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The art of lie detection [Year in Review, Part 3]

I think I echo the entire human race when I say that there was something in the air this year that made the days go by faster. What other explanation could there be for the fact that it’s December again? Why does the end of the year have to be once a year? Maybe we should execute a search and rescue mission for all the time we lost—that stuff’s got to go somewhere, right? I’ll try checking the junk drawer.

If there seems to be little rhyme or reason in the review choices this year, it’s because there isn’t. I mostly just picked at random, hoping to break the pattern of expectation versus reality caused by following teams from dramas I liked to dramas I usually don’t like. But with the fast turnout rate required by the insatiable beast that is dramaland, it turns out that avoiding a production team’s reunion would only be possible by stopping my drama intake entirely.

And since that’s not a viable option in any universe/alternate timeline, the solution to the inevitable ebb and flow of drama watching remains the same. I’ve just got to pony up and take ‘em as they come, which is what it means to consume entertainment. Or is it? Why take my word for it anyway?

Ooh, I’ve got an idea! Let’s play a game. You decide which of two statements is true, and which is a liar-liar-pants-on-fire falsehood. Good luck, and god speed!

SONG OF THE DAY

Triangle OST – Jaejoong – “우연 (Coincidence)” [ Download ]

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Empress Ki

It’s hard to believe that blockbuster sageuk Empress Ki started its fifty-episode run before last year’s holiday review extravaganza even began (seriously, where did the time go?) yet here we are, looking back at six months of tumultuous romances, sumptuous costumes, arresting performances, and just a light smattering of paint-by-numbers political intrigue to keep the wheels greased and moving.

And the formula worked—in a year with pretty dismal numbers overall, Empress Ki surpassed the elusive twenty percent mark early in its run and was close enough to taste the thirty percent milestone by the time the finale aired. It was a rousing success both commercially and critically, which wasn’t necessarily unexpected coming from the writers who brought us History of the Salaryman and the PD who brought us Dr. Jin—…wait, what?

Yes, the director who proved himself incapable of focusing a camera or our attention in 2012 was handed a star-studded cast, a primetime slot, and a boatload of money by MBC to do as he liked for nearly half a year. And you know what? The end result was actually good. Though I’d bet money that the sudden show of competence wasn’t so much proof of miracles as it was the result of having two directors working in tandem, it proves that MBC knows how to make commercially sound decisions when it’s not actively feeding its decade-long obsession with Dae Jang Geum. (Seriously, guys. Give it up already.)

With a commanding performance by Ha Ji-won as the Goryeo woman who would later become the titular empress of Yuan, Ki looked at the historical blanks in her life and thought to itself, “How about we add some crossdressing, a fictional Goryeo king, and a love triangle too fantastical to have actually existed?” Before you think that’s a criticism, it isn’t—I loved the show for its willingness to use history as a really, really pretty backdrop for a story that was unabashedly fictional and infinitely watchable.

Because in what other sageuk could you watch a girl be torn between the love of a king and an emperor? Romance novels come to life on a scale like this don’t come along every dynasty, you know.

Truth or Truth: Empress Ki would pass even the most discerning test for historical accuracy in sageuk. Or, it proved that you can substitute history with entertainment as long as you get the second part right.

 

Pretty Man

Jang Geun-seok has had a bad run lately, hasn’t he? With Pretty Man now added to the list, his last three projects have been ratings disasters—with a maybe-kinda-sorta exception for Love Rain, which flopped domestically but found commercial success in Japan. To say I had any expectations for Pretty Man would be an outright lie, but I had at least hoped that it’d be a return to form for an actor who’s proven himself capable when it comes to zany romantic comedies.

But it wasn’t. In fact, I’m not even really sure what it was or what it was supposed to be. There were elements of a cute show here, with a love triangle made of fresh young faces and a wackiness in tone that belied the manhwa source material it drew inspiration from. I got the feeling that Pretty Man wanted very much to be a fun, silly, enjoyable little show.

But it wasn’t. Or maybe it wasn’t really aiming for that after all, because the tone could swing so wildly from slapstick hilarity to These Problems Really Matter in the blink of an eye—and maybe those problems could’ve actually mattered had they been grounded in characters rather than caricatures. As it stood, we had a gigolo gold-digger for a hero tasked with seducing ten successful women by a mysterious benefactor with her own hidden agenda, and an “average” heroine (played by IU) who didn’t seem to have a grasp on the concept of self-worth when she only had eyes for Ma-te. And I had the hope that maybe, just maybe, the show would be about her transformation as well as his.

But it wasn’t. Instead it felt like the show was chained to the seduction challenge posed to Ma-te, since the later introductions of his targets/bachelorettes became more like the show was ticking off a checklist it didn’t actually need to adhere to—after all, the challenge itself was arbitrary. Why ten exactly? Why did it really matter to Yoo-ra that Ma-te prove himself by seducing rich women when he’d already grown past the point of needing a sugar momma’s money by becoming a capable businessman? Wouldn’t the show want to be about growth and change despite the odds, without Ma-te getting a free pass because of a late-game birth secret?

We’ll never know the answers to the half-baked questions this show attempted to raise, which wouldn’t have been such a chief offense had it gone about asking them in a way that was less soul-suckingly boring. Jang Geun-seok’s haircut alone garnered more press than the show ever did—though I wonder why they didn’t capitalize on that by showing the four-years-in-the-making event on camera. Were they afraid such a blatant cry for attention would diminish their otherwise sterling reputation for artistic integrity?

Truth or Truth: Pretty Man wins for finding an inventive way to incorporate camping gear product placement by having Lee Jang-woo live in a tent most of the show. Or, it was just a sixteen-hour sacrificial ritual to the God of DROPTOP.

 

You From Another Star

Now here’s a trend I’m surprised didn’t take off to inspire a year’s worth of unofficial adaptations, though I guess when you come up with such a novel concept and do it so well—while also filling your cast with the most A+ of A-list celebrities—even the most devious would-be copycats would recognize a losing game when they saw one.

Maybe it’s because we’ve had our share of forbidden relationships involving otherworldly partners to earn a sniff of derision whenever vampires/ghosts/werewolves/chaebols grace our screens, but Do Min-joon was truly otherworldly—not to mention beautiful, incredibly powerful, and endowed with the gift of deadpan comedic timing. And no matter how much we think we’ve been desensitized by dramaland’s fetish for polar opposite odd couples, pairing a centuries-old alien allergic to human kisses with a sassy Hallyu star proved to be an unprecedented and brilliant(-ly lucrative) move.

