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Buried Hearts korean drama review
Completed
Buried Hearts
25 people found this review helpful
by Purple Wisteria
Apr 9, 2025
16 of 16 episodes seen
Completed 8
Overall 6.5
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

All flash, no fire. Meh.

Revenge thriller drama is one of those genres that is hard to screw up but also, at the same time, hard to make good. It has been there since the start, and if you’ve been watching K-dramas long enough, you have probably seen all there is to it. There are only so many tropes to it that you would have pretty much always seen happen. Thus, to make it different from the rest, the characters unique to the plot set it apart from the average. Buried Hearts had all the ingredients to be a standout K-drama but somewhere along the way, it forgot to pack the emotional punch and compelling storytelling that makes dramas truly memorable. From the first episode, the setup hinted at deep secrets and emotional revelations. Unfortunately, what followed was a plot that never quite found its footing. The storylines meandered, and the pacing felt uneven and random at times. By the midpoint, it was hard to stay invested in the characters' journeys. There's a quiet beauty in slow-burn narratives, but here, the burn never really ignites.

Park Hyung Sik as Dong Ju might be the only positive thing I have to say about this show. I haven’t seen much of him, to be honest, but the man can act. Those large and arresting eyes alone can hold an entire monologue in a single glance. Everything from his hairstyle, makeup and attire elevates his character as Dong Ju. He certainly commands the attention of the male lead. If PHS had not been the main lead, this show would have collapsed under its own weight. He is not just carrying the drama; he IS the drama. However, after saying all that, I am still not invested enough in Dong Ju, the revenger, but it’s more down to the accompanying characters and story that didn’t keep up with him.

Yeo Eun Nam. The emotional baggage that led her to cruelly abandon the love of her life in pursuit of her goals was a bold, fitting statement for a female lead. That version of Eun Nam was charming and ambitious, driven not by cold ambition but by fierce love. She felt like the kind of woman who could outplay you with a smile and make you thank her for it. The talent, the looks, the chemistry with Dong Ju; it was all present from the start. I was hooked. How did she end up feeling like a B-side? Two episodes later, she’s full of regret, stripping away everything that once defined her. Her motives collapse into weak, muddled reasoning, and from that point on, her choices become downright baffling. She’s reduced to an eye candy role, dull as a Monday morning. The affair subplot? Unnecessary and insufferable. It cheapened both leads and wrecked all the character work the show had so carefully built up to that point. He barely began to hate her, and she barely clung to her marriage vows. Fitting, I guess. Almost comical how she became an open, walking adulteress right in the house and somehow, no one batted an eye. Nothing against Hong Hwa Yeon; she was flawless. But the writing did her no favours.

So often, people criticise actors for having one-dimensional expressions, and Lee Hae Young as Huh Ildo was exactly that. He carried the same sickly, stoned, vaguely psychotic look the entire show. Even my dog could tell he was up to no good. From day one, the guy was plotting to swallow the whole company, stealing left and right and ready to murder to get his way. And yet, for some reason, the show keeps hinting at some hidden “good side” when literally nothing he did supports that idea. I don’t get it. It didn’t add depth; it just made him look weak and underwhelming as an antagonist. I know a lot of people were impressed by his performance, but for me, it just didn’t click. It felt like one of those roles that seems compelling simply because of the character’s intensity, but lacks real depth on closer inspection. Personally, I found the character lacking in nuance. The whole concept of making him overtly evil, only to later justify it with a ‘he didn’t know any better’ and expect some sort of forgiving reaction from the audiences, came off as unconvincing writing. Another confused character in a story that couldn’t seem to decide what it wanted him to be.

There are honestly so many other characters worth discussing, like Taeyun, Seonu, and Yeom Jang Seo, but I’ll skip over them because, in the end, they all suffered from the same issues: underdeveloped arcs, confusing motivations, and erratic, inconsistent behaviour. It felt like the writer had no real idea what to do with most of them beyond their initial concept or purpose.

The quest felt strangely uneventful, almost too easy for him. Everything that could go his way did go his way, eventually. How many times can one guy cheat death before it starts to feel like a running joke? I get it, it’s makjang, so I shouldn’t expect tight realism. But when it keeps happening, it stops being thrilling and starts feeling like lazy writing disguised as high-stakes drama. Smart characters suddenly turn clueless and guardless- I’m looking at you Yeom Jang Seon. Major events get swept under the rug, all under the weak excuse that “nothing could be done about him.” It started off strong, but the middle turned into a chaotic mess full of missed opportunities and hollow tension. The ending? Everything wrapped up so abruptly, it left me with more 'whys' and 'whats' than satisfaction and closure. After such a great start, nothing else really landed for me.

The biggest letdown? The lack of big emotions. Revenge thrillers in the K-drama world are all about stirring emotions, explosive confrontations and high-stakes showdowns that hit you right in the gut and keep you on the edge of your seat. Buried Hearts had all the ingredients for that: forbidden love, betrayal, and sacrifice. But yet… everything was delivered in a messy fashion that made the emotional core feel hollow. It wasn't subtle; it was just flat. It’s not a bad drama, but it never quite becomes a good one either. Despite its sleek aesthetic and occasional flashes of brilliance, Buried Hearts ultimately feels like a missed opportunity. The story could’ve hit harder and made me feel more, but instead, it left me oddly detached. The writer had some good ideas here and there but failed to piece them together and expand on them meaningfully. There were barely any endearing characters, and the romance, despite the lead's early chemistry, fizzled into something tepid and forgettable. And I blame the writing of the characters for many of the issues. It's one of those dramas that I stuck with, not because I love it, but because I just want to see how it ends.

A revenge tale dressed in beautiful, dark aesthetics but lacking any real consequence or emotional punch. Park Hyun Sik and co deserved better.

Popping some Kopiko while I bury this experience deep down with the rest of my wasted watchlist.
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