Those who have read more than a few of my reviews for BL dramas will know that I am always happy to find a BL that is not purely romance focused but offers another story line or looks into other themes than just romantic love. So, when I watched the first half of "Step by Step", I was fully prepared to firmly recommend it, and here's why:
The romance starts off strong -- and then comes to a complete standstill for six episodes. In that time, the series discusses how workplace dynamics (in particular hierarchies and the concept of seniority) influence the quality of work and of work life. It also picks up themes like bossing, the culturally significant concepts of "saving face" and เกรงใจ /greng-jai/ (the feeling of not wanting to burden people who have seniority/authority with your own needs or wishes), office gossip and others. We follow Pat in his first months at the office, and how he learns to find his own place in this world. The difference between his coworkers (who expect the Thai way of doing and saying things) and his superior, who is, even by my German standards, extremely up-front and blunt with his feedback, is striking; and I expect this might hit a nerve with Zillenial Thai viewers.
We also get to see how his friends go through things: getting prgnant, breaking up, living through unrequited love ... all of the things many young people in their twenties experience.
"Step by Step" is also the first Thai BL series I've watched that takes work issues seriously and not just as pretty background for a sweeping romance. The inter-office work as well as the lingo and the workflow felt quite realistic -- I'm not sure if it actually is, but if there was any nonsense, I didn't notice it. It certainly was better than whatever they did in "Bed Friend" or "A Boss and a Babe".
After episode six, the focus pivots towards the romance -- and while I liked how they gently re-introduce it at first, the whole thing takes a nosedive near the end of episode 8. It recovers slightly in episode 10, when the same-sex relationship between boss and employee becomes known and thus an issue (but only for this episode), and then never fully recovers again. Here are some (hopefully non-spoilery) examples of things that went wrong:
* The timeline went wobbly -- what we get in time stamps, doesn't make sense.
In the beginning, Pat is 25, his friend knows she is pregnant (and in the third month of pregnancy), and Jeng gets a year to turn the department profitable.
Sometime later Pat has a birthday, then his friend gives birth, then we get a small time skip of three months. But then there's almost tow quarters left of the year Jeng had?
After that, there's a time skip of two years, another of birthday of Pat's -- and in the last minutes of the series, he says he is 26 years old. Sigh.
* The secondary pairing doesn't get a resolution at all, after a lot of dramatics between episodes 5 and 10 or 11.
* Some supporting characters are important in the first half, and then never come back. One supporting character has a 180°-turn with her characterization.
* Jeng has a breakdown in episode 8 because of his feelings -- there was never any hint before that he was that deep in love. Overall, the progression of emotions was uneven; especially just before and after they got together, there seemed to be a jump in attraction/love; which could have been prepared better.
* Let's just forget the lakorn-ish birth scene, which happened in a public bus with onlookers filming, and which had never any impact on anything else.
* The conflict between Jeng and his father never gets resolved. Jeng even says "this was too easy" at one point, but there's never any follow-up. (The father was also a severely underutilized character. And maybe all the more jarring because his actor was good enough to give him characterization where there was none in the script.)
* In episode 12, which is overly long already, with 1 hour 49 minutes, instead of resolving the remaining conflicts (e.g. the secondary couple's story), the last 30 minutes were spent on Pat and Jeng being domestic together in unrelated scenes. Also, Pat was ukefied in these last scenes, which, for me, made all his character growth kind of pointless.
And it's really a shame that the writing falls apart to that extent. We have this really well-introduced office and its work dynamics. We have a diverse friend group, that even has a token het couple, with interesting romantic and platonic relationships. We have a discussion about social issues about society and workplace politics. And then nothing of that is used to the fullest, and in some cases, not even resolved. I wished a ThaiPBS writer would take the same premise and run with it -- to think that they could do another "The Summer We Met" with this? I would love it. The potential for something special was there.
It's strange that despite these issues, I ended up liking the series anyway. Maybe because the first half was so strong for me. Maybe because I really liked both Pat and Jeng, and they did make me feel all aflutter when they were together.
Was it good?
In regard to production qualtiy and acting, it was an average Thai BL. It could have been a perfect ThaiPBS lakorn, if the romance had been reduced to a minimum and the social commentary about working as a young adult and issues of nepotism and class had been more developed.
It's also really unfortunate that the ending just fizzled out.
Did I like it?
Despite the issues the series had, I liked it fine, strangely enough, especially the first six episodes. I might even rewatch it some day.
Who would I recommend it to?