We’ve seen so many instances where shows as seemingly pre-calibrated for success and meticulously calculated as You From Another Star have gone horribly awry, so I can’t really pinpoint exactly what this show did so exceedingly right. Even if the creators were banking on the drama to be a hit and engineered it to be impossible-to-miss by casting Jeon Ji-hyun in her first small screen comeback in fourteen years, I doubt that anyone expected the show to become the literal phenomenon it’s known as now.

Not only was it a hit at home and abroad, it set records for being the most expensive drama exported to China in the history of ever. Its impact on a nation with over a billion people was so strong that even The Washington Post published the headline: “Chinese officials debate why China can’t make a soap opera as good as South Korea’s.” Let the full impact of that actually sink in. You From Another Star didn’t just revitalize the overseas Hallyu boom, it practically reinvented it. Any product even flashed across the screen subliminally experienced a meteoric rise in profits—which I totally don’t know from firsthand experience, because it’s not like I used my hard-earned dollars for the same Yves Saint Laurent lipstick shades worn by Cheon Song-yi. Not even close.

Though it’s impossible now to remove Manstar from the ocean of hype still churning around it (“This is why I created the earth in seven days.” -God), a cursory look back would reveal that it wasn’t perfect. The second leads were familiar and well within their respective molds at all times, the main villain had hopelessly simplistic motivations—and considering the kind of villainy Shin Sung-rok would later prove himself capable of, I’m inclined to blame the writing for him serving up a competent but mostly predictable performance as an evil chaebol with a thing for screwing people over. And then murdering them.

Truth or Truth: This show could’ve really done without the “You might be the reincarnated love of my life!” layer. Or, maybe there wouldn’t have been enough fate in their fated-to-be sundae if they’d just met like regular peo—…er, regular humanoids.

 

Age of Feeling

Age of Feeling OST – Im Jae-bum – “Destiny” [ Download ]

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Despite the fact that I sustained a major concussion before Age of Feeling’s finale week and spent the weeks that followed in haze of forgetfulness, I vividly remember how promising Age of Fighting started and where it all went so horribly wrong.

I wonder if (but highly doubt) there’s ever been a case where a struggling show has achieved commercial success after a late game writer switch, because it certainly didn’t happen here. Though I’m no stranger to production woes in shows I end up recapping, Age of Feeling took the cake when it couldn’t go a week without making headlines, proving that there is such a thing as bad publicity.

Which isn’t to say that everything would’ve turned out all right had the show not fired its head writer, lost Kim Jae-wook, or exceeded its already lavish production budget, but it certainly might’ve helped. There’s no way to know exactly what happened behind the scenes, but judging by how sudden every drastic change was (and there were SO MANY), it wouldn’t be inaccurate to say that there was more drama happening off screen than there was on it.

The change in writers also marked a departure from established, likable characters we literally never saw or heard from again in order to focus on a broader group of middling characters and two of the worst villains to ever smear expository excrement all over all ten of our screens. You’d think that with enough side characters played by legitimately engaging actors to populate a small village, surely the show would find a way to incorporate them into the broader story, right? I mean, it’s not like they’d eschew the likes of scene-stealing Song Jae-rim in favor of ultimately meaningless subplots revolving around a mythology no one—not even the creators—seemed to understand, right?

Wrong. Oh, so wrong. While I’m eternally thankful that Song Jae-rim was one of the only worthwhile remnants from the first half to stick around for the messy and unfocused second half, that’s one of the few choices the show made for its own benefit. If you’ve got a choice between lobster bisque and a moldy sandwich, who would choose the moldy sandwich? And who, I ask, would be depraved enough to dress those two pieces of stale bread up as Im Soo-hyang and Jin Se-yeon? That’s just wrong, Age of Feeling. Shame on you.

Truth or Truth: Age of Feeling was the most unenjoyable of all the 1930s period dramas to date. Or, that prize still goes to Basketball. (Nice try though.)

 

Full Sun

I have fond memories of Full Sun, not only because it reminds me of how much of a procrastinator I am (gummimochi asked me weeks in advance to cover Episode 8, and I waited until the day before to watch the first seven episodes), but because watching it was like comfort food for the optic stems—familiar, but pleasant.

Which isn’t to say the subject matter was all that pleasant, since the show dealt with murder, wrongful imprisonment, revenge, forbidden love, and friends-turned-enemies, but you know how it goes by now. Normally every year carries with it a few old-school melodramas, which is a change from when the market was practically saturated with them. Before game-changing bandwagons like time travel and ghost-seeing arrived on the scene, the freshest idea to be added to the pool of melodramatic plot points was fauxcest, which I’m sure none of us miss.

So in lieu of being especially imaginative or mold-breaking, what makes a good melo good is its level of commitment to the genre and the paaaain of its characters. And it’s there that Full Sun succeeded, though it’s not going to sweep any awards for it. And you know what? That’s okay. It’s not like we’re rewarding a show for underachieving, because we’ve all seen shows that try to do everything and achieve nothing (hay there, Doctor Stranger), but Full Sun actually delivered on its promises. It may not have been groundbreaking, but it was solid.

Yoon Kye-sang was both beautiful to look at and compelling as the wrongfully-accused hero who ends up falling in love with the daughter of the man who ruined his life. Though the players and their motivations got pretty murky by the end, Se-ro’s emotional journey remained clear, making his mixture of seething anger and vulnerability into a standout performance. In that, he wasn’t alone—though veteran supporting actor Jo Jin-woong is awesome in everything, this was his first time being second lead. And he freaking OWNED IT. So take heed, dramaland, and cast him in more things. You won’t be disappointed.

Truth or Truth: Either Son Ho-joon signed on thinking he’d have a role where it would actually matter if all his scenes were suddenly removed. Or, the writer really just screwed the pooch on that one.

 

Secret Love Affair

Undoubtedly one of the best dramas of the year, Secret Love Affair marked the second project from the writer/director duo (man, I’m starting to sound like a broken record with all the reunions this year) behind landmark cable ratings hit A Wife’s Credentials, and which also starred Kim Hee-ae as a cheating spouse.

In the interim between the two dramas, the director helmed last year’s fantastic and unforgettable End of the World, which meant that expectations for this project were sky-high, nigh unreachable—and yet all expectations were met. Some were even exceeded. Secret Love Affair might have been a slow burn when compared to dramas from the Big 3, but you just can’t beat that Perfect Drama Trifecta of writing, acting, and directing when you get it. It’s rare these days to have a show that’s as technically flawless as it is artistically resonant, which is an area where cable has shown itself to have a distinct advantage. When you’re not working in the maelstrom of the live-shoot system, good things can happen.

