Loud, Surface-Level, and Sadly Forgettable
I really wanted to love *Miss & Mrs. Cops*, especially because I’m a huge fan of Ra Mi Ran. She’s one of those actresses who can carry both comedy and emotion so naturally. So I went into this movie with high expectations… and maybe that’s why it didn’t fully land for me.
The film actually starts strong. It even gave me slight *Midnight Runners* vibes at the beginning , that chaotic investigative energy with humor mixed in. But somewhere along the way, it became too loud. There was so much shouting, so much exaggerated chaos, that I never really had time to sit with the story or let the pieces fall into place.
The investigation itself felt very surface-level. The message about undervalued women proving their worth was definitely there but it stayed on the surface. It didn’t go deep enough to create an emotional anchor. I never felt that strong emotional binding that makes a message hit harder or gives the story real weight.
The comedy was present, yes. But because of the serious topic it was dealing with, I felt like it needed more balance. Instead of building tension or diving into the emotional impact of the case, it often relied on loud reactions and physical humor. It felt like the film was circling around its point instead of fully committing to it.
Another thing that held it back for me was the lack of originality. The story felt familiar like I had seen pieces of it in other movies before. It didn’t feel like it tried to push boundaries or offer something new. And when a film deals with such a relevant issue, originality and depth could have elevated it so much more.
It’s not a bad movie ,it’s just okay. Watchable, but not memorable. And with a cast that strong, I honestly expected something sharper and more impactful.
The film actually starts strong. It even gave me slight *Midnight Runners* vibes at the beginning , that chaotic investigative energy with humor mixed in. But somewhere along the way, it became too loud. There was so much shouting, so much exaggerated chaos, that I never really had time to sit with the story or let the pieces fall into place.
The investigation itself felt very surface-level. The message about undervalued women proving their worth was definitely there but it stayed on the surface. It didn’t go deep enough to create an emotional anchor. I never felt that strong emotional binding that makes a message hit harder or gives the story real weight.
The comedy was present, yes. But because of the serious topic it was dealing with, I felt like it needed more balance. Instead of building tension or diving into the emotional impact of the case, it often relied on loud reactions and physical humor. It felt like the film was circling around its point instead of fully committing to it.
Another thing that held it back for me was the lack of originality. The story felt familiar like I had seen pieces of it in other movies before. It didn’t feel like it tried to push boundaries or offer something new. And when a film deals with such a relevant issue, originality and depth could have elevated it so much more.
It’s not a bad movie ,it’s just okay. Watchable, but not memorable. And with a cast that strong, I honestly expected something sharper and more impactful.
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