To be honest, I don't think I would recommend it. I would not advise against watching it, for those who like to watch a story that's slow to unfold and focuses on work relationships.
The romance starts off strong -- and then comes to a complete standstill for six episodes. In that time, the series discusses how workplace dynamics (in particular hierarchies and the concept of seniority) influence the quality of work and of work life. It also picks up themes like bossing, the culturally significant concepts of "saving face" and เกรงใจ /greng-jai/ (the feeling of not wanting to burden people who have seniority/authority with your own needs or wishes), office gossip and others. We follow Pat in his first months at the office, and how he learns to find his own place in this world. The difference between his coworkers (who expect the Thai way of doing and saying things) and his superior, who is, even by my German standards, extremely up-front and blunt with his feedback, is striking; and I expect this might hit a nerve with Zillenial Thai viewers.
We also get to see how his friends go through things: getting prgnant, breaking up, living through unrequited love ... all of the things many young people in their twenties experience.
"Step by Step" is also the first Thai BL series I've watched that takes work issues seriously and not just as pretty background for a sweeping romance. The inter-office work as well as the lingo and the workflow felt quite realistic -- I'm not sure if it actually is, but if there was any nonsense, I didn't notice it. It certainly was better than whatever they did in "Bed Friend" or "A Boss and a Babe".
After episode six, the focus pivots towards the romance -- and while I liked how they gently re-introduce it at first, the whole thing takes a nosedive near the end of episode 8. It recovers slightly in episode 10, when the same-sex relationship between boss and employee becomes known and thus an issue (but only for this episode), and then never fully recovers again. Here are some (hopefully non-spoilery) examples of things that went wrong:
* The timeline went wobbly -- what we get in time stamps, doesn't make sense.
In the beginning, Pat is 25, his friend knows she is pregnant (and in the third month of pregnancy), and Jeng gets a year to turn the department profitable.
Sometime later Pat has a birthday, then his friend gives birth, then we get a small time skip of three months. But then there's almost tow quarters left of the year Jeng had?
After that, there's a time skip of two years, another of birthday of Pat's -- and in the last minutes of the series, he says he is 26 years old. Sigh.
* The secondary pairing doesn't get a resolution at all, after a lot of dramatics between episodes 5 and 10 or 11.
* Some supporting characters are important in the first half, and then never come back. One supporting character has a 180°-turn with her characterization.
* Jeng has a breakdown in episode 8 because of his feelings -- there was never any hint before that he was that deep in love. Overall, the progression of emotions was uneven; especially just before and after they got together, there seemed to be a jump in attraction/love; which could have been prepared better.
* Let's just forget the lakorn-ish birth scene, which happened in a public bus with onlookers filming, and which had never any impact on anything else.
* The conflict between Jeng and his father never gets resolved. Jeng even says "this was too easy" at one point, but there's never any follow-up. (The father was also a severely underutilized character. And maybe all the more jarring because his actor was good enough to give him characterization where there was none in the script.)
* In episode 12, which is overly long already, with 1 hour 49 minutes, instead of resolving the remaining conflicts (e.g. the secondary couple's story), the last 30 minutes were spent on Pat and Jeng being domestic together in unrelated scenes. Also, Pat was ukefied in these last scenes, which, for me, made all his character growth kind of pointless.
And it's really a shame that the writing falls apart to that extent. We have this really well-introduced office and its work dynamics. We have a diverse friend group, that even has a token het couple, with interesting romantic and platonic relationships. We have a discussion about social issues about society and workplace politics. And then nothing of that is used to the fullest, and in some cases, not even resolved. I wished a ThaiPBS writer would take the same premise and run with it -- to think that they could do another "The Summer We Met" with this? I would love it. The potential for something special was there.
It's strange that despite these issues, I ended up liking the series anyway. Maybe because the first half was so strong for me. Maybe because I really liked both Pat and Jeng, and they did make me feel all aflutter when they were together.
Was it good?
In regard to production qualtiy and acting, it was an average Thai BL. It could have been a perfect ThaiPBS lakorn, if the romance had been reduced to a minimum and the social commentary about working as a young adult and issues of nepotism and class had been more developed.
It's also really unfortunate that the ending just fizzled out.
Did I like it?
Despite the issues the series had, I liked it fine, strangely enough, especially the first six episodes. I might even rewatch it some day.
Who would I recommend it to?
To be honest, I don't think I would recommend it. I would not advise against watching it, for those who like to watch a story that's slow to unfold and focuses on work relationships.
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