This was the project Yoo Ah-in really needed, not only to show us that he knows his craft, but to also show that he’s not incapable of picking a good project. (He’s had more success in movies, but his drama picks since Sungkyunkwan Scandal haven’t exactly been hits.) This role was also a deviation from his penchant for being the strong quiet type, because that role was filled by Kim Hee-ae. Quite marvelously, in fact.

As the (much) younger man in the illicit love affair, Yoo played an impassioned youth with a gift for playing the piano. What initially started out as a means to mask her corrupt boss’ illegal dealings by nurturing this poor, disenfranchised boy into an educated musician soon became something more. They were brought together by their love of music, resulting in an oft-parodied scene wherein the two play a piano duet together and become so absorbed in the music and each others’ skill that the act of playing becomes a metaphor for sex. Literally. He actually orgasms in the middle of the piece.

The progression of their relationship was well-done on all fronts, achieving a real-world sense of poignancy that’s so often missing in romantic dramas these days. Kim Hee-ae perfectly embodied a woman who’s lived most of her life trapped in a cage of her own making, and one who suddenly finds her entire way of life shaken by a man who sees her for who she really is. Their love changed the both of them, and gave us two satisfying character arcs in the place of one. The repercussions were real, the scope far-reaching, and the personal stakes always compelling. Bravo, Secret Love Affair. Bravo.

Truth or Truth: A drama like this proves its worth not only in its use of sound, but in its use of silence. Or, maybe some scenes had you thinking, “That was pretty neat for someone’s experimental film school project.”

 

Doctor Stranger

Is there any one thing we can blame this mess on? While no one can say the writing was anything less than a complete disaster, the directing certainly didn’t do the show any favors either. With his last two dramas, PD Jin Hyuk has established a pattern for blowing his wad (of money) too quickly and too early, leaving the show floundering after the first few weeks have passed. One of my biggest gripes with last year’s Master’s Sun was its inconsistency of vision—the first episode was needlessly bombastic and almost at war with the script, featuring nice-looking but ultimately superfluous effects there only to look pretty.

Which would have been all well and good if the visual language had been carried through to the end, so that maybe your previously CG-enhanced ghosts wouldn’t have to switch to using white body paint instead. The directing commits the exact same error here, with the first two episodes taking place in Budapest and featuring all the bells and whistles money could buy. All that was missing was a script and a pool of actual dollars from the budget for the cast to swim in.

To be fair, some loss of quality is to be expected when a show is in the throes of live-shoot, though that was less a problem for Doctor Stranger than the lack of moderation in the directing department and the lack of sense everywhere else. In hindsight, the fact that the show had multiple genre disorder should have been a warning sign—because if you were wondering how a medical action thriller/political melodrama/romantic spy travesty could possibly work, it didn’t.

The ideas it started out with were promising, most notably the hero’s dark past as a medical genius growing up in an oppressive North Korean regime where he was forced to perform horrific human experiments. Though he eventually begins his new life as a doctor in South Korea, he’s unable to forget the love of his life he lost in the North until her doppelgänger suddenly joins his hospital. Hoon’s failing as a character can be blamed on many things, but Lee Jong-seok’s performance would not be one of them. Kang So-ra deserves a mention here too, as long as we’re talking actors who tried their damnedest.

Speaking of which, Jin Se-yeon’s character was an absolute disaster on every front, the least of which was acting (pause for surprise), since it honestly seemed like the writer had no idea who she wanted Jae-hee to be. Was she Hoon’s true love returned to him as a spy after learning how to be a doctor in two short years, or a coincidental lookalike? I’m not against a good mystery if it’s teased out correctly, but the arbitrary outcome made the contradictory clues and groundwork ultimately moot. Story of this show’s life.

Truth or Truth: Doctor Stranger defied its own internal logic and negated its own setups so often that it had to be a case of self-sabotage. Or, it was all foreplay and no payoff (foreplay not included).

 

Triangle

Despite being set in the present day, there was a strangely dated feel to Triangle, like it didn’t quite belong. Part of me wonders if that one-of-these-things-is-not-like-the-other quality was due in part to the reunion of the writer/director duo behind classic megahit All In, though that’s not much of an explanation unless they spent the last decade in a hermetically sealed vault only to emerge for the filming of this drama.

But you have to admit, there’s a lot about Triangle that’s reminiscent of this team’s last casino-centric show, in that it features a hero with a talent for gambling and a graceful, principled heroine working as a dealer. Add two brothers, a birth secret, and some unremarkable side characters to fill all the empty spaces that are bound to crop up when you take what’s essentially a simple story and stretch it out to an overlong twenty-six(!!) episodes.

Granted, the show was originally slated for twenty-four episodes, and was already stretching itself pretty thin. The two episode extension foisted on it not because it was a runaway hit (it was pulling in moderate numbers), but because the drama slated to come after it needed more time was the final nail in the coffin. I can imagine how unfair that must’ve felt to everyone involved when such an extension was neither wanted or needed, especially since scheduling conflicts with a couple of the actors forced the show to sacrifice the ending they’d planned in order to accommodate the changes in the cast.

Out of the three long-lost brothers central to the tale, all bets would’ve likely been placed on veteran actor Lee Beom-soo to carry the bulk of the show’s emotional weight on his capable shoulders. Speculations as to why that didn’t happen are twofold: (1) His character was a failure of conception and had nothing to do—not even a job—for most of the drama, and/or (2) maybe Lee Beom-soo was taking a mental break. Alternatively, maybe being paired with a soggy napkin for most of his scenes brought the caliber of his performance down.

What a triumphant breakout role for idol-actor Jaejooong, though. He became Heo Young-dal, perfectly embodying a childlike sense of naivety and foolhardiness with a more jaded sensibility stemming from years spent as an orphaned street rat. His was a character with hopes and dreams and nothing special to his name—not money, status, or even an education. Young-dal’s vulnerability paired with his daredevil nature was what made him one of the most unexpected character triumphs of the year. Dramaland needs to know that there’s life outside the genius pool.

Truth or Truth: If the show gave us nothing else, it at least gave us Jaejoong’s first true breakout performance, which was worth its weight in gold. Or, you don’t like puppies, kittens, and freedom.

 

Fated To Love You

Fated To Love You OST – Ailee – “잠시 안녕처럼 (Goodbye My Love)” [ Download ]

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Hands down, this was my most anticipated drama of the year. Back in the days where we had to walk fifteen miles to the nearest underground streaming site, every episode was split into no less than six parts and accessible only through a web browser (you darn kids have it so easy now with your glass rectangles and moving picture shows). The original Taiwanese version of Fated To Love You was reaching unprecedented ratings at home and a surprising amount of popularity abroad in a world that was still fairly new to streaming subs, and transcended linguistic and cultural barriers to become the crack drama to end all crack dramas. It was cheesy, it was soapy, it was so far from perfect that it didn’t even know how to spell it, but it’ll always hold a special place in my heart.

