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Buried Hearts korean drama review
Completed
Buried Hearts
0 people found this review helpful
by strawberryeuphoria
8 days ago
16 of 16 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 9.5
Story 10.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

A Story That Burns From the Inside

I honestly don’t understand why Buried Hearts isn’t rated higher. This drama wasn’t just good, it was consuming. It was the kind of story that grabs you by the collar in the first episode and refuses to let you breathe until the very last scene.

Plot**
The story follows Seo Dong Ju, the loyal and frighteningly competent executive director of Daesan Group,and the chairman’s most trusted man. He works in silence, in shadows, cleaning up messes no one else can handle. But the more indispensable he becomes, the more dangerous he is to those circling the company like vultures.
What starts as corporate tension turns into psychological warfare. Alliances rot. Loyalty becomes currency. The “good” characters aren’t good at all; they’re just better at hiding it. And the villains? They don’t just cross lines. They erase them.
This wasn’t just a power struggle. It was a slow emotional suffocation.

Spioilers ahead ***


Park Hyung Sik
Park Hyung-sik delivered something unforgettable here.
I’ve seen him in other roles, but this? This was different. I almost didn’t recognize him. The styling, the cold sharpness in his face but more than that, the way he carried Seo Dong Ju’s pain like it was stitched into his skin.
His eyes did most of the acting. They were alive. Burning. Trembling. When he looked at Eun Nam, it wasn’t just longing; it was devastation mixed with disbelief. Anger fighting love. Pride fighting vulnerability. It felt like watching someone try to hold themselves together while breaking apart in silence.
And that twist in the first episode? It hit like a physical blow. The kind that leaves you staring at the screen, stunned. That was the moment Dong Ju changed. Not into a villain but into someone who realised goodness was an illusion that no one around him was truly clean. You could see the shift happen inside him.

Eun Nam
What she did was cruel!!! Marrying another man in front of him. On the day he was going to propose. I felt that humiliation through the screen. It wasn’t just heartbreak; it was public destruction.
And people say she loved him?
Love does not choose stock shares over someone’s soul. Love does not strike exactly where someone is most fragile. That moment shattered something in Dong Ju that never fully healed.
I tried to understand her. I did. But every time she appeared, I felt anger bubbling up again. Because she didn’t just hurt him, she altered his path.
That wasn’t romance. That was betrayal.

Yeom
Huh Joon-ho as Yeom was terrifying in the most controlled way.
The second he appeared on screen, I knew this drama was going to hurt. He doesn’t play loud villains; he plays scary ones. The kind who smile while dismantling you piece by piece.
Yeom wasn’t just greedy. He was hollow. A man who replaced humanity with ambition. Watching him manipulate, calculate, and destroy without blinking made my skin crawl.
The Loneliness of the Ending
I know people were divided about the ending.
Part of me wanted something softer. Something that gave Dong Ju peace. But another part of me knows, peace was never the point.
He ended up alone, and maybe that’s the most honest outcome. Because who around him truly deserved him? The chairman used him. Eun Nam wounded him. The allies doubted him. Even loyalty in this world was conditional.
The ending wasn’t comforting. It was haunting, but it felt real.
Still… the way things were left? The tension unresolved? Are the power dynamics still shifting? I can absolutely see another season. And if there is one, I will be there immediately because I’m not done with this world yet.

The cinematography was cold and deliberate, sharp blues and shadows that matched the emotional frost between characters. Every frame felt heavy. Controlled. Intentional.
The OST? It didn’t just play in the background; it amplified the ache. The longing. The rage. It made certain scenes feel almost unbearable in the best way.
There was one small flaw in an early fight scene; the impact didn’t quite land smoothly. But honestly? That detail faded compared to how powerful the later confrontations were.
I could talk about every character. The bodyguards. The hackers. The family members hide secrets behind polite smiles.
This drama wasn’t shallow. It wasn’t predictable. It wasn’t safe.
It was sharp. It was emotional. It was relentless.The only real flaw?
That it ended.
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