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If You Like… Contract Marriages

We’re rolling out a new feature, which we’re calling the “If You Like…” series, intended to help you wade through dramaland waters for your favorite plot devices, character types, or recurring themes.

‘Cause you know you’ve got your favorites—or your Achilles heels, as the case may be—whether it’s a soft spot for heartbroken second leads or a need to watch every separated-at-birth show ever created. And while you may have no trouble sussing out what all the crossdressing dramas are (they’re a bit obvious that way), perhaps you’re in the hunt for a less visible trope, or want more dramas that don’t make it on the usual lists of recommended titles.

I’m taking on contract marriages for this first post because I’ve been watching the drama Sweet 18, which I missed when it aired a decade ago. There’s probably a series review post in the works so I won’t give away too much here, but I’ve found it a surprisingly addictive watch despite the age of the show, and it reminded me just how much I love stories of people being shoved together first and then falling in love.

The forced proximity conceit can work in various forms, whether we’re talking reluctant roommates or housekeepers-employers or dorm buddies. But there’s something special about matrimony that makes it my favorite version, when lead characters think they can escape the trappings of a paper-only marriage with their hearts intact, only to fall hard. Maybe it’s because there’s an added gravity to the proceedings when you say “I do,” even if you don’t really mean it at the moment. Or maybe it’s because this subverts the expectation of marriage as a happily-ever-after “reward”—instead, marriage is the vehicle and the setting. The starting point, not the resolution. Muahaha.

Note: We aren’t necessarily endorsing the dramas mentioned here. Some are valid recommendations, while others are included because they fit the category. We’ll leave it to you to judge whether to watch.

 

1% of Anything (2003)

The premise: A kind schoolteacher helps out an elderly man who turns out to be a chaebol chairman. To her shock, she’s named the beneficiary of his huge fortune following his death—and the old man cuts out his own grandson from the will. There’s a caveat, however, that he may inherit if he marries the woman Grandpa has picked. The cold businessman grandson thus strikes up a reluctant acquaintance with the heroine, resulting in a contract marriage that is supposed to be temporary but which eventually grows into romance.

Caveat: I haven’t watched 1% of Anything, but as one of the earliest contract-marriage dramas, it seems remiss to leave it off the list. So this isn’t an outright recommendation as much as it’s a heads-up, if you want to see Kang Dong-won back when he was still doing dramas (sigh), playing a bristly chaebol who wants to earn his success on his own terms, falling for Kim Jung-hwa as a sweet heroine. The two apparently butt heads quite a bit at the outset, which gives way to attraction as they grow closer.

The story’s based on a popular novel written by Hyun Go-eun, who was also the drama’s scriptwriter. At 26 episodes, it’s a bit longer than most trendy rom-coms, but considering how much I love stories where the guy is initially a jerk but soon finds himself getting jealous and petty, I may have to put this on my list.

 

Sweet 18 (2004)

The premise: A marriage between the grandchildren of two lifelong friends is arranged when the leads are mere children. Years later when the heroine graduates from high school, gramps is eager to get the kids hitched, and though the modern leads find the arrangement old-fashioned and unrealistic, they settle for a contract marriage where they both get to keep their own personal lives to themselves… which lasts all of about a minute.

I’m currently loving this show, which shows some signs of aging but does hold up over time with a strong central couple whose relationship development is believable and sweet. The drama is an opposites-attract romance where she’s the bubbly, heart-on-her-sleeve ball of emotion, while he’s the reserved serious workaholic who could use a bit of loosening up. One of my favorite aspects of the show is that they go into the marriage treating it like a roommate scenario, and then have to deal with the pounding hearts when attraction starts growing (especially for him). But since they’ve drawn that platonic line so clearly, it takes extra effort to cross it, and watching them dance around it trying to muster up the nerve to broach their real feelings (and then backing off, then approaching again) is a big part of the fun.

The tone is upbeat and comedic, and Sweet 18 is a classic old-school romantic comedy with simple conflicts and meddling second leads who can be annoying, though they’re fun to hate because they are ultimately ineffectual (Lee Da-hae plays the scheming ex). Plus, this is the show that got leads Han Ji-hye and Lee Dong-gun dating in real life for several years. They’ve since broken up and she’s gotten married, but the chemistry is there, and very cute.

 

Full House (2004)

The premise: The heroine is conned out of her house and kicked out by the haughty movie star who moves in. She negotiates a deal to stay as his maid, but in the wake of compromising gossip the star decides to quiet the scandal with a quiet contract marriage. Cue hijinks.

Probably one of the most popular contract-marriage dramas around, Full House was a sensation at home and across Asia. But you probably know that, and I bet you’ve probably already seen it. So maybe this entry really only applies for, oh, two of you out there who’ve never heard of the show.

Full House is a light, mindless watch that zips by quickly and, like many rom-coms of its time, relies on rather simplistic conflicts and plot turns that aren’t entirely logically sound. I know, you’ll be hard-pressed to find any rom-com that is completely logically sound, but this one really glosses over its plot holes and hopes you don’t stop to question it too hard.

The chemistry between Rain and Song Hye-gyo was never the sizzling kind, ending up with a cute but kind of sexless relationship where bickering acts as a stand-in for romantic development. So I wouldn’t get your hopes up for pounding hearts or sexual tension, although the characters go through the motions well enough to carry the drama’s thin plotline. I couldn’t imagine getting hooked on the show nowadays, but it could make for a good marathon watch on a rainy weekend.

