watched ep1, the main conflict seems interesting, but the cinematography is lacking and at the end where peasants are just standing calmly with their torches and then march through a wooden village in unison and without setting anything on fire by accident, like some religious procession, is unbelievable. Now, I've never seen a peasant uprising irl, but you'd think they'd be more wild and unruly? They're disciplined like a trained army there.
Do judges in SK investigate cases themselves like detectives?
no, it's just the mc and the show being stupid
That being said, I've seen this shit in other shows too, from europe and america. some movie makers just don't care about realism, or they don't even know
sob story, a bit boring at time, quite melodramatic, overall good tho
R
OnReview unavailable•Jul 18, 2022
ReviewReview unavailable
It's not that he can't get any character development because he is autistic. It's more like, the writers didn't want or couldn't give him any.
For example, the scene where he got bullied in the bathroom could have been a great moment to have him think about it and realize that not all people care about the rules and laws, or they follow some other rules from himself. But he didn't.
First, the kill was easiest for him due to victim being his daughter. Second, there was a shot where they were sitting in a bar, and everyone was in light, but he alone was slightly behind them, in darkness. This is like director giving us strong and indirect clue that this guy is evil. Later, that shot was repeated in flashback.
Basically, if you pay attention to direction and cinematography you can foresee things happening in movies. For another example, in mystery shows there is something called "red herring". Basically, if a show overly focuses on a potential suspect, trying hard to make you think he is the killer, chances are thicc it's a bait. I knew Dongsik wasn't the killer because of that.
That being said, I've seen this shit in other shows too, from europe and america. some movie makers just don't care about realism, or they don't even know
For example, the scene where he got bullied in the bathroom could have been a great moment to have him think about it and realize that not all people care about the rules and laws, or they follow some other rules from himself. But he didn't.
First, the kill was easiest for him due to victim being his daughter. Second, there was a shot where they were sitting in a bar, and everyone was in light, but he alone was slightly behind them, in darkness. This is like director giving us strong and indirect clue that this guy is evil. Later, that shot was repeated in flashback.
Basically, if you pay attention to direction and cinematography you can foresee things happening in movies. For another example, in mystery shows there is something called "red herring". Basically, if a show overly focuses on a potential suspect, trying hard to make you think he is the killer, chances are thicc it's a bait. I knew Dongsik wasn't the killer because of that.