google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: KBS2

The Queen of Asian Drama is Back with more Irreverent Reviews and Snarky Commentary.

Showing posts with label KBS2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KBS2. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Unkind Women





Title: 착하지 않은 여자들 / Chakhaji Anheun Yeojadeul
Also known as: Unkind Ladies
Genre: Family, drama, romance
Episodes: 24
Broadcast network: KBS2
Broadcast period: 2015, Feb to 2015, May


 

Main Cast 


Kim Hye ja as Kang Soon ok, Chae Si ra as Kim Hyun sook, Do Ji won as Kim Hyun jung, and Lee Ha na as Jung Ma ri.

Synopsis

 

Courtesy KBSWorld: This drama features the women of three generations and people around them.  Ma Ri grows up as a good teacher of this generation where there is no true mentor. Hyun Sook, who has been a troublemaker, realizes the love and support of her family. Kang Soon Ok regards herself as unlucky, but later on realizes how happy she has been.  How can you hold up when your life gets tough? You will figure it out by holding up day by day, just like these women in the drama.

Again, it makes little sense after having watched all 24 as-they-were-released episodes. And, with thanks to Dramafever, the subs were relatively painless a majority of the time.

What this was really about was Kang Soon Ok, a troubled teen who ended up being expelled for selling stolen goods and then lying about it to her homeroom teacher. 

The story begins in present-day Seoul with Soon ok living with her grown daughter, a Ph.D holder in Korean Literature, in her mother's traditional Korean home and still struggling to try and make some sense of her desolate life.

Her mother spent the last 30 years raising two daughters and then a granddaughter in this traditional home and makes her living as a traditional Korean dish cook. She teaches classes from within this home, and the two daughters are faithful to her and her cause.

That is because after 30 years, they are beginning to understand what it was their mother went through in the absence of a father-figure. A man who ran away with another woman, though the three women are led to believe that he died in a club fire.

After 30 years, the puzzle pieces are slowly and methodically put together and the truth is finally revealed. Now these three women are made to readjust not only their way of life but their thinking about such things as the past, the lies, the betrayal, and the confusion that ensues.

It is basically a story about two women who suffer from past transgressions who in present-day are made to have to deal with them directly and in a mature fashion while also learning how to grow, forgive, and move on.

And, yes, it was well worth the 24-episodes. Not a one was slapped together or unnecessary, although I will admit to there being a slight bit of redundancy, and to a disappointing outcome in the 'romance' category between young Ma ri and her two, eligible suitors.

My Take


I thought everyone did a marvelous job. Every character (and there were dozens) did a great and convincing job of portraying whomever it was involved with this family.

I adored the mother. She's cute, endearing, and has a passive yet wicked sense of humor. For a woman of her age and stature to pull off a few of those hilarious stunts was amazing, so kudos to her for being so marvelous!

I thought that Lee Ha na was cute, too, and funny in a stunted-serious way that goes against the grain of comedy. If that makes no sense, you'll just have to watch the drama and then it will.

As for the two love interests (half-brothers in the show) I was always rooting for the younger, more handsome, and of course, more physically fit of the two. There was just something about the elder that irked me and rubbed me the wrong way -- and even if he, too, did a wonderful job of portraying the eldest, responsible one with a stable job and a warm heart.


                       


Then again, I'm biased on account of my past memories of said second hunky guy! Oh, how I wish they'd stay young forever :D


                           
And, of course, Lee Soon jae as Kim Chul hee will always be my favorite halabeoji!

Last but not least, there was Kim Hye Eun as Ahn Jong Mi -- a scene stealer from the very start and who's character never changed throughout the drama. I really like her.

Curiosities


Why couldn't Soon ok just re-enroll at another school? 

It was even pointed out that her older sister attended another high school, and I'm pretty sure there are more than one in any part of that large city.

Getting a bit tired of the hair-perm as being a sign of weakness, age, and lack of social or monetary status.

I'm also noticing a disappointing trend in the romance department that pits two unlikely people against each other, has them grow to fall in love, and then separates them with the ubiquitous Migu trip to study.

Talk about gaping holes in a plot!

The title is a bit off-putting as well as being untrue. 

These women weren't all unkind, but there were two unkind souls involved in their lives -- and the father was a dick who chose to have an affair. 