 

My Little Bride (2004)

The premise: Similar to Sweet 18, this one marries off two youngsters because of pressure from elders, although the heroine is still in high school—and the hero’s a teacher at her school. They keep their marriage quiet for the sake of her reputation and bicker like dogs at home, but it’s not long before the lines start blurring and hearts skip. (Note: My Little Bride is a movie, not a drama series.)

There are a few aspects about My Little Bride that may trip you up. The teacher-student scenario, perhaps, or the age gap. Stars Kim Rae-won and Moon Geun-young are only six years apart in age and she was 17 when the film came out, so it’s not like we’re dealing with an actual child bride, per se. But the hero and heroine have known each other all their lives and have a very sibling-like relationship full of name-calling and petty squabbling, which makes the process of romantic awakening potentially unsettling. I have to find any story where the hero is waiting for his wife to grow up to be a little bit squicky.

On the other hand, the movie does attempt to smooth out some of those bumpy moments and the plot stays in sweet and innocent territory. Both actors are very appealing, and in the end I found myself rooting for those kids to work it out, even if I didn’t really believe the romantic chemistry between them—it’s definitely a chaste kind of love. As a fluffy comedy, it’s a zippy two hours. If you want a more believable romance, I’d go for Sweet 18 instead.

 

Delightful Girl Chun-hyang (2005)

The premise: Based on an old folktale in which young lovers secretly marry, Delightful Girl Chun-hyang updates the story with modern-day characters. The marriage between two high school juniors is necessitated as a damage-control measure when they’re caught in a (totally innocent, we swears) compromising situation. They decide to keep the relationship strictly buddy-buddy until they’re older, at which point they’ll re-evaluate whether they want to stay married. (Hint: They do.)

This drama totally won my heart, and remains one of my favorites even when looking back on it years later and seeing its flaws with the benefit of time and distance. The Hong sisters have gotten more high-concept, punny, and complex in their stories since then, but here in their first drama, the relatively simple story has a winning freshness. (Well, it felt pretty fresh in 2005.) It’s consistently funny and leads Jae Hee and Han Chae-young hit on a nice balance between bickering and attraction—the love connection feels credible, and when you’re invested in that, you’re willing to follow the characters through everything.

Because the couple is married while they’re still in high school, they never act genuinely married, nor can they ignore each other, and no they’re not dating either. It’s the in-between-ness that keeps everyone on their toes, and the drama follows them over a span of years so we watch them growing into adults as their romance grows too. There are a couple absurdly persistent second leads, but the strength of the central pairing trumps their meddlesome ways.

 

Goong (2006)

The premise: In a fictional Korea where the monarchy still exists, the young crown prince approaches adulthood and is deemed ready for marriage. We can thank more grandfathers for the pairing of the snobby royal heartthrob and a plucky ordinary high school student. She enters the palace and learns how to be a princess (clumsily), but eventually wins over the nation and, more importantly, her husband.

The alternate reality Goong builds, not to mention the gorgeous costuming and sets, are enough to make this drama a recommended watch; there’s still nothing quite like it. Based on a manhwa, the show retains that fantasy feel and builds up the lead couple’s romance in a gradual but compelling escalation. I’ll admit to finding Joo Ji-hoon’s cold prince to be a prime jerkwad of a hero and was rooting for them mostly for Yoon Eun-hye’s sake, but they did have pretty fantastic chemistry (and pretty hot make-out sessions, a rarity amidst all the closed-mouth kisses we normally see).

There are some issues of pacing (slowish, thanks to a late-game four-episode extension) and palace politics I could have done without (none of which I remember, because that was never the point). It’s not a seamless affair and Goong wasn’t a crack drama for me. But for a romance that starts out as a forced arrangement, we get a pretty engaging transformation between the two, and in particular on the hero’s side. Because the whole purpose to having assy cold-hearted heroes is to see them tumbling off their high horse when they fall in love, isn’t it?

 

I Love You (2008)

The premise: Here’s a backward romance in action: A mismatched couple hurries into marriage when a one-night stand leads to pregnancy. They can fall in love—or, you know, get acquainted—later.

The cast comprises three couples, each depicting a different type of modern marriage as they encounter conflicts and figure out how to navigate their relationships. I Love You is based on a popular manhwa but never made a big splash as a drama, which isn’t too surprising given its low-key vibe. That’s not a criticism—the relaxed air is part of its charm—but it doesn’t have the big dramatic set-pieces or sweeping arcs that tend to hook viewers.

Though not strictly a contract marriage premise, I Love You sort of qualifies in that it features a couple who gets married before they’re in love, letting the marriage set the stage for relationship to bloom rather than acting as the endpoint. It’s also an opposites-attract romance and a bit of a May-December setup (perhaps May-September is a better descriptor?) with Seo Ji-hye playing a 21-year-old and Ahn Jae-wook playing a 35-year-old, even if he’s a very immature one. So while I Love You lacks a punchiness that drives a lot of my favorite rom-coms, it might fit the bill if you’re in the mood for something a bit more laid-back.

 

Accidental Couple (Just Looking) (2009)

The premise: An ordinary citizen helps out a movie star, protecting her image from potential scandal, which turns a bit sideways and gets him involved instead. The couple decides on a contract marriage for six months, intending to divorce quietly after the frenzy subsides.

This drama is all about Hwang Jung-min, who is wonderful (no surprise, as he is wonderful in everything) playing the humble everyman who gets caught up in the press whirlwind and whose only desire is to be of assistance. Kim Ah-joong is fine as the star, though I think both casting and writing make for a heroine who could be interchangeable with any number of other actresses. The drama runs the couple through many of the expected tribulations, with divorce being both a goal and a threat at various points.

