When we talk about love triangles, we usually picture rivalry, jealousy, or even betrayal between two friends. That’s the cliché. But A Hundred Memories dares to flip the formula. Ko Yeong Rye is in love with Jae Pil, but Jae Pil is drawn to Seo Jong Hee. The twist? Yeong Rye and Jong Hee aren’t rivals—they’re best friends. That choice changes everything.
Isn't this repeated and repeated again again in soulmate series of movies and dramas, Kim da mi's last movie and many other sequal of same story
R
OnReview unavailable•Sep 30, 2025
ReviewReview unavailable
This review is full of contradictions and selective blindness. The writer insists this drama has “nothing in common” with Breaking Bad, yet openly admits the core setup is exactly the same: family in crisis, hidden illness, financial ruin, and drug money as the way out. That’s not “different,” that’s just a repackaged copy.
Worse, the reviewer seems to ignore how disturbing some of the story choices actually are. The daughter’s own art teacher turns out to be the drug dealer? That’s not “exciting,” that’s horrifying. Did it never cross the reviewer’s mind that if this teacher is selling meth at clubs, he could just as easily supply it to his own students—including her daughter? And if he’s already threatening to kill the female lead, why wouldn’t her child be at risk too?
Then there’s the strange lack of respect for the husband. Just because he has cancer, does that mean his wife can toss her marriage aside and team up with a criminal? He isn’t dead yet—why does the review almost cheer for her “chemistry” with the drug dealer as if she was just waiting for her husband to die and be replaced? Illness doesn’t erase a person’s rights, dignity, or their place in the family.
The reviewer also gushes about “nice tempo” and “not a boring second,” but honestly, what’s so interesting when the outcome is painfully predictable? Everyone can already see how it ends: the husband dies miserably, the daughter accepts the drug dealer as her “new dad,” and somehow the police will conveniently ignore everything—because in this twisted story, selling drugs apparently isn’t treated as a crime, only buying is.
In short: the review reads less like fair criticism and more like blind fangirling. It overlooks disturbing moral flaws, glorifies reckless criminal behavior, and refuses to acknowledge that the drama is just a recycled Breaking Bad knockoff with a shinier cast.
South Korea is only country where criminals have support from Law (defamation law protect criminals more it has been used to Silance anyone against them) And has public that is more interested in forgive and defending criminals then calling them out Particular if it's a woman, Weird pseudo Faminist society
It's total garbage. Angels look more like villains I started rooting for PHS to get his girl back from fat ass villain Ma Dong Seak and his old pervert friend
Thanks for the honest review 🙌 It saved me from wasting time on this spineless ML drama. Early warnings like yours are super helpful. And don’t mind those self-righteous folks crying about “you can’t review if you dropped it” — your experience matters just as much. They act like higher ratings will put food on their table 😂.
how can you leave a review for a show you didnt even finish….. bad etiquette
Anyone who watched and dropped a show has every right to leave a review. That’s part of their experience, and it can be just as useful for others to know why someone didn’t finish. Reviews aren’t only for people who stuck it out until the end. You don’t get to decide what others can or can’t do—so maybe keep your “etiquette” to yourself.
Just three years? That's a significant penalty. He did the crime, he did his time. Let it go.
Oh, so you’re a rape apologist now? Three years banned from the industry is not “doing time” — that’s just a career break, not jail. And who exactly made you the authority to decide what’s “enough” for a sexual crime? The trauma can haunt victims for decades, but you think 3 years off work is fine? Pathetic.
age doesn't matter,
Isn't this repeated and repeated again again in soulmate series of movies and dramas,
Kim da mi's last movie and many other sequal of same story
Worse, the reviewer seems to ignore how disturbing some of the story choices actually are. The daughter’s own art teacher turns out to be the drug dealer? That’s not “exciting,” that’s horrifying. Did it never cross the reviewer’s mind that if this teacher is selling meth at clubs, he could just as easily supply it to his own students—including her daughter? And if he’s already threatening to kill the female lead, why wouldn’t her child be at risk too?
Then there’s the strange lack of respect for the husband. Just because he has cancer, does that mean his wife can toss her marriage aside and team up with a criminal? He isn’t dead yet—why does the review almost cheer for her “chemistry” with the drug dealer as if she was just waiting for her husband to die and be replaced? Illness doesn’t erase a person’s rights, dignity, or their place in the family.
The reviewer also gushes about “nice tempo” and “not a boring second,” but honestly, what’s so interesting when the outcome is painfully predictable? Everyone can already see how it ends: the husband dies miserably, the daughter accepts the drug dealer as her “new dad,” and somehow the police will conveniently ignore everything—because in this twisted story, selling drugs apparently isn’t treated as a crime, only buying is.
In short: the review reads less like fair criticism and more like blind fangirling. It overlooks disturbing moral flaws, glorifies reckless criminal behavior, and refuses to acknowledge that the drama is just a recycled Breaking Bad knockoff with a shinier cast.
original drama that started this love triangle concept of two girl besties falling for same guy
And has public that is more interested in forgive and defending criminals then calling them out
Particular if it's a woman,
Weird pseudo Faminist society
Ma dong seok...
I started rooting for PHS to get his girl back from fat ass villain Ma Dong Seak and his old pervert friend
Unworthy guy instead of waiting for getting kicked out.
kim dami recently work in the korean movie version of soulmate (chinese OG)