So when this year’s Korean adaptation was announced, I was surprisingly unperturbed by the whole idea, unlike the usual instaboycott reaction fans of any original might have to news of a revamp. Looking back, I think I was just excited at the prospect of a new audience getting hooked on a flashier, prettier, and less-off-puttingly-wacky version of a story I enjoyed so much. I wasn’t quite sure how the story of a rich man marrying the poor and simplistically naive girl he accidentally knocks up would stand the test of time, or how this adaptation would handle the sometimes-wild mood swings the original had, where it could go straight from a slapstick joke to an abortion clinic, then back to slapstick again. How did this Fated To Love You solve that problem? Let me answer that question with another question: Did it?

This is one of those shows that’s a bit painful to look back on, because there’s just as much good to recommend as there are qualifiers to go with it. If the show was only its first half, I would proudly say I loved it, from the drug-induced night of conception to the snails haunting our hero’s every step—it was everything good about romantic comedies and more. It managed to be both gut-bustingly hilarious and tearfully heartfelt, with masterful comedic and dramatic performances by Jang Hyuk and Jang Nara, in their first reunion on the small screen since Successful Story of a Bright Girl (in the year of our lord 2002).

As Lee Gun, a descendant of royalty and sole inheritor of his father’s-grandfather’s-great-great-grandfather’s looks and fortune, Jang Hyuk was absolutely perfect. There’s really not another word that can adequately sum up what a treat his performance was on every conceivable level—and yes, that even includes his uncontrollable hair and maniacal laugh. The level of commitment and energy he poured into the role was unparalleled, but well-matched by the more subdued performance by Jang Nara. In anyone else’s hands Mi-young would’ve been considered a pox upon women’s suffrage, but in her hands, Mi-young mirrored the post-it girl in all of us—which isn’t to say we’re all secretly doormats, only that learning how and when to just say “No” is a universal part of the human experience. And I really liked how her character confronted that in as grounded a way as an unexpectedly-pregnant-and-suddenly-married woman could manage.

But then there’s the second half, which derailed most of what the first accomplished through a needless amnesia plot and possibly the most infuriating act of noble idiocy I’ve ever witnessed. Picking it apart piece by piece would take too long when it’s easier to just reject it wholesale, and I’d honestly prefer to just stick my head in the sand and remember the good times. If he so wishes, Jang Hyuk can pay restitution by starring in another romantic comedy. Just saying.

Truth or Truth: Gun’s actions were completely justified by his fear of succumbing to his genetic disease/Melodramatic’s Syndrome. Or, the show actually thought our couple needed the time apart in order to… do… stuff.

 

It’s Okay, It’s Love

I find polarizing shows really interesting when on the outside looking in, because on the one hand, when a show inspires intense discussions and debate rather than just pleasing everyone or fading into the background, it’s likely accomplished something. (Though I’d argue that pleasing everyone is more difficult than pissing off a few.) On the other hand, It’s Okay, It’s Love arrived on the scene as a pre-packaged pot stirrer practically overstuffed with self-importance, or as PD Kim Kyu-tae put it in an interview, “I think It’s Okay, It’s Love is a necessary drama.” He later added that as long as he balanced the lighter romcom elements with the more conventional melodramatic ones, the result would be “close to perfect.”

There was a feeling at certain points that the directing seemed to be at war with the script, which isn’t something I would’ve initially expected from a team on its third project together. And while writer Noh Hee-kyung has wowed me in the past, each new drama since Padam Padam has somehow felt more emotionally disconnected than the last, despite the bevy of real feelings playing out in any given scene. This was especially the case in It’s Okay, where the goings-on of a psychologically disturbed hero and his girlfriend/psychiatrist were presented in the drama equivalent of a fishbowl. We could look without touching and think without feeling. Best of no worlds.

And while the director learned to ease off a little from grinding the camera lens into his actors’ faces, he found a new way to make sure we all recognized what a special snowflake he was by juxtaposing any moment that got too melodramatic with happy-poppy-fun-time music. Some of the best movies in history have used unusual music choices to punctuate some of the most serious of scenes, but it’d be a mistake to think that’s a formula that always works. At least for me, it was actively frustrating to have a musical record scratch cut in juuust when I was starting to get emotionally involved in any given scene. It left me bewildered more times than I can count, because emotional investment is the whole point—why would you undermine that on purpose? And if that wasn’t the aim, then what was?

Jo In-sung put in a commendable performance as an obsessive compulsive celebrity author (and DJ, and property owner) with a worldview that somehow managed to be both jaded and naive. He was the outsider looking in when it came to human emotions, though he seemed to have a better grasp on them than the spitfire Gong Hyo-jin, despite the fact that human emotions were supposed to be her job. I’ll confess to liking parts of their romance, though not necessarily how her phobia of sex was cured by having sex. Was this dramaland’s first case of a hero with magical unmentionables? Should we consider that a milestone or a cause for concern?

Truth or Truth: It’s Okay, It’s Love wins points for tackling the taboo subject of mental illness with sensitivity and restraint. Or, it was just okay at it.

 

Surplus Princess

I don’t normally gravitate to romantic comedies as a genre, and will admit here and now that I probably wouldn’t have seen this show had I not been itching to see more Song Jae-rim after Age of Feeling. And just in time, too—I’d started to worry that I was some freak of nature who couldn’t enjoy a simple, bubbly show like a normal well-adjusted person and that I was doomed to a life of melodramas forevermore.

Then Surplus Princess came along, and I fell head over heels in love with the world it created and the characters who populated it (minus the obligatorily awful second lead). For being so lighthearted in tone and silly, the show had an amazing sense of humor it exploited at every opportunity possible. It had its finger on the pulse of common issues plaguing young people—like unemployment—and used its social awareness to inject poignancy and real-world meaning into a narrative that could’ve just as easily spent all ten episodes wading in the shallow end.

What I ended up loving most about the show was its level of commitment to all things big or small in its insulated, lived-in little world, to the point where it could sell us on a mermaid living in the Han river with an addiction to smart phones (which she kept in a waterproof case). It could sell us on a witch with a potion to make her human for a hundred days, and his big ole teddy bear heart. The only thing it failed to sell me on was the ending, though I can only be so upset when the drama had to cobble together a finale after four episodes were cut.