I wouldn’t look to Accidental Couple as much of a romance story, but it does have some worthwhile elements. Namely, the bromance that develops between Hwang Jung-min and his young brother-in-law (Baek Sung-hyun) all but takes over the show, which is not a bad thing. Joo Sang-wook plays a forgettable second lead, while Lee Chung-ah has a cute but fairly minor supporting role.

I’m pretty sure you’d be able to predict exactly how Accidental Couple unfolds, but sometimes you just want something comfortable and familiar. We can’t live solely on crack (dramas), right?

 

It’s Okay, Daddy’s Girl (2010)

The premise: This example is different in that the contract marriage belongs to a secondary couple, so the premise listed here is about their relationship rather than the show as a whole. The bride chooses to marry in a sacrificing gesture to help her bankrupt family, while the groom is a prodigal son whose parents strong-arm him into marrying a respectable girl hoping she’ll be a good influence and curb his wild ways.

I have to start off with the warning that It’s Okay, Daddy’s Girl is not a drama I’d freely recommend to anyone—it is incredibly flawed and strangely paced and just kind of weird all around. Even so, I think of it fondly for all the heart-warming character bonds that developed (in between the crazy other stuff), and this marriage is one of the show’s highlights.

At first, the bride seems to have essentially thrown herself onto a sacrificial altar to save her family (and we may have to overlook how the whole setup of her needing to marry for money is rather gothic to begin with). Look at that picture—she’s crying her way down the aisle, fer Pete’s sake. Her husband is a big baby without any desire to do anything worthwhile with himself—his family is rich, he gets an allowance from mommy, and he spends his days (and nights) partying with his bro-dudes. But then when the wife actually needs emotional support, the playboy rises to the challenge and to everyone’s surprise (including his own), he kinda likes being the decent man. His marriage rewrites his life’s script, and he finds that when he’s given an option other than nightclubs and womanizing, he enjoys the alternative. The marriage goes from sham to earnest, and offers a rewarding resolution.

(Even if the drama is a mess.)

 

Ojakkyo Brothers (2011)

The premise: Another secondary pairing. Two co-workers have a one-night stand that leads to pregnancy, and are pushed into marriage by their families. The couple hits upon a contract marriage as a compromise, intending to keep up appearances to the outside world for the sake of their child while keeping their distance at home.

There seem to be two main types of contract marriages: the kind where both sides enter it with equal indifference, and the kind where one side is well on their way to falling in love while the other side takes his sweet old time, hmph. This drama falls into the latter category, which is not inherently better or worse than the other kind but which does make for a potentially more frustrating scenario because we have to watch one side suffering in silence while the other side stays oblivious. (It’s for this reason that I tend to appreciate the mutual discovery when both sides start from zero and end up in the same place.)

As a weekend family drama with a longer episode count, Ojakkyo Brothers is paced accordingly, which means that things take a little while to really kick into gear for this couple, especially since this is not the only loveline cooking. The groom’s reluctance to marry the woman he knocked up can be teeth-grindingly frustrating, but to even the score, the bride’s jealousy and hurt feelings can feel excessive in the wake of their contract arrangement. However, one upside to these longer dramas is that the character development feels more realistic, the trajectory more complete. This is a couple who started things by running out on their own wedding ceremony (work crisis!), who end up at mutual understanding and working toward a genuine marriage.

Moreover, the rest of the drama is so winning that even if you find yourself throwing up your hands in the air regarding Ryu Soo-young and Choi Jung-yoon’s marital courtship, you’ll have plenty of time to squeal in glee over the uber-cute romance unfolding concurrently between Joo-won and UEE. (That one has nothing to do with contracts, but I’m sure we don’t care.)

 
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And in the Not Quite Married category (not to mention not quite recommended)…

Mary Stayed Out All Night (2010)

The premise: The heroine wants to avoid getting pushed into an arranged marriage with a chaebol’s son, so she pretends to be married to a rocker boy, but the ruse eventually gets discovered, then at some point she agrees to play the part of prospective fiancée to the chaebol guy anyway and moves in with him, and then is maybe dating the musician too, or breaking up with him repeatedly, and there’s a lot of fake marrying and cohabitating but not a lot of logic.

Here, the contract scenario (albeit a faked marriage) is used to deflect the threat of a real marriage, which is a premise that sounds wacky and hilarious. Plus, the heroine spends time living with both male leads. How great is that, right? (Not actually that great, unfortunately.) You would expect that over the course of playing house with her not-really-husband, the couple would get caught up in loads of uproarious (and romance-building) incidents. To be fair, there are several cute moments between them in the early parts of their fake relationship. But there’s a lot of nonsense cluttering up the works with needless angst (and gangsters and loan sharks and kidnapping), not to mention some really insane parenting.

Ultimately Mary is a show that had room for solid contract-marriage shenanigans but let go of a lot of opportunities with sloppy writing. For a show about two fake marriages, it doesn’t really have much to do with marriage… although it doesn’t really have much to do with reality either so maybe it’s all a wash.

 

Lie To Me (2011)

The premise: The heroine tells a white lie about being married to save face in front of a smug frenemy, but her story soon spins out of control and entangles the chaebol hero as her surprised “husband.” Conveniently, the hero later requires a fake wife for a business dealing, extending their ruse. They don’t end up married, but after two charades acting the part, at least they find love.

