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Omg is it that time of year already? [Year in Review, Part 1]

How on earth has another year zoomed by already? It felt as though I’d only just recovered from banging my head against my keyboard over last year’s year-end reviews when I had to start banging my head against my keyboard for this year’s batch. And okay, perhaps banging isn’t expressly necessary—but trust me, it’s become a standard part of the process.

Every year I love and dread doing these reviews; they are a blast to have written, but a bear to actually write. On one hand, while our regular recap format is pretty awesome for detailed reviewing on a micro level, it’s a fun exercise to step back and take a look back at the year as a whole, assessing dramas as part of the landscape. Because no drama exists in a vacuum, and as much as we love to focus on content, we can’t forget entirely about context.

On the other hand, omg so many dramas. I watched a ridiculous amount of television this year—even more than usual, which is saying a lot—and in an effort to keep these reviews manageable, we’re once again limiting our discussion to shows we’ve completed. First, that feels fair, and second, these posts would go on foreeeeever if we opened it up to series that were partially watched. But don’t worry—as in past years, we here at Dramabeans have done our best to cover as much ground as possible between all of us, and if I haven’t gotten to a title, chances are good that another reviewer will. We’ve got the panda eyes to prove it.

 
SONG OF THE DAY

Krystal – “울컥” from the She’s So Lovable OST [ Download ]

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Miss Korea

While Miss Korea technically premiered last year (and feels ages ago), it makes this year’s list for airing more of its run in 2014, and also because I left it out of last year’s reviews and surely it deserves mention somewhere. There’s a tendency for dramas that air very early in a year to be largely forgotten by year’s end (curse our short memories!), which is too bad when a drama such as Miss Korea drops off the radar after turning in a surprisingly thoughtful showing.

Understated and sweet, Miss Korea contained a lot more depth than you’d expected from its frivolous-sounding pageant premise. On the surface, the drama sounded lightweight: A young woman aims to become Miss Korea to find direction in her aimless life, and a young CEO backs her, hoping to save his failing cosmetics company. The stakes were low and the plot took its time, focusing on smaller challenges—say, preparing for pageant competition, or marketing lipstick. Does it sound like the most riveting concept? Well, no. And yet, the drama tapped into an emotional current beneath its surface, engaging our affections with its heartfelt characters and their underdog struggles.

Adding an interesting moodiness was the tinge of nostalgia lent by the drama’s setting—the late nineties, during a time of widespread societal and economic uncertainty, an unease that was reflected in the characters’ plights. As a result, Miss Korea was an example of a show that worked not because of a clever premise but because of its overall mood (feel-good, woven through with a thread of grimness) and execution (a bit gritty).

The cast provided the other X factor, bolstered by a earnest, adorable lead couple: Lee Seon-kyun can always be relied upon to deliver a charismatic performance, but it was really Lee Yeon-hee who broke through. Not particularly known for her acting skills, she changed some minds with her short stint in last year’s Gu Family Book, and built on that transformation to embody this lead role and give her character a sweet spirit and a backbone. A winning combination.

 

You From Another Star

There are hits, and then there are phenoms, of which You From Another Star is a prime example, becoming such a success that it’s actually hard to overstate just how popular it was worldwide. It made a huge splash both domestically and internationally, set trends left and right, and was dramaland’s biggest success story of the past year (more, even).

All of that makes it tricky to look back on You From Another Star now without being swayed, one way or another, by the outside knowledge we have about it. Inevitably, wild hype creates expectations that are different than those that existed at the time of the original run, and this kind of baggage has a way of altering people’s memories and inviting added scrutiny, because the drama becomes such a large target.

Be that as it may, I have nothing but fond memories of the show, which was a blast to recap. The story incorporated a number of romantic-comedy conventions, but its skill was in weaving them together to feel fresh and current; we’d seen shows with similar elements before, but not quite this exact show. There’s a built-in formula inherent in the romantic comedy format (boy meets girl, complications ensue, happily ever after) that can hamstring the genre when employed clumsily; I’d argue that it can be much more difficult to make a rom-com fresh than most other formats because of this. So when one comes along and hooks me with fantastic romantic and comedic chemistry, I’m absolutely going to watch the hell out of it and remind myself to savor the experience, considering how many times I’ve struggled to like something and been let down.