But I’ll always have fond memories of Surplus Princess despite the romantic conclusion, even if its short tenure on the airwaves is lamentable. It had the kind of laughs that were good for the soul, and a cast of characters that looked like they were having a blast in every scene. The shows that leave the strongest impressions don’t always have to be the ones that reach down into our souls and fester there—sometimes they can be the ones that simply remind us to smile.

Truth or Truth: Out of all the hilarious visual gags, Witch Ahn streaking across the beach as a merman with a fish upper body was hands-down the funniest. Or, you can choose your own adventure.

 

Three Musketeers

Touted as the first season out of three planned for cable network tvN, Three Musketeers had all the makings of a hit before even making it to the airwaves—what with the requisite idol cast member, millions of dollars, the director/writer duo behind previous network hits like Nine: Nine Time Travels and Queen In-hyun’s Man, not to mention the whole business regarding the famous and unmistakable source material serving as this adaptation’s foundation.

The idea of moving the events of Alexandre Dumas’ tale of brotherhood and adventure to one of the most tumultuous periods in Korea’s history—one that would mark the end of an independent and autonomous Joseon at the hands of the Qing Empire during the second Manchu invasion of 1636—was well-conceived, in that it allowed the show to play fast and loose with certain historical details without throwing all semblance of its sageukness out the window.

As evidenced by Empress Ki’s startling popularity and the rising trend of fusion sageuks in general, historical accuracy isn’t the barometer it used to be when it comes to telling stories involving well-known (and well-worn) royals, so it comes down to how believable the deviations are made out to be. In this case, Prince Sohyeon (the Aramis of this retelling) had more than enough reason to do most of his gallivanting outside the palace walls, considering that he and his father were only installed in the palace after a coup.

So it was fair that Sohyeon preferred life on the outside rather than miring himself in a political subplot which started out decently enough before devolving into an unfocused mess dependent on the machinations of a mustachioed and way-too-enamored-with-the-sound-of-his-own-voice villain and Sohyeon’s vengeful first love. Which would have been fine, really, if only their motivations hadn’t stopped making sense somewhere around the eight hour mark.

The show had a good mystery going when it came to the initial parting of Prince Sohyeon and the show’s resident femme fatale—which involved murder, tears, and a suicide command (in that order, no less)—and while it answered those questions adequately, it didn’t seem to know what to do with itself in the aftermath. When your villains stop making sense, the story inevitably suffers, and that’s when people start teleporting for the sake of dramatic timing and random arrows start flying because script.

At the end of the day though, it was an entertaining romp and a breakthrough performance for Jung Yong-hwa. He may not be winning a daesang anytime soon, but his earnestness shined through in a role which called on him to be young, foolhardy—and above all, likable. Luckily he was all of those things, and then a little more. Too bad we saw the last of his bromance with Lee Jin-wook and the other musketeers now that plans for future seasons have gone the way of the dodo. Maybe for the better.

Truth or Truth: Prince Sohyeon’s air of mystique and emotional unavailability was completely intentional and the result of a fine-tuned performance by Lee Jin-wook. Or, maybe he was a little too unavailable.

 

Liar Game

Last but certainly not least (spoiler alert: it’s actually the best) is tvN’s Liar Game, which may not have earned high enough ratings to be officially dubbed a sleeper hit, but garnered enough critical acclaim and buzz here and abroad to be considered a home run for everyone involved. It wasn’t just a drama. It was an experience. Cheesy? Maybe. True? Definitely.

Based on a Japanese drama of the same name, Liar Game boasted one of the most intriguing premises of the year and the kind of follow-through that would make any lover of good storytelling go weak in the knees. Starring Kim So-eun as a kindhearted but financially struggling girl who suddenly finds herself a contestant of a sinister reality show which pits contestants against each other in a game of lies, brains, and betrayal—but for a grand prize of ten million life-changing dollars that even she can’t refuse.

It’s when she employs the help of master swindler and alarmingly handsome grumpycat Lee Sang-yoon that the story shifts into high gear, as he becomes her guardian angel and guide into a world of deceit she knows very little of. Through her, the drama posed relevant and deeply resonant questions about trust and virtue, and in doing so it challenged the status quo where cynicism is considered practical while optimism is often sneered at.

They faced a mutual enemy in the form of Shin Sung-rok, who gave us a truly chilling and unforgettable performance as Kang Do-young, a Mephistophelian game show host with an uncanny ability to see into people’s souls and use them in whatever way he saw fit. Less of a man and more like a force of nature, Do-young pursued his goals with the sort of one-mindedness that could only come from someone unburdened by any semblance of morality. If he and Ha Woo-jin were evenly matched in wits, Do-young’s inner emptiness gave him a distinct advantage when it came to our human lie detector of a hero. How can you tell someone is lying if they’ve removed—or had removed for them—what traditionally makes us, well, us?

Truth or Truth: Liar Game was the best drama of the year. Or, it was the greatest drama of the year. #sixseasonsandamovie

 

THE WHOLE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT

It’s hard to believe that this is already my third time doing this, because it feels like I just finished writing last year’s review. No, really—about three months of my life were erased by that brain injury, which marked an epoch in my life that will now always be fondly tied to Dramabeans, and less fondly so to Age of Feeling.

Special thanks to javabeans and girlfriday for their encouragement and support over the years. And to gummimochi—you are the lighthouse to my stormy sea, and if you were ever unjustly murdered, know that I would avenge your death.

To the Beanies, thank you for another wonderful year of lively discussion and group fanning sessions. Thank you for the love rain when I needed it most. You guys are awesome.

 
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I didn't watch many of the dramas mentioned here but watched many that are not.
I am absolutely guilty of not watching "Liar game" yet, but it's on my watch list.
Thanks for the wonderful year review, it sure was a fast year in dramaland.
Hoping for some more cracktastic dramas in 2015 ?

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does anybody know how to make that picture effect that heads2 made on top? Should I just go and ask her directly? If only she would read the comments here. Any idea, pls? Thanks!

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That graphic on top was great. I haven't even read the post yet, I came to the comments sections just to praise the graphic before I read the post b/c I thought it was that great.

Unfortunately, I am technologically challenged so I can't help answer your actual question though. Sorry!

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Agree, that graphic is really cool. There are probably lots of ways of doing it. The one way I can think of, without actually doing it, is to have two main layers. One for the "soundwave" image, and the other a collage of the drama pics. Then make the sound wave image transparent, and have the collage layer be under it. You may have to play around with it some. Hope that gives you some ideas!

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You are so RIGHT!

LIAR GAME is the BEST DRAMA this year!

and hopefully next year IF there is a second season, which I am praying for.