The premise of Lie To Me is classic rom-com stuff. It’s got the requisite comic misunderstandings as the heroine runs her mouth off with wishful thinking, only to find that she has to put her money where her mouth is. Plus the budding chemistry really works, replete with those confusing line-crossing moments when the facade cracks and we’re wondering whether the couple is still acting or really feeling something. The couple is wondering the same thing, caught up in the confusion of blurring boundaries and growing attraction. Those are definitely the show’s highlights.

If that’s enough to sustain your interest, there’s a fluffy fast-forwardable story in there. Where the show falters is in taking its paper-thin conflict and trying to fill sixteen hours with it, when really it should have been a cute two-hour movie. This results in too much screen time with annoying meddlers and needless hand- and heart-wringing angst. Let the fast-forward button be your guide.

 

Big (2012)

The premise: The drama’s ostensibly about a high schooler who swaps souls with a comatose grown-up, but the marriage comes into play when he falls for his shell body’s ex-fiancée, who then offers to marry our hero (wrong body and all) to “protect” him. Yeah, it doesn’t really make sense.

To be fair, I think there exists a way to take the components of Big and arrange them in a way that works out, more or less. The problem is that the show didn’t quite manage to accomplish that, mucking up the works with confusing execution. The heroine’s decision to marry the hero to offer him some sort of legal and emotional protection could (should) have utilized the contract scenario in a more effective way, prodding the two souls to find love in spite of their unromantic arrangement. That’s the whole point of shoving them together, right? But they were already living together since the shell body was already her fiancé, so we didn’t need the marriage to further the existing premise. Thus when “real” marriage is introduced as an option, it rather feels like a woman sacrificing herself as a martyr for a cause, which is about as unromantic as you can make a marriage.

 

Haeundae Lovers (2012)

The premise: While investigating a crime, the hero is injured and stricken with amnesia, whereupon he is taken in by the heroine’s surrogate family of reformed ex-gangsters. To bail her out of a tough fix, he’s persuaded to step in as her groom, and both find themselves acting the part of the loving newlywed couple to deflect suspicion.

Haeundae Lovers may be a case more of flawed execution than conception, because the broad strokes of the courtship totally hit the right narrative buttons for me. Amnesia, fish out of water, surrogate family, fake courtship? Yes, yes, yes, yes. Plus Jo Yeo-jung and Kim Kang-woo have strong chemistry, mixed in amongst the comic relief moments. There are plenty of those, although my main complaint is that the tone often skews excessively broad, which keeps the show’s emotional beats from landing with sincerity. Though there are some likable characters, this is mostly a silly drama with silly characters.

 

Empire of Gold (2013)

The premise: This is not a romantic drama, and in fact very little of the show involves a romantic arc. Still, there’s a contract marriage in it, with a chaebol daughter agreeing to marry the ambitious self-made businessman in a purely professional arrangement. It qualifies. Just barely.

This is a drama I’m not up to date on, so I’ll let you figure out whether it’s one you’re up for watching. By all accounts Empire of Gold is a solid show, but it’s definitely a harder-edged drama with a serious tone, and more about power and money than love stories. Furthermore, I don’t know that the marriage above is one to root for. But hey, it was worth a parody in Master’s Sun—which flirted with a contract marriage for half an episode, by the way. That wasn’t quite enough to merit its own entry—nor did Master use the plot point for romantic effect—but I always appreciate a cheeky nod to one of my favorite common drama tropes.

 
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And we’re done!

I did briefly debate whether to expand this post to include contract dating relationships, but decided against it because fake-dating, while sharing similar aspects, doesn’t have quite the same dramatic effect as a marriage does. Still, if you’re interested, you could give the following a try (if you haven’t already seen them, which you probably have): My Name Is Kim Sam-soon, Dal Ja’s Spring, Coffee Prince, and Personal Taste.

A key difference with these dramas is that the romance doesn’t necessarily hinge upon the contract in the same way that the marriage stories do. In fact, many of them just set us up with the contract as a catalyst for the acquaintance, opening the show up to other storylines for the rest of its run. Which makes it a different kettle of fish.

Let me know if I’ve missed any key dramas—gotta add ’em to my watch list.

 
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I love this new idea for posts! I'm not a big fan of arranged marriages though, so there's not much drama here for me to watch.

Although I do wish I had time to watch Ojakgyo Brothers, but for very different reasons. (*cough* Joowon *cough*)

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Lovvveeee this idea and I'm adding all the ones I haven't seen yet to my watch list I love this plot device

Thanks do much

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oh... Sweet 18.. I've been wanting to see that drama again. Just seeing the title made me smile. A little nostalgic too because that is one of the drama that I've watched when I first started to love kdrama and I've seen more that half of those! yay!

Loving this new feature!

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I love this feature! There is something special about a relationship which gets super serious for all the wrong reasons and then fixes itself over time. I will now wait with baited breath till we get to the best friends to lovers trope, particularly if there is added co habitation. I've been anxious to find a sub of Propose for a while now, in the meantime I've just been rewatching Bottom of the Ninth and Two Outs on a semi annual basis.

I am also looking forward to the next Thing versus Thing. All these ghost dramas need to be compared and contrasted with witty GF and JB banter.

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Oooh, I'll second the Best Friends to Lovers trope. That's another favorite!

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I absolutely love Sweet 16 (it was like crack and I couldn't stop watching it), and Delightful Girl Chun-hyang.

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Wow! 1% of Anything was good if my memory serves me right! I started liking Kang Dong Won since then but as I don't watch much movies, I don't really know how he is faring now. As for Empire of Gold, not much lovey-dovey romance.....

