into Basque, then into Mandarin, then into English, but after deleting every third word.
The show is an action thriller, so I think whatever happened in this episode was absolutely crucial for the plot…
I have no idea what you're talking about. My question is not related to Todd. My queston is why didn't White tell Sean about Black after he knew he was awake? Black said he was going to go back to the gang, which means he'd see Sean, which would 100% be a disaster is Sean didn't know about it. If White had told Sean about this, he wouldn't have been hurt. It makes no sense for him to go an entire day without speaking to Sean.
The show is an action thriller, so I think whatever happened in this episode was absolutely crucial for the plot…
He didn't know how Sean would react, but he could predict with pinpoint accuracy that it would be a total disaster if Black got to Sean first. A day is just too long. A couple of hours I could buy - but he didn't even call or text to say "I have something very important to tell you." The reason being that Sean would then know something was off and there wouldn't be that Black/Sean scene that the writer wanted. But it could have been arranged some other way - Tawi's men are after him, their mother has him forcibly detained, Todd gets in the way - but instead they chose something that makes no sense.
This series has so far for the most part avoided the writing sin of having specific plot points drive everything rather than characters - but this was a really egregious case of that. Nobody that loves someone will do this to them.
The show is an action thriller, so I think whatever happened in this episode was absolutely crucial for the plot…
Why was the Sean-Yok thing crucial to the progression of the story? There needed to be some sort of confrontation, but the medieval trial by combat was silly.
Everyting did not happen in a flash. When Black talked to Sean he arranged to meet him the following night, not in an hour - White had an entire day to contact Sean, but he didn't. That's too big and crucial a plot hole to swallow. If he had gone immediately from his White to see Sean, then I would agree with you, but not an entire day.
The scenes with acting in them were wonderful, but otherwise all the violence bored me. I'm a little let down after last week's ep, which I thought was a masterpiece. The plot needs to be advanced, but the whole Sean-Yok thing was unnecessary.
It also didn't make sense that White didn't do anything to let Sean know what's happening - that was the first time a plot point came off as ridiculous to me. I'm OK with how ridiculous the premise is, because, well, it's the premise - but within that context, things have to make sense. There can't be two Blacks, White has to know Black is going back to the gang and Sean - what did he think would happen? This felt like the standard GMM matufactured drama that always seems to happen around this point in the series.
Anyway, White's scene with his mother and Black's scene with Sean were the obvious high points in this ep. The editor did a great job with the White/Black scene.
The first ep is terrible, but if you can get past it, it might be worth it. After Ep 4 they're just starting to head in the BL direction - I have a feeling they'll have good chemistry.
That was cute - and pretty funny.
When Turbo goes to the hospital, Kaonah says "Let's not lurk to make a sound like this. Whoever it is, it is shocking." When Turbo gives him back the marble, Kaonah says "Looks like we need it more than you. Keep it. What document is in front of the camera? It's been."
At this point I'm just scanning through this to ogle Turbo's brother.
This series has so far for the most part avoided the writing sin of having specific plot points drive everything rather than characters - but this was a really egregious case of that. Nobody that loves someone will do this to them.
Everyting did not happen in a flash. When Black talked to Sean he arranged to meet him the following night, not in an hour - White had an entire day to contact Sean, but he didn't. That's too big and crucial a plot hole to swallow. If he had gone immediately from his White to see Sean, then I would agree with you, but not an entire day.
It also didn't make sense that White didn't do anything to let Sean know what's happening - that was the first time a plot point came off as ridiculous to me. I'm OK with how ridiculous the premise is, because, well, it's the premise - but within that context, things have to make sense. There can't be two Blacks, White has to know Black is going back to the gang and Sean - what did he think would happen? This felt like the standard GMM matufactured drama that always seems to happen around this point in the series.
Anyway, White's scene with his mother and Black's scene with Sean were the obvious high points in this ep. The editor did a great job with the White/Black scene.