I miss my pet....

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Please oh please, there just HAVE to be a second season for Liar Game. No Buts, no Howevers. How can we be denied from seeing Ha Woo Jin and Kang Do Young after the way they've validated my entire year of drama- watching?!?!

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Forgot to mention the BEST DRAMA LINE this year,
"I am just a dog right now. I'll show you what happens when you mess with my owner."

Another dose of Ha Woo Jin please.

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*fans self* I may never recover from that line. And of course "DaJung-ah" *swoons*

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and Dal Goo! such a soft teddy. my favorite (former) thug ever.

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and Do Young!! Such a complex villain-- ugh, can't wait for Season 2!

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When I saw the title 'Lie Detection' concept, the first drama came to my mind is Discovery of Romance, but it's not even written here.

I enjoyed Empress Ki (big fan of Ha Ji Won since her younger days), Fated To Love You and Liar Game.

Eventhough some people said Secret Love Affair is good drama, I dropped after second episode. Just not my taste.

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Thank you for the major effort writing all this down and writing it so well! I laughed a lot reading these (especially the Dr. Stranger review) but I also decided to put Secret Love Affair on my list (gotta have an experimental student film night sometime). I agree intellectually about some of the jarring juxtapositions in It's Okay, That's Love, yet strangely, I was so emotionally involved in that show that things I knew should bother me didn't. And from the flip side, I never got emotionally caught up in You from a Star, so I never stopped being annoyed by the flat secondary characters.

I'm impressed you can keep a cool head and give smart, balanced analysis on all these shows. Awesome work.

Especially Dr Stranger. "Because if you were wondering how a medical action thriller/political melodrama/romantic spy travesty could possibly work, it didn’t." Hee hee.

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Thank you 2014 for giving us Ha Woo Jin aka Lee Sang Yoon with bangs.

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Him and Captain Awesome.

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I have to add that Fated was sold for like two or was it three times what You From Another Star did, of course it came with a build in fan base with Jang Nara and being a chinese drama remake. I have to say You From Another Star was a drama I watched and pretty much enjoyed but once it was over I could not not really remember much about the drama at all..lol

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Isn't Fated a Taiwanese drama remake? And Jang Nara doing mainland China projects (not Taiwanese)? It isn't a the same...

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Yep, FTLY was a Taiwanese drama but it was quite popular it the mainland too. Anyway, it was so long ago that I almost can't remember, but JNR was extremely popular in her early career in TW because of I forgot which of Bright Girl and My Love Patzzi (oh god, my age). And afterwards in Mainland China too because of Bratty Princess, which was also an insane hit in TW. Usually, the most popular dramas on China are extremely popular in TW as well and vice versa because of the similarities in culture, so there.

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mainland chinese think of taiwan as being part of china, or at lest that is the 'party' line..in fact there was a big fuss, because they also count Korea as part of the 'greater' China as well. And yes the TW version did well in the mainland Joe Chen the female lead of that drama pretty much work 100% in China these days for big $$. As for Jang Nara, it hard to put across how, well perhaps not popular, but even more important, how well known she is in China. She pretty much the only korean star there there acually known throught china, while say super junoir and others are pretty much only known of in the capital and ex colonies, there is a huge difference. It is why she always in such demand endorcement wise.

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@paroles & @bjharm,
Thanks to both of you for the insight. It helped me. As an outsider (= no Mandarin, no Taiwanese or any other Chinese language skills) I perceive movies and dramas from Taiwan and Mainland China so differently that to me they are not interchangeable. As for the political implications, I rather not try to touch them as I'm not qualified to judge them [ I'm European what do I know about that ;) ]

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I always love the headers that you make, they are always stunning!

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I absolutely LOVED Liar Game!!!! It was an awesome drama!! I loved all the main characters. There was thrill, suspense, heart, and friendship in LG :) Lee Sang Yoon and Kim So Eun is a great lead pair. I hope they star in a romantic comedy sometime. Or better, I hope that there will be a second season of LG with them and that it airs soon!

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You took the words right out of my mouth! They had such great chemistry that I hope we get to see more in Liar Game Season 2! (with a more fully fledged loveline too!)

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That last picture! Shin Sung Rok should smile more, as in, sincerely, not 'I'm gonna ask on your health but I'm scheming for your death' kinda way. Though I like both honestly.

And in contrary I think Ha Woo J- Oops, I mean Lee Sang Yoon looks the hottest when not. Put on that thinking face!

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Liar Game, all the way.

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Thank you for espousing your love for Secret Love Affair. I so wished that it had been recapped, I thought that I was alone in my infatuation. I don't now how they got me to root for infidelity, but I have fallen in love with Yoo Ah-In.

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If it was recapped, there would've been chock full of people deriding it for its moral concept…it would've taken from the beautiful drama that it was, I think.

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Heads!! You just have the same taste as mine and I love your reviews. Hope next year you don't pick any drama that waste your time hehehe

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I hurt my cheeks grinning so much at this review. Was it the Song Jaerim love? That Full Sun marathon story? The Liar Game questions at the end of each drama? Your pledge to avenge gummimochi? That final gif?

Whatever it is, I'm glad you're here and sufferi--- err... recapping dramas for us. :D (No, really, I'm glad you ladies are all here. It's been a very eventful year.)

HEARTEU HEARTEU ♥

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When it comes to recapping stinkers, Heads is a master at turning lemons into lemonade. I'm so glad she suffers along with us, ok that sounded kind of sadistic, but Heads you make even the worst dramas bearable via your snarkiness and providing us the space to vent (even in the face of angry fans sometimes). It makes the praise you do give out that much more genuine. And sometimes there are happy surprises in those stinkers (see: Song Jae-rim, Jaejoong)

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Very happy! Yes :DDDD

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Heads, I know you have been getting a lot of stinkers to recap. I am glad to see that did not turn you off from dramaland. I liked your wit when the script writers had none. You truly made some of those god awful shows enjoyable.

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"I liked your wit when the script writers had none."

HAHAHA True! That's why her pain is our gain (err just recapping wise, ok? No more accidents and sickness in 2015!!!)

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+1!!! Here's to no more accidents and sickness! Thanks, Heads!

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Liar game is pretty much the only drama this year i loved from start to finish that remained consistent and entertaining. Bravo. I'm proud that my current love (Kim So Eun) got to star in this show even if her character was frustrating.

I doubt many people here watched age of feeling, but thanks for pointing out that Rim pretty much stole the show away from everyone. That drama only made sense when mo il hwa stepped into the scene. His presence was like rain in a long drought.