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watched all of the drama :D my all time fav are 1% of anything and sweet 18 :) but i do love all the dramas mentioned. would love to watch all of it again exclude Big and mary stayed all night -.- i just cant stand the storyline of that 2 dramas

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Great new feature! I keep wanting to ask for recs that are like certain shows (right now: something like Two Weeks), so this is really good. Thanks, javabeans!

I wonder if Story of a Man counts: the marriage between Chae Do-woo and Seo Kyung-ah was essentially political, even if Kyung-ah was sympathetic to him. Further, when she had her meltdown after she found out Do-woo was the one who made a mess of their life to begin with, she made a decision to stay with him.

It's not a warm and fuzzy marriage, but I think it *just* about fits the criteria. What do you think?

Plus it gives you a chance to recommend and wax enthusiastic about this drama. Which = plus.

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I was just thinking about whether their marriage was a contract marriage or not. I don't think that Do Woo was indifferent to Kyung Ah. I think I'll have to add this to rewatch list. It was such a treat the first time around.

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Can you do a better second lead couple story? I have realized that i always end up loving the second lead couple than the main one in so many dramas like Birth of Rich Man, Boys Before Flowers, On Air, History of Salaryman, Take care of Aghassi, King2Hearts, Seoul Scandal, Kim Tak Goo, Wild Romance, Protect the Boss....
I think sometimes there is a better chemistry shared between the second lead rather than the main one. That is one thing i like about k-dramas, atleast you can still feel giddy about romance despite having an okay main!

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Wild Romance has a great third (?) lead story with kim tae han, the manager of the lead male character's baseball team, and kim dong ah, the best friend of the lead male character.

someone uploaded all their scenes in drama at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0cz2QFOYN0 with english subtitles, although the audio was disabled. they only had 1 hour and 20 minutes screen time but they really had great chemistry.

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That's more like a third couple than 3rd lead but their romance was one of the few things that moved the drama forward.

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The best thing about Sweet 18 was LDG's character. He's a rare gentleman who is considerate and not try to be a jerk all the time. he's super nice to his wife and MIL, he's patient with her, takes her side against the sister and the ex, is faithful, and is responsible even though the marriage was fake. Even my mom said she'd want a son in law like him.

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If u want fights for an Empire,business and that....Empire will be your cup of tea,a veryy good one but if u are looking for ROMANCE, don't try this tea,it doesn't had any romance....

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this is such a nostalgic trip for me since I started watching kdramas during the time when contract marriage was the current trend (along with the season dramas, of course). I've watched most of the titles above and loved them too. Goong would always be one of my favorite dramas, the plot tends to get loopy but it's definitely cute and pretty, it has one of the best OST out there and MBC really made it royal-like with it's sets and costumes. and yes their makeout sessions are always hot, hot, HOT!
I remember 1% of anything fondly because of my love for Kim Junghwa (who is one of the prettiest faces out there IMO) and because, duh, Kang Dong-won, he totally surprised me. He wasn't supposed to look hot but dangit the more you watch him, the hotter he gets.
Full House is also an all me favorite, sure it's shallow but 100 points for cuteness and charm.
Delightful Girl Chunhyang was also very nice. At a time when kdrama was all about cancer, pseudo-incest and tragedy (see season dramas) Chunhyang came like a breath of fresh air opening up an entire world of rom-coms and of course introducing the Hong Sisters to me.
I really like these new feature.

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1% of Anything - I dont get whats so charming about the female lead's character. I didnt see the attraction. The male lead was rather stiff.

Sweet 18 - DAEBAK!!! I remember liking it so much back then.

Full house - it was fun but the plot in general was rather "stupid" or lack gravity or whatever

My little bride - watched the whole movie but at the end of it i didnt get what the hype was all about. Maybe because I watched sweet 18 first so this movie was rather pale in comparison.

Its okay daddys girl - i actually adore this drama to pieces. The sister's storyline was also my fave. I think its the first time the male character didnt act like a complete jerk to the girl even when he wasnt interested in her or the marriage.

Mary stayed out all night - WHAT? why would a girl fall for JGS's character when the alternative was KJW's character? WHAT? CANNOT COMPUTE. Couldnt finish the series either

Ojakkyo brothers - I have a strong dislike over the fact that someone is greedy about someone else's prop3rties and couldnt get past that plot point so I just skip this series. I did tho watched a few cuts from youtube but couldnt really be bothered to know more.

BIG - the drama failed in the bigger sense. But the small moments and gong yoo internal conflicts was depicted is such a way that I thot was rather poignant and thoughtful. They just couldnt conclude the whole series very well. But because of that winning little moments, I am rather fond of Big.

Goong - at that time I thot it was so addictive. Visually pretty. Fun until they decide to drag it with extension. A disappointment at the last moment. Besides, I was probably in the minority who shipped jihyo-jihoon. Amazing chemistry.

Accidental couple - a snoozefest?

I love you - couldnt get past episode.... I dunno. Somewhere between 1 to 4, I think.

Heundae lovers - too silly to be taken seriously. But love the female character.

Lie to me - I always thot YEH is overrated even tho I enjoyed coffee prince immensely. She's been lacklustre in everything else. And I dont find the romance in lie to me intriguing. It doesnt feel sincere and lacks conviction. Besides I thot it was unfair that the second female lead was viewed as an annoying character when I felt that she was a victim of two immature brothers and was left hanging. It just doesnt feel right to root for YEH, even if KJH doesnt love the other girl anymore.

Empire of Gold - havent started this one. I was a little put off by the serious vibe that I'm getting from this show. Maybe later, when I finish any other show. Or maybe I'll change my mind tomorrow. Who knows.