The two very vicious, hateful, spiteful, and vindictive women both chose to try and ruin the lives of the mother and her second daughter as well as to come between the budding romance that eventually fizzled and died anyway.

Isn't it just a little bit ironic, then, to create all of these magical 'family values' dramas and then bump off the romance? 

Education, wealth, and career are far more important than romance. 

Okay, so if that is true, then where will all of Korea be in 20 years if no one is getting sexually involved or wants to get married and raise a family?

It just seems counter-productive to a mass-media hype intent on influencing a generation of mindless followers of said law, doesn't it?

And why, then, would The Return of Superman be so popular?

Very confusing message not jiving in this very un-Korean mind of mine.

Speaking of TRS, when little Uhm Ji on grows up, she'll look exactly like Lee Ha na.


















. . . or her mother :D




Friday, January 08, 2016

Healer #Review




Title: 힐러 / Hilleo  
Genre: Romance, comedy, thriller, action  
Episodes: 20  
Broadcast network: KBS2  
Broadcast period: Dec, 2014 to Feb, 2015

 
 


Finished watching this afternoon, and like a terrific book you can't wait to finish in order to find out how it all works out, I felt the same way about Healer.  

Bad thing about that is, like a good book, when you do get to the end, you're sad to know it's over even if you were looking forward to the end!  

Man, was this good.  

The plot 

. . . I'll quote the KBS source first . . .
 
A mysterious messenger of the 22nd century, an online newspaper reporter who only concerns her own interests, a popular reporter who agonizes over the truth and reality. When these three people meet, a passionate romance starts and the truths from the past and present reveal themselves to the world. This drama features young people and how they grow into real reporters.

. . . and then say (like per usual) it doesn't make much sense and didn't help me to understand the story's premise.  

I don't know if Healer was a mysterious messenger from the 22nd century -- in fact, I don't recall anyone slipping through time to deliver anything throughout the 20 episodes.

What it did do was to keep going back in time, 1992 to be precise, and show us glimpses of why that story is relevant to the plot in the present.

Healer did deal with three separate types of news reporter, and they did uncover an awful secret from the PAST (not the future) that still needed explaining and exposure.

That much is true.

The girl, however, was hardly self-absorbed.

More clueless and suffering an identity crisis at the start of this show.

She had big dreams of a promising career in reporting, but there was something holding her back.

We discover what that something is later in the show.

Healer (Ji Chang Wook as Seo Jung Hoo / Bong seo) is a mystery right out of the gate and someone who remained elusive, sexy, and self-assured throughout . . . even when he eventually transformed into bookish Bong seo, the mild-mannered office gopher at the newly created Some Day News.

Both depictions of Healer and Bong seo made me love Chang wook.

Funny thing is, I couldn't get past the first episode of Bachelor's Vegetable Stand, in which he stars.

You can bet I'll be watching it next, though!

Long story short: these three reporters are connected by a thin thread from the past.

The eldest (Yoo Ji Tae as Kim Moon Ho) knows enough about what's going on to want to put an end to the madness, but there is something that prevents him from revealing everything all at once.

He hires Seo Jung Hoo to obtain a DNA sample of the female wanna-be reporter, Park Min Young as Chae Young Shin.

Jung hoo traps Young shin inside a public bathroom, clips her fingernail, and disappears, leaving Young shin to hyperventilate in his startling wake.

Once Moon ho knows she is who he always assumed she was, the real fun begins.

He hires Jung hoo to guard Young shin, protect her from harm, and be her friend.

So, naturally, a romance begins to bloom for the two of them.

Jung hoo is reluctant for obvious reasons and she is eager to find out more about the mysterious Healer while becoming good friends with his alter ego, Bong seo.

They had great onscreen chemistry.

GREAT onscreen chemistry.

I liked her start to finish, her acting is superb, and the two combined made for an enticing bit of sexual tension, comedic silliness, and then that heart palpitating moment when the truth is revealed (more times than just one, too).

Loved, loved, LOVED the OST!

I know the main tune (Eternal Love) by heart now :D

Although I kept thinking it was Peter Gabriel who was doing the singing.
 
Jung hoo is a bad-ass with some serious fight skills courtesy of one of the hippest, older Korean men (Oh Kwang Rok as Ki Young Jae) I've seen onscreen thus far.
 
