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sayratial

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Business as Usual korean drama review
Completed
Business as Usual
4 people found this review helpful
by sayratial
May 8, 2025
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 8.0
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Great Chemistry, but would've Like Another Ending

Okay, so. I’ve been eyeing this drama for a while, finally gave in when only four episodes were out, and now I’ve finished the whole thing. Whew. I have thoughts. Let’s dive in.

First Impressions:
They sold the chemistry in literally two minutes. I was shocked when they kissed in the first five — like hello? That was fast. But it worked. Somehow, it worked. I was immediately curious — what’s their deal? Why are they making out already? Turns out, there’s a whole history, and it’s messy in the best possible way.

The Plot:
So we’ve got Min Jun and Jin Hwan. College friends. Min Jun’s first love. Jin Hwan’s "he might be into me but I’m not sure so let’s just kiss him" moment. Except that moment ruins everything.
Because — plot twist — Min Jun overhears Jin Hwan saying something that sounds like he's about to dump him, sees him with another guy (U Hyeok), and decides to nope out of the entire relationship and city. Ghosts him. Poof.

Fast forward 8 years, these two end up coworkers. Of course. Min Jun is guarded, mature, all “I’m here to work, not relive my emotional damage,” while Jin Hwan is over here like, “I still want you and I’ve been lowkey pining this whole time.”

And the kicker? The whole misunderstanding was... exactly that. A tragic misread that could’ve been avoided if they had just talked for literally 30 seconds. But hey, they were 20. Youth. Mistakes. Drama.

Characters & Acting:
The acting wasgood. Genuinely. These actors gave it depth. Every side-eye, every hesitant smile, every pause in the middle of a sentence — it meant something.

Min Jun: King of Emotional Repression. But like, you get it. His first love blew up in his face and haunted him for eight years. He’s not cold — he’s just scared. The vulnerability behind his walls? Painful. Beautiful. Real.

Jin Hwan: Smooth, charming, way too attractive for my mental peace. He’s sincere though, you feel it. But he’s also kind of impulsive. Kisses first, explains later. A vibe. But sometimes I did want to shake him a little.

And U Hyeok? Surprisingly grounded for the role he had. Iconic best friend. Gave advice that may have wrecked a relationship but hey — he meant well.

OST & Cinematography:
The OST carried so much emotional weight. Soft piano, warm tones, and melancholy in all the right places. And the cinematography? Gorgeous. Lighting, framing, mood — chef’s kiss. Even the most casual scenes felt like poetry.

Top Scenes:
That Intimate Scene in Episode 5? One of the best in BL. Ever. Not just because of the physicality — but the emotion.
Jinhwan kisses him there on the street, it's a little one, a romantic one for the missing and yearning of all the years. And then it's bigger as they let go of what they were holding back.
They go inside, and can't stop touching each other, kissing and holding hands as they slowly undress each other. The kiss on the forehead, the affection.
This might be one of the best intimate scene in a BL tbh. The lighting, the soft music. It was raw.
When minjun stops to remind they'd how to shower and jinhwan says but ‘I like it like this,’ and the smile on minjun!”

The Morning After 2.0: Jin Hwan stays, makes breakfast, lends clothes. A quiet redo of their past. No drama, just domestic softness. Redemption, in the form of eggs and toast.

The Ending (Spoilers ahead):
Okay. Let’s talk.
On paper, it’s a happy ending. They get back together. Jin Hwan doesn’t go abroad. There’s a cute post-credit wedding suit fantasy scene.

But if you really think about it… Min Jun was right. They’re not that compatible. They love each other, sure, but they keep crashing — after a night together, after every attempt at something real. Love alone isn’t enough. They’re too different. They don’t communicate naturally. So as romantic as it was, it also felt… forced? Like the show wanted a soft ending, but the buildup didn’t quite earn it.

Still, I get it. If you turn your brain off and ignore the past two heartbreaks, that last scene is sweet. And I’ll admit — I did smile. But also? I kinda wish they didn’t get back together. Sometimes walking away is the mature, healthier ending. But I’ll just pretend the post-credit was a dream sequence and call it a day.
Final Thoughts:
Great acting.
Beautiful cinematography.
Emotional, sometimes frustrating story.
Best intimate scene I’ve seen in a while.
The airport scene trope needs to retire, thanks.
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