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As much as I fangirl JGS (and that's a lot), I also could not finish Mary Stayed Out All Night, which is a rare thing in for my drama-watching record. Cannot Compute - ditto.

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I really liked the ost for mary.

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Forgot to mention delightful girl chunhyang. Probably in the minority but I tried to watch this long time ago and couldnt understand why some people say it's fun. I dont get whats the hype about this series, just as I was not charmed by jahee. No offense. I suspect sweet 18 has put a high bar for romantic comedy/arranged aka contract marriage at that time that some other dramas just not meeting the expectation anymore back then. Or maybe because it was too childish. Both characters were highschoolers after all. And then the alternate pairing...well, once youve seen the childish act, it's hard to be convinced with the idea of them pairing with someone older. The noona or the ahjusshi. Out of all hong sisters series, this one really at the bottom. I'd rather rewatch BIG.

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I love the idea for these posts!

But I do think that "contract marriages" should be separated from "shotgun weddings".

"Wonderful Life" should definitely be on the list.

"Empire of Gold" is a solid drama but there's seriously NO ROMANCE in it. =\ such a wasted chance!

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1% of Anything: Boring, Kang Dong Won couldn't act yet and if I weren't his die hard fan, I'd have dropped it.

Full House: Fun, good for its time. Liked it, but it does get boring on many occasions. Still, a piece of kdrama history.

Goong: I really hated it. Angst, chaebols, girl treated like a piece of meat for royalty, awful. The kissing was the only thing that was ok, but I can't really say one thing saves an entire drama.

Accidental Couple/That Fool: Loved it, one of my favorite series. Warm, human, cute, awesome bromance, interesting characters, jerk male lead/lovely second male lead reversal (the jerk is Mr. Second here), just wonderful and what I wish Dramaland would do more of.

'Marry Me, Mary' and 'Big', I couldn't even go past the midpoint (Mary got 4 episodes' worth of attention from me before I was royally bored and pissed).

Lie to Me: Had some potential, but it became too unstable and boring, so no.

Haeundae Lovers: It was fun. Light fluff, but fun fluff. Good chemistry, endearing family, some nice laughs.

Out of all of these, 'That Fool' (Accidental Couple) is the one I recommend to all. I disagree with it not being romantic. It just wasn't wrist-grabbing angsty romance. It was adult romance. About two people becoming friends, helping each other and forming a bond and then a relationship. I'll take this over whiny chaebol brats and "eternal loves" that would probably last less than a few months, in realistic terms, any day.

There. My quick opinion on the works in the list that I have seen.

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Marry me Marry had so much going for it but it just couldn't get it right. Awesome cast? Why yes! Really funny/ cute plotline? Oh Yeah. Can we do it? uhh no... no we can't. This story had so much potential. One thing ( out of many ) that they should have changed was the way the relationship was done. Marry was legally married to Jung In but that was never really used other then like once? Marry never gave him a real chance to be a husband. From the beginning she was determined to hate him and that's fine but as the story went on she never gave him a chance. so he never felt like a real threat to the main love line. It would have been better ( in my opinion) to have her try to date her husband since in like episode 7 she said she would which lasted like 10 min. and in her trying to make her marriage work fell in love with Mu Gyul. That would have added more tension then telling us in episode 8 that she will never love Jung In and chooses Mu Gyul. Okay.. well now we have 8 more episodes. Now what? The show should have ended right then because after that it lost all its power with the plot. Jung In was useless. We knew she had no intentions of being with him. Why watch when the whole set up is who will she choose. Ugh.. so wasted.

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out of all, i've watched Something about 1%, Sweet 18, Full house, Delightful girl choonhyang, Goong and Lie to me.

All of them are not really perfect but the most enjoyable drama would be Delightful girl choon hyang and Sweet 18. There is humor in every episode. The only thing i dislike about choonhyang is the two second leads while Sweet 18 starts to get boring by the end of ep14.

I actually prefer watching the 2nd leads in Something about 1% which includes Han Hye Jin as the heroin's best friend. I still remember Kang Dong Won's character had a cousin and He finds out about the inheritance condition which is marrying the women grandpa choose and he asked to be included in the game but mistaken Han Hye Jin as the girl. By the time he realize about it, he had already fell in love with Hye Jin. And ofcourse, he let go of his greed for the inheritance eventhough mommy was furious because Hye Jin's family background is also a No no, a abusive dad.

The others are dramas I wont watch for the 2nd time

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i really want kim rae won and moon geun young to do a drama together...i think it would be cool...

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Surely, Sweet 18.
my 1st korean drama.
Then I keep falling in love to watch another and another korean drama on and on again. That ohhh lovely ahjussi, Lee Dong Gun.
Yes, he and Han Ji Hye had a very long relationship after the show. Sadly, they broke up and after his brother died, Dong Gun Oppa has a hiatus time. That's why I keep waiting his new drama, and yeayyyy, he' s back with Yoon Eun Hye, my fave artist that I always love her act at Goong. Cant wait!

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Resurfacing to say I love this post. Brought back a lot of memories. Sweet 18 was one of my first dramas and I adored it so much I watched it back to back (ah, those days of yore when second and third helpings in quick succession were mandatory for much-loved fare). 1% of Anything is very special (hint: male lead).

Thanks JB.

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God I loved Goong, flaws and all. That is one perfect example of a drama whose leads were less than perfect as actors (though YEH was pretty good) but carried the whole drama thanks to fantastic chemistry.