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Yeah totally agree Liar Game was the best drama I saw this year. I hope to god they make a second season soon! Want to see more from the lovely trio.

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Thanks for the wonderful drama reviews HeadsNo2!
I also feel like this year has just zipped by, but oddly enough it feels as though a lot has happened at the same time!
And oh gosh HA WOO JIN!!! How I love thee! Loved, loved, loved Liar Game. It honestly was the highlight of my year, showing just exactly what super writing, and intricate machinations should be in a show. It's awesome how Liar Game has made it in the list for all the reviews this year, and I hope it's achieving a ridiculous amount of love in Korea as well. The gif at the end was super appropriate seeing how they were saying "Season 2!" And I agree wholeheartedly. More please! Because we all need more of HWJ, NDJ and SSR!

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Thank you heads! your in the same situation with me in 'fated to love you' I don't know if I'm going to recommend it or not.

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I don't know how you find the time to watch all of this!

It's awesome. I'm going to catch Liar Game now after hearing a lot of + things about it here.

I have 2 weeks off from school. Cheers to drama crazy time!

Ah, thanks for the review. I didn't want to read all of it just in case of spoilers.

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What about You're All Surrounded?

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oh, come to think.... Ahn Jae Hyun was a doctor there.... and his strange look taking care of Gookie.... and next he plays a vampire doctor.... yeah, it was there.

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when you throw it it sticks aka grumpycat it is for Woo Jin! Sorry to see mind of the masses is killing Liar games´chances at winning the Beanie Polls, but it is still the best. If Do Young won´t return as the ending promised, I am going to scratch someones´face.

for me it is also the year when I saw more Korean movies in the cinema than ever. and now I also found that one of our artsier cinemas has a lot of them on DVD. I am so tempted to buy.

but after sending 86 christmas cards to all my relatives, I am pretty broke.

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and friends and workplaces and the Folk Music Center and some libraries and....

I think I need to ENTER Liar Game to cover that. so.... bring it on again please.

did I just call the Devil? I think I need. I felt a gust of cold wind

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Yup It's a shame that alll the YFAS buzz is killing off any chance of LG winning. I mean how could DMJ ever win over HWJ the grumpycat? xD

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Thank you for the review.

Your taste in dramas seems to be kinda similar to mine, so I pay particular attention to your recommendations. I watched Heartless City just because you put it as one of the best in your review last year (and I love it !), and I had put End Of The World in my must-watch list. So, I would also put several of this year's recommendations in the list. :)

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I COMPLETELY forgot about Pretty Man, that's how bad it was.

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Heads, you are a freak of nature, but I mean that in the most admiring way possible. You're just frickin' amazing.

Thanks for the wonderful Year in Review by HeadsNo2. I'm glad you got an opportunity to sing your Oppa's praises, and got to let him sing here, too. :D

The most surprising part of the review for me was the realization that Pretty Man aired this year~ I definitely feel like 2014 flew by, but it feels like that show aired forever ago. It was nice to see Jo Jin-woong, SLA, and gummimochi all get much deserved shout-outs. (It's so sweet how jb+gf, and you+gummi are like recapper OTPs.)

I hope you've fully recovered from your head injury and that you have a sense of how much you're appreciated 'round here. May you have a fulfilling 2015, including being blessed with recapping some of the years best dramas!

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+1
I'm a fan of your recapping style, Heads!!
May your recapped dramas are the ones truly worth-watching!!

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Liar Game and Bad Guys and My Spring Days ♥♥

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Thanks so much Heads. That was a fun-filled review which I truly enjoyed reading. I have to agree with what you said for all the shows that I watched, and try to catch those that I missed, because they sound good written up by you.

And since the year does whoosh by so fast, I'm already looking forward to your next year end review in the near future!!! :D

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HeadsNo2,

Thanks for your dramas' "Year In Review". I'm considering to try "Liar Game", thanks to your positive review of it.

But most of all Thank you (and gummimochi) for recapping "Fated to Love You". It is my favorite drama of the year, from beginning to end, from first half to second half. No ifs or buts, I just love FTLY! And it all started with your recap of episode 2.

Have a happy holiday and a K-drama gems-filled New Year!

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nice

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cort.as/HmkJ

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i've been avoiding the Liar Game drama because I loved the manga so much, but after your review and all the comments I feel I must set my prejudice aside and give it a try. That and Empress Ki, which again I was afraid to start because of its sheer length.
Secret Love Affair sounds too intense and melodramatic for my taste, and Surplus Princess too fluffy, but since you've lauded both in the same breath I guess I should give them a try too.
I gave up watching Man from the Stars I think 3/4th of the way in, just lost interest for some reason, which also happened to me with Sungkyunkwan Scandal. Maybe should resume both.
Now to find the time to watch them all =_= we need more hours in a day!

Btw I don't know how much variety you guys watch, but definitely check out The Genius season 3 that came out this year. It's as good as season 1, and the finale promises to be even better. It's modeled on Liar Game and is quite brilliant.

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Maybe I should really watch Secret Love Affair. But I still have to finish watching End of the World, which is really awesome! I know this is far fetched considering it has 50 episodes but I believe that Yoona Street is really worth a try. Best 2014 drama in my opinion. :) Jtbc has been doing good.

Thanks for another year of recapping, Heads! Always be healthy and have a merry Christmas!

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I was just wondering if there's new year end review and then BAM there's your review!! Thanks HeadsNo2 for another enjoyable (or not-so) year of recapping.

Empress Ki: I'm pretty sure I can't blame the directing in this one because it's all so pretty. The writing makes it exciting, not a moment is boring. The acting from everyone is just amazing. And if anyone wants to watch it, trust me it's worth. In gummi's review I commented my friend watched it in 2 days, she said she watched it 24 hours/day with little sleep, little food and of course a little bit FF. But now she becomes EK fan.

FTLY: Even if the second half is plagued with noble idiocy and infuriating plots, I still fated to love this show and everyone else. JH and JNR seems having blast playing as Gun and Mi Young here. Really enjoyable drama and one of the best dramas of the year for me.

IOIL: I enjoy the second half after I turn off my brain and just enjoy the prettiness on screen. Jo In Sung is mesmerized and his performance worth of a Daesang. DO is a revelation. And everyone else are capable actors. The writing is kind of groundbreaking and deviates from the standard kdrama. But truly, I still can't say I love this drama.

DS: Is there any show stranger than it? I'm glad I just watching it like wind breeze through with no expectations and no emotional investment. At the end of the day I don't even remember what this show is all about and only can recount the grand picture.

