What a ridiculous way of criticising a fiction work ... The drama clearly has historical setting and watching…
It is always interesting to get an assessment of one's own opinion from others. So, dear ShayanaVashisht, thank you for that.
Perhaps your tone takes some getting used to, but for us the motto is: Tough on the matter, friendly in tone! As you probably have a lot of stress at home because of your aggressiveness, I would like to recommend this method to you. What can I say about the content of your comments? Something like this: costumes from ancient times do not always mean a historical background, but are often just stage sets, facades and backdrops. And ancient states were orderly, had laws, they were usually not anarchy. Your “historical background” is as historical as the movie “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes”, which is set in our time.
I will spare you any further references, they are certainly not welcome. If you like watching brutal and cruel movies, that's up to you. A famous king once said: Let every man be happy in his own way. On that note, dear ShayanaVashisht, take care of yourself. martinique
Here are some questions that will remain unanswered, but that I would have liked to see answered in the drama itself, which wouldn't have left the story so unfinished. Does anyone have any idea how things would have gone? > What happened to lawyer Park? He was particularly important to EunKi. Was she in a relationship with him? (She named the clarification of her father's death and the person of Lawyer Park as the most important thing in her life, not MaRoo) > Did she learn that Attorney Park knew everything she had been desperately searching for for a long time? The murder of her mother by Park's own father, the murder of EunKi's father by lawyer Ahn Min and Jae Hee. He was aware of both, or even witnessed the crime. Did she break off the relationship with Park at some point, did she forgive him, or what happened? > MaRoo fell unconscious, collapsed on the street, but was found. He underwent a dangerous operation which resulted in . He recovered but lost his memory. Later he was able to study the US. Did FL know that he was going to US? > How did FL lose contact with him, did she stop coming to the hospital because she didn't want any more contact? (Maybe because of Park?) > What happened to the management. Did she still work there? Why did she stop working there?
> Who was in the coastal town first. FL or ML, after returning from the US? Was their encounter a coincidence, or did she move there specifically because she knew where he was? What was their first encounter like, because she must have recognized him. > He gave her wedding rings at the end of the story, from when they were getting married. Did EunKi know the rings, or why was she hardly surprised when a man she hardly knew offered them to her? In the end, I don't understand why they got together after all, even though it's beautiful and romantic. After all, didn't she hate him before they met again after 7 years?
You are certainly a nice person! But I think in your head the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus say good night to each…
There is a saying that goes something like this: it swims like a duck, it quacks like a duck, it looks like a duck: then it will most likely be a duck. That's what I think about that nasty little passage in the series that completely ruined it for me. FL and Kamiyama had sex, no doubt about it. He practically "kidnaps" her, prevents her from being found. That's premeditation. He undresses her (she doesn't have a dress on in bed, you can only see thin straps) In the morning he comes into the room showered and half naked, as it goes after a one night stand. In his brazen appearance later, he brags about her sexual behavior and, most importantly, he knows intimate parts of her body, the birthmark on a particularly intimate spot. There are other clues, but, dear Heroine what the heck! It's not our job to find out the intentions of incompetent authors. We are debating here, that much the authors have managed to do, after all. I take back Easter Bunny and Santa Claus, Penthesilea and Tomoe Gozen are certainly more to your liking.
From episode 7 on, the rape of FL by the "trustworthy man" destroys the previously pleasant fluffy romantic comedy. After this outrage, the author makes every effort to exonerate the rapist. All not so bad, eh girls? A reckoning with the pig probably doesn't fit into the script. The victims and the aggrieved only talk about it briefly, only the scumbag still has some fun telling spicy details of his mean deed. All romance afterwards, such as tenderness between ML and FL is implausible, the rapist even becomes the closest confidant of both. Simply disgusting, this filth. In the forum one reads, probably also from many female commentators, it is a fluffy nice love comedy. This is true only up to episode 7. Do rapes of unconscious girls belong to light, fluffy RomComs? And finally: Let's hope that the FL doesn't occasionally end up drunk again in the bed of a scumbag who, as here, had already made it clear that he would approach her no matter what.
The FL is a pure Mary Sue. She can do everything, she checks everything, the men are crazy about her. Alas, she is stupid, her EQ is tiny and only her masochism, as Señora Ramírez wrote, is huge. Funny. But: where did the bike for the joyride with grandma come from?
Why? Xing Zhaolin is a god. He is perfect . I find your review pretty unfair.