Dude was pretty awesome, and he giggled his way through every one of his scenes while teaching Jung hoo those impressive skills.
 
Another bonus came courtesy of my all-time favorite female actress, Kim Mi Kyung as Jo Min Ja.
 
She plays a retired detective and works anonymously with Jung hoo to help undo injustices Min ja is capable of detecting through the use of some extremely advanced hacking devices and her own know-how.
 
Actually, everyone involved in this thriller of sorts did a great job. The goofy guy in the Some Day office always at his laptop, and his timid boss.
 
The young girl who lives in the streets, break-dances, and uses her gang mentality to help Min ja aid Jong hoo -- she was a scene-stealer.
 
I also kept wanting to believe that she is Kim Mi kyung's real-life daughter, too. Might just be me, but they look alike and even act/sound alike.
 
Healer was a wonderful 20-episodes that I was thrilled to bits to be able to watch as it rolled, and for which I'm sad now that it's over.
 
Encore!


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Thursday, January 07, 2016

Discovery of Romance #Review




연애의 발견 / Yeonaeui Balgyeon

Genre: Romance, comedy
Episodes: 16  
Broadcast network: KBS2
Broadcast period: Aug to Oct, 2014


 


This was good.
Surprisingly good.

I didn't like the leading lady much, but she did an excellent job of portraying the character's messed up personality.  

I just wasn't all that convinced that she was deserving or attractive enough to have not one but two hot, successful men after her.

The chemistry wasn't there in either relationship, but I'm getting ahead of myself.

If you haven't seen it yet, this is a rom-com with more rom than com, but with enough com to make me laugh through at least the first half.

It's about a woman who experiences love at first sight and sticks with this guy (Eric) for over five years when things go south and they break up.

Three years later, she meets another hot guy (Seong jun) and the same thing happens again -- instant attraction, hook-up, and romance.

A little more than a year later, she finds out that Seong jun's Nam Ha jin is on a blind date and storms the hotel lobby to make an ass of herself.

She plunks down at a small seating arrangement directly in front of Han jin's cozy nook, hides behind a newspaper, and passes the guy already seated there a quick note to let him know why she's barged in on his privacy, and to please excuse her rude behavior just this once.

The guy turns out to be Eric's Kang Tae ha.

They're both stunned to see one another again, and she shouts at him about things from their past, but that Ha jin presumes have to do with his being there on a blind date.

The first half of this 16-episode melodrama with comedy tossed in for relief is about the first relationship and why they broke up and why she's clinging to Ha jin (the plastic surgeon with his own mixed up past).

It was a little disconcerting to have her mother, some guy, and her assistant showing up every now & then since it didn't seem (to me) like it had anything to do with the plot.

 And then to be just as confused with Han Yeo reum (Jung Yoo mi as the female love interest) living with a guy and a girl (friends) whom I was first led to believe were brother/sister, but then it turns out they're not, she's Yeo reum's sister and then no, she's not.

He is Yeo reum's brother.

No, wait. None of them are actually related. They just all live together. (scratches head)

The second plot was about Ha jin's past, his being an orphan who did something he felt was pretty mean to a little girl he once cared deeply for at the orphanage.

Those two end up meeting, and for the rest of the episodes, the secret remains just that -- because of his guilt.

Around episode 13-14, I got bummed thinking she would end up with the wrong guy.

By the start of episode 15, I was like, I hope neither guy is stupid enough to continue to want to stick it out with her.

It had a happy ending, and I was pleased with the final choice between the two leading men, but I'm still not sure how I feel about the relationship in general or its chances for survival.

Unless she makes some major personality changes.

The show flowed well, the music wasn't invasive, and there wasn't too much repetitious rehash of previous scenes & you-just-said-that dialogue, no 10-minute long dwelling instances of someone walking aimlessly while thinking, or a lot of weepy angst & brutality in the form of verbal & physical abuse like you get with most KDo's, which annoy and distract from the story.

If I recall correctly, there was only one instance of someone doing something that the camera needed to show in triple-effect, too.

I got the slightest hint of old 90's and 00's dramas -- like What Happened in Bali -- but nowhere near those dark and dismal melodramas from back in the day.

I said hint