And the amounts of skinship involved set a high, HIGH bar - the only drama that matches it for that (though not for the kissing, sadly) is Master's Sun. And I dearly wish Master's Sun would take a cue or ten from Goong on the kissing!

The first teaser trailer for Heirs just dropped, and now I wonder if that's going to involve a contract marriage anywhere too. It's too tempting not to wonder (we already have engaged high schoolers in it after all)

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Have to agree on the kissing scenes in Goong. They were certainly believable. I can be watching a drama and believing that the two characters are really in love until a kissing scene comes on the screen. I can't help but be dragged out of the drama. If you really loved someone and wanted them to kiss you, would you really be cringing? I can understand the ones that are set in high school (first kiss and everything), but not the ones where the characters are in their late 20s, early 30s. So few kdramas have good kissing scenes that I appreciate the ones that do.

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How about the drama "wedding" starring Jang Nara and Ryu Si Won.. It's a typical case of forced marriage though not in a contract form but ended with both leads falling in love with each other....

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This was the first thing I watched Jang Nara in and the only thing I've seen Ryu Shi Won in it. I actually really loved it. It felt really believable and realistic. I really felt for the characters, particularly Jang Nara's. When she hurt, I hurt.

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What a great idea! Thank you so much. So many dramas on this first post that I have wavered in watching and always go back to read the synopsis but still can't decide. I've decided to give them a try.

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I have seen all of them except Empire of Gold, and waiting for the series to finish so I can marathon it. About the one I would bother to watch again is Sweet 18.

I don't know why the contract/forced marriage trope is so very common in dramas, when it is apparently pretty rare these days in RL Korea, but I guess it provides an easy (though clichéd to death) way of getting unlikely couples together.

I did some digging of my own on Koreandrama.org and though there seems to be dozens with this same theme somewhere in the plot, almost none have been done that show the same situation when it fails in epic proportions. In the few I could find where these contract marriages don't work out, it is usually just a passing comment. I guess in drama land if you force any two of the most unlikely people together, they will fall in love :D

The problem I have with most of those you listed is not just that it defies logic, but that far too often the setups just border on total insanity, and then the writers do even more stupid things to "fix" it.

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If you like...I love how this new feature clumps together dramas by category! It's a fresh way for me to watch dramas just when I was feeling rather stagnant waiting for fall dramas. I am also surprised by how much I like reading the descriptions of dramas that have a common theme or thread. Just knowing that you are currently watching Sweet 18 makes me want to jump in and 'watch' with you! Thanks javabeans, you and your gals are always on your toes on behalf of us beanies - you rock! \o/

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Awesome idea and thanks for starting with my favorite trope! I will go on record and totally vouch for 1% of Anything. I watched it in 2008 when I was relatively new to dramas so, not only was it one of my early dramas, it was my first Contact Marriage and I thought it was the wackiest thing ever but I really enjoyed the show. But, it's a good thing because I totally "got it" when I watched Choong Hwang, Accidental Couple, and Full House not long after (ironicall, I watched all three of those around the same time, someone in 09 I think, and I don't believe I've watched a Contract Marriage drama since). Anyway, 1% is one of those dramas I stumbled upon when I didn't know any better and I totally lucked out because it was funny and genuine and the heroine had a backbone (if I remember correctly) and the extended families were sweet and the secondary couple had their own story and had better things to do than thwart the main couple.

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Might I add that, while Choon Hyang is my favorite in this category, I think that Accidental Couple is one of the sweetest dramas that I've ever seen. But I think that's because Gu Dong Beak is the sweetest character ever written. I don't think I've ever watched Hwang Jung Min in anything else and it's to the point where I don't really want to because I just want to keep him in my mind as Gu Dong Beak forever.

He really was the heart of the show. Kim Ah Joong was the heroine in the very first drama I watched (Bizarre Bunch) and I didn't recognize her because her character (or maybe her acting... or both) commanded so little of my attention.

Anyway, I'm so sad that this trope seems to have been supplanted b Contract Dating because it is so much more fun!

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Thank you for doing this post! It got me digging into my dusty old collection and making want to watch DGCH all over again. For starters. Then Goong, and Sweet 18 and LTM and... the list goes on.

But I just wanted to point this out, since you haven't actually watched 1% of Anything. It's really not about a contract marriage, because by the time the OTP did get married they were already in love. And there was a lot of opposition from the girl's middle class parents, who didn't want their beloved daughter to marry into a chaebol family. Actually it's more similar to Shining Inheritance, although because of its length, they married off or coupled off almost everyone by the end of the 26 episodes!

And ditto about that megawatt smile. And I loved his character. What an awesome oppa to have. So caring, on top of being an earnest doctor. And as for KDW, he has such a baby face, he's so cute, and the deep voice and tall stature just makes him even more adorable. :)

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I said this same thing in a comment later. 1% was a show I liked a lot but it doesn't really belong on a contract marriage list. The show doesn't have a contract marriage. They made a contract for dating but their marriage was totally regular old love match.

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It would be awesome if you could have another post about dramas with OTP's that started out as best friends for a long time before falling in love, Example: Answer me 1997 or that taiwanese drama In time with you :) Just my humble suggestion

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I vote 'noona-romances' for the next installment of the series!

I like this, it's a gret idea. And added a few new dramas to the 'Plan to Watch' list. Looking forward to future additions to the series. Thanks!

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would que sera sera count? there were two weddings (three if you count the one near the beginning) and all of them weren't particularly motivated by love...

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Do people actual do arranged marriages in Korea?