The drama certainly had its weaknesses, with a cartoonish villain (who was at least of the deliciously campy sort; Shin Sung-rok dove into the role with gusto) and weak second leads who were nice and all, but sort of just hanging around while the two leads got to sparkle. But I will never complain about the sparkle, which gave us Jeon Ji-hyun in a career-defining turn (in a long career that’s already had a defining moment (that would be My Sassy Girl)) and one of the more memorable characters of the year. Sure, galaxy-hopping alien genius Do Manager was drily hilarious, but it was Chun Song-yi—hilarious and poignant, ridiculous and genuine—whose star shone brightest.

 

Wonderful Season

When Wonderful Season premiered, I was encouraged by its low-key, naturalistic approach to the weekend family drama, a format frequently plagued with histrionics and makjang excess. It was refreshing to have a series that employed all the same character types and story tropes that we’ve come to expect of these dramas, yet utilized them in different ways. Instead of dragging out angst-ridden scenarios for weeks on end, Wonderful Season consciously avoided the standard rhythms in favor of a gentler ebb-and-flow of conflict. I appreciated the different approach and was eager to see it play out, since the success of non-makjang dramas might encourage a shift away from those tired hysterics.

That said, this drama needed some drama. Color me surprised when I found myself thinking, deep into its 50-episode run, Man, I could really use some makjang right about now. It turns out there can be such a thing as too little angst; what initially felt languorous soon became plodding, and the series was so placid that even the conflicts felt conflictless. On an intellectual level I appreciate that despite plot points like birth secrets, unfaithful spouses, shady business dealings, possible murder, first loves, and unrequited loves, the drama was really about a fractured family coming together and healing years of repressed hurt. Yet its approach went too far the other way and sapped the proceedings of any sense of urgency.

As a result, I watched with no commitment—why get worked up, when the show wasn’t going to? Slice-of-life works better when the drama is buoyed by humor or cuteness, but Wonderful Season wasn’t going for comedy. Thoughtful and moody was the intent—it’s just that it undermined its own melodramatic pillars. Every time the drama built up to a climactic peak, the conflict defused before it hit that point.

So maybe we don’t try to solve the makjang problem by doing away with tension entirely. Maybe all or nothing doesn’t have to be the game plan. Maybe nobody wants to watch a six-month-long anticlimax.

 

Sly and Single Again

My main takeaway from Sly and Single Again is that Joo Sang-wook should only do romantic comedies, forever and always—a belief that solidified further with Birth of a Beauty a few months later (mentioned further down on this page).

He is what made Sly work for me, taking what seemed on paper like yet another chiseled CEO prince type and turning expectation on its head; I adored his dorky, sheepish beta male lead who wore his heart on his sleeve. It’s true that an actor is more likely to draw critical acclaim through dramatic outings (as Joo did in Giant, the role that provided his acting breakthrough), but in my eyes he is much more of a standout in the comedy field. (At least when he’s the lead; he put in his time playing the standard, boring cardboard-cutout second leads in rom-coms earlier in his career and was entirely dull as such.)

Lee Min-jung was fine as the heroine, though I’ll file her away in the “acceptable” category (I’ll confess to being disappointed in her recent roles, having expected more development from her after memorable early performances). Still, I’ll give her credit for being part of one of the few (only?) separated-couples-who-reunite that I actually wanted to reunite this year (wasn’t that a tricky trend?). Their separation felt understandable and reparable—not an easy balance to strike. I could leave Sly feeling hopeful that they’d learned from their mistakes and would work hard not to screw up their second chance, which isn’t something I could say of some other unfortunate reunited exes.

Performances aside, Sly and Single Again was a competent, good-natured rom-com that hit all the bullet points of the genre and neither soared above the pack nor failed spectacularly. It was a comfortable watch, if broad and sweet fit your bill.

 

God’s Gift – 14 Days

I almost skipped writing this review because God’s Gift — 14 Days, I’m still mad at you! But then I figured the best way to work out repressed anger is to let it out rather than trying to pretend things never happened, sooooo… let’s let it all out.

