First episode, Netflix cuts out: entirely removed FL and her friend singing (45 seconds) at 21:15; replaced a few seconds of music when FL is on a rooftop at 1:01:30; replaced car stereo music when Oh Yang Chon is driving his car right after the previous scene; entirely removed a few moments of Oh Yang Chon singing into his phone at 1:04:40.
The UXN 60-fps UHDTV broadcast does not have these cuts and episode 1 seems to be complete there. (However, UXN's What's Wrong With Secretary Kim had a scene in one episode towards the end shortened, so they're not always cut-free.)
The first episode really showed some potential and really was the best, or even only good episode, but then for 70-80% of the show's runtime absolutely nothing happens: a rom-com with no 'rom' and no 'com'.
A lot of "this might work in a webcomic..." scenes. By the end, the actual storyline is merely very spottily explained/justified.
I didn't understand why the FL didn't have a flat of her own to go to and instead slept at the clinic?? This turned…
Because she lived in the middle of nowhere before, and then moved to an expensive area of Seoul where you can't just summon a cheap apartment out of nowhere.
My Secret Romance is 92% identical to this. I can't quite decide if this original is better or not.
Sung Hoon expresses about 700% more passion in MSR.
The last four or even five episodes of Noble, My Love are really bad and the subplots in them are totally unnecessary. Not as absurd as the writing at the end of MSR though.
I could have given this a higher rating, the production quality was a little lacking in sound engineering and…
I think the 13 eps version is the same except that the cliffhangers are in different spots – however, maybe more importantly Viki has the 'epilogue' sequences after the episodes, and those are rather painfully missing on Netflix.
Highlight: the manhwa slides before each episode starts, and a way-above-average amount of kissing (though more by SH than SJE). Downsides: dumb character actions, poor production, and the overall plot goes into places that are neither convincing nor entertaining (and is resolved in an offensively illogical fashion).
The 14 episode Netflix version is missing the very much important post-episode 'epilogues'. Besides that the one after Ep5 is really bad, they add tons (!) of extra minutes of content. Viki has them though!
The cliffhanger cuts of the episodes are weird in the 14-episodes version, and often you have to skip to minute 4-5 to get past previous repeats. This only changes with the last episodes, when the repeat sequence actually includes new content.
I don't know if Netflix removed anything else (some logos are blurred out, but the songs and karaoke seem intact).
Did they pay any royalties to https://kisskh.at/15171-noble-my-love as the original? From actors and their characters to plot arcs and scenes, so much of MSR is lifted from NML...
I'm curious if anyone else thought this feels like a Chinese clone of Reply, with the focus on the characters'…
- Swimming scoreboard shots are re-used all the time. It's like they have two shots for four races or something? - The Counter-Strike game the males play in the cyber cafe is not convincing. Perhaps the most glaring issue is that two of them are on opposite teams but encourage each other as if they were on the same one. - When they're in the cinema, the movie playing has a MOUSE CURSOR in it?! - The CGI for the snow scene is unnecessarily bad. - Bite wound (WB) disappears moments later. - Football pitch injury to the torso leads to a nose bleed. - In ep21, WB is in his car, and in one cut he stops and in the next he's still driving, and then is stopped again.
I'm curious if anyone else thought this feels like a Chinese clone of Reply, with the focus on the characters' extended families removed, and only about half the nostalgia? Seems to steal some of the style and some scenes or character constellations. Often episodes have not much happen in terms of overall plot development, in the same way. Someone else further down wrote it reminded them of filler episode filled anime series like One Piece (or Dragon Ball).
I was surprised to see so many production mistakes. Will put some that were really obvious in a spoiler comment.
The whole thing is a mix of exactly copied scenes and changes that aren't really for the better. Important scenes are often rushed or cut together, whereas random fluff survives barely changed. A lot of scenes probably make little sense without the added context from having watched the CN ALSB. The ML stops being cold and distant just a few minutes in, and it feels they didn't understand the character. Some actors are visibly way too old (the FL is the most glaring violator). Jung Jin Hwan's character is missing a lot of crucial pieces for his arc, and of course time skips don't help.
The singing scenes are better / more and it's all in all not ultra drawn out like the Chinese original.
Boring, corny and ridiculous story from start to end. I gave it a 5 and that's being generous!
I'm curious if you enjoy any of the Reply shows (or Prison Playbook). To me this one felt like a lot of stuff was 'taken without permission' from Reply.
Call it nitpicking but god does it bother me seeing post-2015 elements like new models of cars in supposed 2007-2009…
At least they didn't keep re-using the same swimming competition scores for different events like the C show does. That was so bad. (The C one has enough production mistakes to write a proper article about.)
( 1-4 SPOILERS) i'm on ep 4 right now i don't understand why the male lead was so mean to the FL than changed/gets…
In the C-drama, both get very jealous/hurt when the other interacts with their respective rival. For the FL, it's maybe more expressed through sadness and crying (the C one has a ton of baby wailing). Whereas the ML gets very angry. The K-drama is the cut down cliff notes version, so many plot points don't go into that much detail.
The UXN 60-fps UHDTV broadcast does not have these cuts and episode 1 seems to be complete there. (However, UXN's What's Wrong With Secretary Kim had a scene in one episode towards the end shortened, so they're not always cut-free.)
A lot of "this might work in a webcomic..." scenes.
By the end, the actual storyline is merely very spottily explained/justified.
Trigger warning: substantial triangling.
USA earlier: 2023-05-11
Korea yet earlier: 2023-05-08
Anything missing / cut on the Netflix version?
Sung Hoon expresses about 700% more passion in MSR.
The last four or even five episodes of Noble, My Love are really bad and the subplots in them are totally unnecessary. Not as absurd as the writing at the end of MSR though.
Downsides: dumb character actions, poor production, and the overall plot goes into places that are neither convincing nor entertaining (and is resolved in an offensively illogical fashion).
The 14 episode Netflix version is missing the very much important post-episode 'epilogues'. Besides that the one after Ep5 is really bad, they add tons (!) of extra minutes of content. Viki has them though!
The cliffhanger cuts of the episodes are weird in the 14-episodes version, and often you have to skip to minute 4-5 to get past previous repeats. This only changes with the last episodes, when the repeat sequence actually includes new content.
I don't know if Netflix removed anything else (some logos are blurred out, but the songs and karaoke seem intact).
Did they pay any royalties to https://kisskh.at/15171-noble-my-love as the original? From actors and their characters to plot arcs and scenes, so much of MSR is lifted from NML...
- The Counter-Strike game the males play in the cyber cafe is not convincing. Perhaps the most glaring issue is that two of them are on opposite teams but encourage each other as if they were on the same one.
- When they're in the cinema, the movie playing has a MOUSE CURSOR in it?!
- The CGI for the snow scene is unnecessarily bad.
- Bite wound (WB) disappears moments later.
- Football pitch injury to the torso leads to a nose bleed.
- In ep21, WB is in his car, and in one cut he stops and in the next he's still driving, and then is stopped again.
I was surprised to see so many production mistakes. Will put some that were really obvious in a spoiler comment.
The singing scenes are better / more and it's all in all not ultra drawn out like the Chinese original.
To me this one felt like a lot of stuff was 'taken without permission' from Reply.
(The C one has enough production mistakes to write a proper article about.)
The K-drama is the cut down cliff notes version, so many plot points don't go into that much detail.