google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: Kim Go eun

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

Showing posts with label Kim Go eun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kim Go eun. Show all posts

Friday, February 03, 2017

Goblin: The Lonely and Great God #review

쓸쓸하고 찬란하神-도깨비

Writer  -  Kim Eun sook
Network -   tvN
Episodes -   16
Released -   Dec, 2016 - Jan, 2017
Genre -  Fantasy, Romance, Drama



CAST




SYNOPSIS


Kim Shin (Gong Yoo) is an immortal goblin and protector of souls. He lives with an amnesiac grim reaper (Lee Dong wook) who is in charge of taking deceased souls. Together, they see the dead off into the afterlife. One day Kim Shin meets a girl, Ji Eun tak (Kim Go eun), who has the ability to see ghosts. She is destined to be Kim Shin's bride and return him to ashes.

REVIEW


I liked it and didn't, it was good and it wasn't.

The story itself was marvelous.

The acting by all was superb, but I could have done without the unnecessary rehash at the beginning of just about every episode, and the usual drawn-out until it becomes stale romance that takes its agonizingly sweet time getting to the point.

The bromance was cool.


Lee Dong wook and Gong Yoo

I especially enjoyed every scene at the old mansion, when these two would argue telepathically, or when they were together with Yook Sung jae's Yoo Duk hwa.

Also enjoyed the sexiness of their dark-side tandem walks, but they were too few and too early on in the show to be thoroughly enjoyed.

As a matter of fact, the writer seemed to point it out by making fun of it a little more than 3/4 into the 16 episodes.

The romance was a bit awkward.


Kim Go eun and Gong Yoo

I really like her and think she's very pretty and a good actress.

In fact, she stole the show, especially as her younger self.

Very natural, cute/funny, and an interesting young woman start to finish.

Polished, mature, unafraid of the unknown, and determined.

Still, it was painfully obvious how much younger she is than Gong Yoo and that made it a little difficult to root for them, but not entirely.

It was entirely too clean, childish, and boring (asking a 900 year old Warrior to behave like a modern-day 19 yr old Korean (= immature girly-man) is asking a bit much).

The Second Romance was much more interesting.



Lee Dong wook and Yoo In na

Talk about a handsome couple!

These two were made for each other, on and off screen.

Get married, make babies, and thrill us on The Return of Superman, please!

The pacing needed work.

So much went into the first few episodes; enough to draw me in and keep me interested, but then it just lost steam and rehashed -- sometimes all of the previous episodes, taking up about 20 to 30 minutes of a single episode -- to make the thrill of the chase die out.

No surprises, either.

It was too predictable, and I knew who the Grim Reaper was after only a few episodes.

The writer kept harping on the fact that he had no name and no memories, which only leads the viewer to just one conclusion.

Crime and Punishment

It's always interesting to hear various viewpoints about death and the afterlife.

What I learned after watching Goblin is that Koreans seem to believe in a hell, but that only the severely abusive souls go there and with no chance for reincarnation.

One of the ghosts who followed Ji Eun tak around never had her back story told, leaving me to wonder why she was dead since all of her friends had their stories told before being sent to the other side.

I am still confused as to why it was Kim Shin's character was being 'punished' when he had suffered enough in his own lifetime to last the purported 3 to come -- even if he technically lived just one before dying -- and having never received his other 3 since he became immortal.

Becoming immortal after all that suffering makes sense, but not his having to wander aimlessly for 900 years in search of his Bride to remove the invisible sword so that he can finally rest in peace.

And, the real culprit behind the pain, suffering, loss, and eventual 'punishment' of those involved ended up becoming an immortal of sorts as well, which makes even less sense.

I understand it was meant as a tie-in to the other ghosts wandering earth because their deaths were murder or some unsolved crime, but his crimes weren't unsolved yet went unpunished for 900 years.

I don't get that.

It implies that God picks and chooses His hell victims (and everyone else goes to Heaven, apparently) which I don't buy at all.

The Hat


Lee Dong wook as the Grim Reaper

LOVED the hat!

A little on the cappello romano side, but still cool.

The Soundtrack


I didn't mind it and liked two in particular, but it wasn't spectacular yet did fit nicely with the theme of the story.

Bottom Line


Overall, I'd recommend this as a good-time watch but with a few reservations about things like consistency, a plot that lost its way, and too much build-up with zero reasoning or results.