Dear Yukjei Chong, you are right Xing Zhao Lin is excellent. And a handsome man at that. The criticism is not against him, his acting was good, but against the writers who made the story so unbelievable. Among other things, I wish they hadn't humiliated your idol like that. He didn't deserve that. Sorry, don't be angry.
Yeah... this is another Victoria drama I had to drop. I love f(x) Victoria as a K-pop star but as an actress...…
@Yellowbird: that's exactly what I believe. It is dangerous to our freedom everywhere free people live. They also like to take victim status, as it was said: words even kill.... Thanks for your writing, take care!
Although I haven't officially dropped this drama yet, I cannot pull myself to finish it. I think I am on episode…
Dear Gina nine eleven, Thank you for your nice nice comment. I agree with you, as far as I can tell. I didn't like the ML either. Many greetings. wherever you are (NY?). martinique
Perhaps your tone takes some getting used to, but for us the motto is: Tough on the matter, friendly in tone! As you probably have a lot of stress at home because of your aggressiveness, I would like to recommend this method to you.
What can I say about the content of your comments? Something like this: costumes from ancient times do not always mean a historical background, but are often just stage sets, facades and backdrops. And ancient states were orderly, had laws, they were usually not anarchy. Your “historical background” is as historical as the movie “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes”, which is set in our time.
I will spare you any further references, they are certainly not welcome. If you like watching brutal and cruel movies, that's up to you. A famous king once said: Let every man be happy in his own way.
On that note, dear ShayanaVashisht, take care of yourself.
martinique
Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
> What happened to lawyer Park? He was particularly important to EunKi. Was she in a relationship with him? (She named the clarification of her father's death and the person of Lawyer Park as the most important thing in her life, not MaRoo)
> Did she learn that Attorney Park knew everything she had been desperately searching for for a long time? The murder of her mother by Park's own father, the murder of EunKi's father by lawyer Ahn Min and Jae Hee. He was aware of both, or even witnessed the crime. Did she break off the relationship with Park at some point, did she forgive him, or what happened?
> MaRoo fell unconscious, collapsed on the street, but was found. He underwent a dangerous operation which resulted in . He recovered but lost his memory. Later he was able to study the US. Did FL know that he was going to US?
> How did FL lose contact with him, did she stop coming to the hospital because she didn't want any more contact? (Maybe because of Park?)
> What happened to the management. Did she still work there? Why did she stop working there?
> Who was in the coastal town first. FL or ML, after returning from the US? Was their encounter a coincidence, or did she move there specifically because she knew where he was? What was their first encounter like, because she must have recognized him.
> He gave her wedding rings at the end of the story, from when they were getting married. Did EunKi know the rings, or why was she hardly surprised when a man she hardly knew offered them to her?
In the end, I don't understand why they got together after all, even though it's beautiful and romantic. After all, didn't she hate him before they met again after 7 years?
FL and Kamiyama had sex, no doubt about it. He practically "kidnaps" her, prevents her from being found. That's premeditation. He undresses her (she doesn't have a dress on in bed, you can only see thin straps) In the morning he comes into the room showered and half naked, as it goes after a one night stand. In his brazen appearance later, he brags about her sexual behavior and, most importantly, he knows intimate parts of her body, the birthmark on a particularly intimate spot. There are other clues, but, dear Heroine what the heck! It's not our job to find out the intentions of incompetent authors.
We are debating here, that much the authors have managed to do, after all. I take back Easter Bunny and Santa Claus, Penthesilea and Tomoe Gozen are certainly more to your liking.
After this outrage, the author makes every effort to exonerate the
rapist. All not so bad, eh girls?
A reckoning with the pig probably doesn't fit into the script.
The victims and the aggrieved only talk about it briefly, only the scumbag still has some fun telling spicy details of his mean deed.
All romance afterwards, such as tenderness between ML and FL is implausible, the rapist even becomes the closest confidant of both. Simply disgusting, this filth.
In the forum one reads, probably also from many female commentators, it is a fluffy nice love comedy. This is true only up to episode 7.
Do rapes of unconscious girls belong to light, fluffy RomComs?
And finally: Let's hope that the FL doesn't occasionally end up drunk again in the bed of a scumbag who, as here, had already made it clear that he would approach her no matter what.
thanks for your comment. Always pay attention to your gut feeling! It can't be that wrong!
Greetings wherever you are!
Thank you for your nice nice comment. I agree with you, as far as I can tell. I didn't like the ML either. Many greetings. wherever you are (NY?).
martinique