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The only drama that i really love n getting addicted in this year is empress ki n three musketeers
Empress ki is really good, usually drama with more than 30 episode become boring in the end but it's not, i really like it but it was really sad because my favorit charracter has really tragic life, i love wang yo so much

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Heads,

I am sorry to read that your brain injury has caused you a memory loss. It must not feel easy to wonder retrospectively what you have done and said during those 3 months, whether in "good" or "bad". Maybe you have already been teased for supposed deeds which turned out to be made-up. Even though some may seem the upside of forgetting sad memories, said memories have made you who you are. At least, from what you have shared, the accident that you were involved in did not cause more damages. Head trauma can lead to such disastrous consequences.

So we are glad to have you back and still very much look forward to reading your witty recaps and year-end reviews.

All the best!

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Oh, Heads. 2014 really must have been taxing for you, both in real life and drama-watching land - I wouldn't wish Basketball, Age of Feeling, Dr Stranger AND the last two episodes of Triangle on even my worst enemy.

(totally agree with you about some of the performances being better than the dramas they are in, though. Jaejoong, Lee Jong-seok, Jang Hyuk, Jang Nara, Jo Bo-ah, Song Jae-rim, Kang Sora.....they all did their best, and sometimes in was glorious (special props to Gun's insane laugh, I miss it a little even now. And to our pervy mermaid, despite the mess of an ending that drama had - Jo Bo-ah proved her leading lady chops right from scene 1).

And count me in as another one who is sad that 3 Musketeers Season 2 won't happen. I needed more Lee Jin-wook/Seo Hyun-jin, he does a beautiful line in deadpan trolling. I'm saving some of these dramas (SLA) for days when the drama slate feels blank, as it did for a good chunk of 2014.

Here's wishing you a great 2015, and no more accidents or horrible dramas to recap!

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Also, I'm not sure PD Jin Hyuk is entirely to blame for the mess that his drama became.

Based on his past work (City Hunter/Master's Sun) he can certainly deliver a stylish, beautifully-shot work even without the need for a million special effects, and he's good at getting decent performances out of his actors, when there is something to get (see: all the leads of CH/MS), and especially at exploiting sexual tension/chemistry. He's also great at adding little touches that enhance the overall experience of the work - like the focus on So Ji-sub's hands in Master's Sun, or the way certain scenes are framed and played.

Unfortunately, even he couldn't do much with a script where he openly said that SBS ran interference to emphasise on the romance parts (which only works when both your main leads bring something to the table besides a pretty face - well, Lee Jong-seok did that much at least and did a great job basically carrying this mess, but he was alone in that) and keep switching genres (which only works when your scriptwriter knows what they are doing). Reading between the lines of his post-drama interviews, he sounded quite frustrated - can't blame him.

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Am glad you're doing well after that accident. We were all pretty upset about it and I'm sure tons of prayers went up.

Your recap makes me want to see Empress Ki but I'm useless at marathoning 50 episoders. Now am regretting not watching it. Am also regretting not watching Surplus Princess. I might get to that one soon.

Thanks for the reviews

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HeadsNo2 ~

Thanks for all that you do.

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Adding Liar Game to the "watch later" list!

Heads, thank you so very much for all you do. Your wonderful reviews and recaps are just another example of what makes Dramabeans so great.

Glad to know you're doing well after that accident that worried us so. ....... Wishing you continued health and many, many enjoyable hours of drama-watching.

By the way ... yeah, I agree with you, Jang Hyuk appearing in another rom-com would be a payment well-received!!

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huh? where's part 2

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Loved this! Thank you for all you have done! And hopefully the bad drama streak will end next year *throws fairy dust*

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"Maybe it’s because we’ve had our share of forbidden relationships involving otherworldly partners to earn a sniff of derision whenever vampires/ghosts/werewolves/chaebols grace our screen"

Otherworldly partners? Chaebols? Heads, I had to pause here coz I was laughing so hard....*goes back to read*

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Yay! The prayer circle for Heads worked.

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Secret Love Affair was on my maybe to-watch list, but now after reading Heads' good review, I've really got to watch it soon.

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I love reading your stuff headsno2, your recaps are some of my favourites to read. Thank you!

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+1

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Loved Empress Ki. All actors gave great performances. Too bad the Korean awarding bodies totally ignore it .YFAS also enjoyed it but I think it is overrated.

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Super nice review! Thanks HeadsNo2!

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"Speaking of which, Jin Se-yeon’s character was an absolute disaster on every front, the least of which was acting (pause for surprise) ..."
= Oh, thank you!!!! I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought she (the ACTRESS and the CHARACTER) was an ABSOLUTE disaster! This was one show I truly fervently hoped never happened. It was THAT bad. At least, God's Gift had some redeeming qualities on the acting front. This had none, thanks to this lady who wants to act, but can't act to save her life! She and Krystal (My Lovely Girl) should hug and be BFFs!

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Girl, I love you. Congrats on another year well done. Here's to 2015, excited for you to tell everyone what time it is. XO

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HeadsNo.2, I've been procrastinating all morning, reading your review. Thanks for putting such a huge grin on my face!

I agree with what you wrote about the original Taiwanese Fated to Love You, which I convinced myself to watch all the way thru to figure out why it had been SO lauded. (I had to restart maybe 3 times though, cos I HATED the first episode.) I MUCH preferred the latter third of the show, without all of the idiotic, cheesy, and un-funny mother-driven slapstick.

Like you (maybe), rom-coms take a back seat to other genres unless they feature actors I like, but I was SO very glad to have leapt onto the Marriage Without Dating bandwagon. It gave my cheeks, lungs and diaphragm a good hearty workout, for I found myself laughing so hard at the unexpected embarrassments sprung with such perfect timing.

I'm a one-drama-at-a-time viewer, so by the time I get through my long list of pending dramas, and finally catch up to watching Liar Game and Misaeng, most other beanies will have moved on to newer hits. Still, I'd say of the shows I've watched this year, this would be the order I'd rank things:

1st - Secret Love Affair
2nd - Marriage Without Dating
3rd - It's Okay, It's Love
4th - High School King of Savvy (is this from 2014?)
5th - Three Musketeers

...that's cos this year I watched SO many dramas from previous years: Nine: Nine Time Travels, Queen In-Hyun's Man, Answer Me 1997, White Christmas, Bottom of the 9th With 2 Outs, Arang and the Magistrate, Joseon X-Files, and I Hear Your Voice.

Since most of them weren't from this year, I can only say MY drama-viewing this year was...pretty sublime. : ) Thanks to all the reviews that led me to those titles above! I just realized I actually watched A LOT of rom-coms this year...haha! Maybe I've become a convert after all. : )

Merry Xmas!

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