Thursday, March 03, 2016

Cheese in the Trap


Cheese in the Trap


Hangul: 치즈 인 더 트랩
Writer: Kim Nam hee, Soon Ggi (original comic)
Network: tvN
Episodes: 16
Release Date: Jan - Mar, 2016




Cast



Plot


Drama depicts the delicate relationship between female university student Hong Seol (Kim Go eun) and her senior, Yoo Jung (Park Hae jin). Hong seol works part-time due to her family's poor background. Yoo Jung is good looking, gets good grades, is athletic and has a kind personality, but he also has a dark side. ~AsianWiki (w/edits)

Review


When I first began watching this one, I was prepared to give it a 5-star rating without hesitation, and as I waited for subsequent episodes to upload, my curiosity got the best of me so I browsed parts of the manhwa this live drama is based on.

Now that it is over, I hesitated to rate this one a 4 or a 5 so settled on 4.5 stars.

I still wonder if I'm being too generous, but I'll stick with my gut reaction, which should never be ignored. Right?

The best part about this drama turned out to be the Score (OST), one with it's nod to The Cure, and a few Korean ballads I'm not familiar with but didn't mind hearing intermittently during these 16 lengthy episodes.

The manhwa was far more explicit than even I cared for so didn't really get into it but am still glad to know and partially understand the huge differences and slight similarities between the two.

Don't think they know what down low actually means!


As always, it's great to see and be able to appreciate something new and refreshingly DIFFERENT in a Korean drama, and Cheese definitely fulfilled that need.

Yet it also remained true to the formulaic Cinderella theme of two hot guys (only one wealthy, though) going after the mousy poor chick.

I think a majority of the actors did a good job, and the aside characters didn't overpower or overshadow the real plot in any way.


Second Lead Syndrome


My personal favorite was Seo Kang joon as Baek In ho -- the guy I wanted to see end up with Kim Go eun's Hong Seol (the Cheese).


Seo Kang joon as Baek In ho

What I Didn't Like


She chose the wrong dude (big surprise) and went for the wealthy Ken doll instead of the hot, more appealing, and better personality dude.

She also kept unabashedly apologizing to us for it throughout the show, which became annoying around episode six and unforgivable thereafter.




At the start, I liked Lee Sung kyung's Baek In ha character, but after about five episodes, it wasn't funny anymore and her contorted facial expressions, over-the-top maneuvers, AND voice tone/inflection became irritating.





And, on the opposite end of the spectrum, Kim Go eun is an okay actress and I like her hair, but not her style or her flat-line approach to people, things, and life in general. Very boring.




Why this one didn't receive a 5-star review from me had everything to do with the message being conveyed.

Manipulation is the element, and in Korea, being rich or poor has everything to do with whether one can get away with it.




Sure, the script writer did attempt to clear it all up in the 11th hour final scenes, but by then it was far too late for me to accept.

By the time we are privy to their story, the stage has long ago been set and the personality quirks are fully embedded, so our reactions to these people are unfair because we're being manipulated as well.

Park Hae jin's Yoo jung being manipulated by his powerful father, who mistakenly attempts to help his son by manipulating his son's best friend and that guy's older sister, narcissistic In ha. They manipulate one another and later anyone they encounter.




The college students manipulated their way through two semesters. Which didn't coincide with Hong Seol's attitude towards them compared with, say, her attitude toward her rich boyfriend whenever he pulled off the same or similar stunts.

While Yoo jung continued to manipulate and destroy throughout the show, Hong seol witnessed, second-guessed, doubted, denied, accepted, and apologized for it again and again and again.

She still liked him and made lame excuses for him and her reasons for sticking with him, but that same reasoning wasn't there for anyone else including the stalker dude (who, by the way, nearly stole the show).

I never saw a single reason for In ho's blame or need to suffer as much as he did, and at the end of the day, he'd never done anything to warrant Yoo jung's manipulative vengeance.




There were numerous instances when Yoo jung reminded him (and us) about a mistaken notion incident from their past, which both boys misconstrued, though I doubt In ho was wrong and Yoo jung was right.




But! Because Yoo jung is rich and In ho is poor, we must accept In ho's plight and Yoo jung's indiscretion.

Right?

The subs were pretty decent, but there were a few times near the beginning of this show where I had to stop and capture them for your reading pleasure.



exactly



on the right side of my FB wall


One conundrum that occurred about halfway through the sixteen episodes was when In ho sees his old piano teacher being interviewed on television.

Nothing wrong with that except that In ho is standing outside of a convenience store staring at the television screen through the plate glass window, and he is able to hear everything being broadcast.

Outside the store.

In the rain.

sorry, screwed this one up

The climax was somewhat riveting even if it was just a grander scale of manipulation than anything we'd seen previously.

Still, I enjoyed this one a great deal more than it might sound based on this review.

The refreshing change and off-beat writing style appealed to me and kept me hooked for the duration, which is always a delight to encounter.

If this had gone on for more than the sixteen episodes, though, I might have had to deduct that half star.

The Yeppeun