Unlike other dramas that failed to live up to their hype (and there were plenty of those), God’s Gift offered a different kind of crushing disappointment. It wasn’t a show I was hoping would be good that ended up being dumb; it was a show that was utterly gripping, and then betrayed us with that stinker of an ending. That’s worse than just not getting a good show; it’s showing you exactly what kind of awesomeness we could have had… and then yanking it away. Neener neener.

Let’s start with what it did right: A compelling murder mystery, an intriguing jump in time to prevent said murder, an endless parade of suspects. Charged acting from Lee Bo-young and a winsome one from Jo Seung-woo. Red herrings and conspirators dotted the landscape, and while there were probably too many serial killers in the mix, at least the story did a solid job of keeping us guessing and injecting constant threats that kept us on edge. I felt an ever-present danger for our characters, which is something every thriller requires but doesn’t always provide. The risks must be real for us to care, and I cared.

Admittedly, I started to find the constant twists and turns tiring—there is a thing as overly convoluted—but I was willing to hang in there to get our ending. It didn’t need to be happy, but I had full faith that it would be satisfying. *Pause to mourn misplaced hope*

Without giving away the ending, let’s just say that the reason I have such hatred for it is not because it wasn’t what I wanted, but because I believe it actively undermined what the show was working toward all along—the very definition of a “Gotcha!” moment. When we give a show our faith, we accept that there are clues we don’t yet know but enjoy the mental exercise of speculating and playing along with the mystery—we don’t see the full picture but are on tenterhooks waiting for the show to provide it. So when the show eventually produces a big picture that doesn’t work, we realize with a sinking feeling that our faith was misplaced—and then every bit of excitement we’d felt along the way is retroactively diminished.

It’s why the last taste has more power than one in the middle—the sourness lingers long after the actual bite is gone. God’s gift my ass. God owes me a refund, is what.

 

Golden Cross

Golden Cross was an interesting case for me: I approached with caution, unsure whether it would hold my interest, was pleasantly surprised when it did, and months later remember so little of it. I chalk it up to the drama being a competent entry into its category—a Count of Monte Cristo-inspired revenge story set in the financial world—but missing that spark to take it beyond that baseline.

What that meant was that while I was actively watching the show, I was engaged in the week-to-week developments—I liked the story, I felt for the wronged hero’s plight and wanted him to come back strong against the privileged elites and take them all down. I was drawn to the conflict of a righteous prosecutor determined to help the hero and nail the criminal, not knowing said criminal was her adoring dear dad. And I appreciated that the bad guys were, for a change, not genius masterminds who always knew how to skirt the law; they were scared, panicky, and very human. Completely corrupt, to be sure, but this wasn’t villainy for villainy’s sake, but weak men acting desperately out of self-preservation.

On the other hand, Golden Cross felt rather cold, perhaps a bit connect-the-dots. I appreciated that the plot was well-thought-out, but it was mostly an intellectual appreciation that left the heartstrings untugged. That’s not entirely to be blamed on the lack of chemistry between the leads, though that certainly didn’t help—Kim Kang-woo and Lee Shi-young felt more like buddies than romantic interests, and their storyline never quite rang true, and therefore lacked memorability. Wait, what was I talking about again?

 

Gap-dong

Here’s an honest question: How do you make a show about multiple serial killers boring?

I found enough in Gap-dong to make it worth the watch, but it’s another title I’m filing under my list of disappointments. I suppose I can’t blame a drama just because it didn’t end up being what I wanted it to be, but the show bears some responsibility for skewed expectations given how it touted Gap-dong: a dark and twisted thriller based on real-life serial killings that also inspired the lauded film Memories of Murder.

So I was expecting something macabre and edgy, something along the lines of Silence of the Lambs with its eerie suspense. Yet once the show settled in and the copycat murders got going, curiously the show became less of a crime mystery and more of a psychological case study. Interesting? Maybe intellectually. Exciting? Not even a little.

I lay the fault at the writer’s door for actively getting in the drama’s own way; every time the mystery built up a modicum of suspense, the writing spoiled the payoff by telling us what happened up front, rather than taking us along for the ride of discovery. It’s akin to a comic giving his punchline first, then lecturing us on why the joke is funny, instead of telling the joke in proper order. Thus we saw the copycat killing a bunch of people while the good guys ran around mystified, which had the double-whammy effect of boring us and making them seem stupid for not seeing what we knew.