He's not Korean, but I read some interview with EXO's Kris (yes, this is pedo-noonism) where he said if his parents arranged his marriage, he'd go through with it. That made me wonder if arranged marriages were still a valid thing in the Far East.

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Oh nice, thanks for the posts. It brings back happy memories.

I do like contract marriages. But prefer chaebol heirs. Hahaha.

But yeah Sweet 18 and 1% of everything was quite watchable. I didn't quite like some of the others so maybe I don't like contract marriages plot unless the couple is cute and the story is light.

Plus never quite understand why people liked Full House so much, since I discovered KD later. Plus Delightful Girl Chun- hyang.

I am interested in It's okay, daddy's girl. If anyone knows which episode to watch for the couple, I am game to just watch those episodes. Thanks.

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damn awesome! this New segment is daebak!
hatsoff dramabeans ... you guys write so well !
being an engineering student , I get to learn a lot about writing . I keep coming back everyday to read awesome stuff here!

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Most of these don't seem all that interesting to me, but one that did stand out was 1% of Anything. I may give that a watch.

I like this new post idea. Look forward to more!

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1% is a lovely family drama but the description is inaccurate. There is no contract marriage in the show.

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Please make an "If you like... Robin Hood characters" list. Thaaaanks. :)

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What a great idea! You're the best!

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loved my little bride!!
lol at the clothes in full house XD cringe...

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I should mention another weekend drama Famous Princesses (소문난 칠공주) 2006. I mostly know of this drama because of Lee Seung Gi. Seung Gi's character has to marry the youngest Chil sister because he gets her pregnant. It's super hard to find this drama with English subtitles, but for the love of Lee Seung Gi, I watched it without the subtitles hoping I didn't get too lost. LOL It's 80 episodes long, but even with not understanding all that goes on I've been enjoying it. The show follows four sisters. Seung Gi and his wife is not a focal point in the show but since it is 80 episodes long they still get quite abit to do. Seeing the young couple get the hang of being grown ups and falling in love is frustrating at times and adorable. I will probably love this drama even more once I understand what's being said. :D

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Also, this seems so rare (i mean you going back and watching an older show) so it must mean something.

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We should really stop putting dates next to some of these dramas. It has not been a decade since 1% of Anything came out!

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Not sure if anyone has mentioned this already (too many comments to read), Wonderful Life with Eugene and Kim Jae Won seems like a good fit. One night stand, baby, then forced marriage.

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Not big on contract marriage stuff as I was just looking, but I love you if you give us the full house on other topics (e.g., friends becoming lovers) as long as you don't lie to me, because I'll try 1% of anything.

Thanks!

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Watched three of the shows on the list. 1% of Anything, Fullhouse, and Accidental Couple.

1% was slow at some parts. Loved the heroines family though. They were great and loving.

Fullhouse was just a headache. All they did was fight and wear horrible clothes. I now wonder why I stuck with it. I guess then I was compelled to finish everything I started and now I'm like "buh-bye" when they go straight to hell. Like LTM. Why show why.

Accidental Couple is my favorite. I go back and watch my favorite episodes. So many flaws, yeah, but I still love it.

Thanks for the list JB!

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I love Wonderful Life. I swear I've seen it about 4 or 5 times. After having a one night stand that resulted in a baby, their parents force them to get married and they end up writing a five year contract. Eugene and Kim Jae Won had some great chemistry. It's a really cute drama and still one of my favorites.

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This is a really great segment idea, although it seems like a ton more work for you guys (where are you finding the time?!) But I loved reading this segment and chuckling at the memories of when I watched some of these dramas (Full House and Mary, I'm looking at you). I've actually not heard of a few dramas on this list that now sound interesting, so thank you Javabeans for that :D

I have a question: will this segment be weekly or monthly or every few months ? Have you worked out a routine for it?

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Love this new series! Great idea - only downside is my exponentially growing list of must-see dramas... :P

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If you'd asked me before going through this entire list I'd have said the contract marriage is one of my favorite drama tropes....until I got through the list and realized how many of these dramas I dropped for one reason or another. To be fair, some of these dramas - definitely some of the later ones (Mary Stayed Out All Night, Lie To Me, Big) shot themselves in the foot by straying so far from their premise. So I guess I can say I'll almost always *start* a contract marriage drama, but can't guarantee I'll finish it.

Oh and since you brought it up...I'm hoping the cross-dressing trope will also be covered. I love this one! Or maybe its my all encompassing, enduring blind love for Coffee Prince. Whichever it is, I just can't say no the idea of a love that transcends everything. Oh and the hijinks. I can't say no to the hijinks either!

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As a person who watched the 1 % of anything ! I totally recommend it :D Because with long episode number it allows the side characters to be a part of the story especially the family life of female lead etc. So i can say it's like a weekend drama mixed with regular 16-ep romcom :D Yeah i am a sucker for contract marriages too :D

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Contract marriages are my weakness.

Sweet 18 is my favorite, so glad javabeans likes too.

I'm currently enjoying TDrama Inborn Pair. The OTP are matched while both mothers are still pregnant but only meet when they are adults. It is a long drama, so all the subtle stages happen. I can't put my finger on exactly when it changed from funny situation to real romance ... which is part of what I find delightful. Also thrown into the mix is seeing 2 real marriages and a silly secondary pairing for laughs. The pacing is great, fluffy fun.

1% of Anything had cute elements, but it just seemed to go on too long.

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Agree about Inborn Pair. Absolutely delightful. And because it is so long, and the build up so perfect, by the time things come to a boil, they are HOT!

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