The acting was the saving grace of the show—there wasn’t a weak link among the bunch—with particularly strong performances by Yoon Sang-hyun as the dogged cop and Lee Joon as the emotionless psychopath. Their work elevated the material, honestly, because while the interplay between the good guys and the bad guys was narratively unsurprising, at least we could sit back and enjoy what the cast was doing with the emotions of the scenes. Interestingly, this made for a drama where the process of watching was more fulfilling than getting to the ending, which I guess you could take as a grand metaphor for life or something. Just beware the serial killers roaming around.

 

Trot Lovers

Shin Sung-rok – “펄펄 끓어요” from the Trot Lovers OST [ Download ]

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Trot Lovers could have turned out a better show than it did—okay, that’s true of any show, but it feels extra true of this show because the basic framework of the story was perfectly workable. Tried-and-true, even, given the universality of underdog stories, the raw-talent-versus-elitism divide, and opposites-attract romances. Plus, it provided a prime opportunity for cheeky K-pop meta commentary while also taking on the idol industry from a fresher, sideways approach with trot music.

Sadly, Trot was a failure of execution, and suffered from a mishmash of tone—you had your standard light rom-com moments, your feel-good musical performances, and silly side characters, but then you also had amnesia, murderous antagonists, and cover-ups. And for once, it wasn’t Shin Sung-rok pulling those strings! (On a side note, how odd was it to see Shin Sung-rok playing a quirky goofball, sandwiched between two murderous, evil genius roles? He clearly had a blast being the mastermind, to such an extent that I was half-expecting him to show his true colors and start killing in Trot Lovers.)

Trot never tried to be highbrow, but it never quite embraced its slapstick, lowbrow charm either, which would have been one way to salvage the halfhearted attempt. The show was never aggressively bad (as with shows that inspire a much stronger negative reaction in me); it was just limp and lackluster. The supporting cast did what they could to make the most of their comic-relief bits, and the fact that they became more watchable than the main characters tells you something about the blandness of the central story. Thank goodness, at least, for Jung Eun-ji’s impassioned singing—and the show did incorporate her performances into the plot effectively—without which there would’ve been no reason to stick around. Even with her, it’s hard to justify sitting around through that increasingly messy latter stretch; maybe just stick to the Youtube video excerpts?

 

Joseon Gunman

Joseon Gunman was one of my bigger disappointments of the year, which feels almost unfair to say given that I did in fact enjoy it and would give it a pretty high mark. It’s just that I was so ready for it to grab me completely—I was willing it to do that all series long—and it never quite got there.

It had all the makings: revenge tale, new identity, guns in Joseon, gorgeous cinematography, Lee Jun-ki! From a production standpoint, it looked top-shelf, and the story was rich with potential. Its key failing, as I see it, was that it was too afraid to leave the harbors of convention and take risks. The hero could take up a gun and embark on vigilante justice missions, but he wasn’t allowed to actually dance with the dark side—his goodness of character was always reinforced, lest we think badly of him. (And he only ever shot people in the arm! How’s that for unintended comedy?)

Likewise, the heroine was a paragon of virtue, as was her stalwart admirer, and the good guys had a frustrating tendency to be noble folks limited by external forces. Anytime your drama relies on external conflict at the expense of internal ones means that you’re shutting out an entire dimension of human emotion, and keeping conflict on a simplistic level. All of which meant that the most interesting characters ended up being the villains, because they were allowed complexity and shape, where the heroes were given only the one side.

Which isn’t to say that Joseon Gunman was a failure, since I definitely had fun watching it. The core story was well-drawn, even if nuance was dulled by the lack of dimension, and the hero and villain’s escalating dance of attack and counterattack kept the plot in motion. The action scenes were top-notch; Lee Jun-ki sort of spoils you for action scenes forevermore, because you can’t beat an actor who performs stunts completely on his own, negating the need for distracting edits or obscured shots. And the production poured loving care into the filming, scoring, and editing of the show, which is evident in the richness of the visuals—it looks like a winner of a show. It’s just, well, I wanted to give the drama my heart, and it just wouldn’t take it.

 

Marriage Not Dating

I almost bypassed Marriage Not Dating at first, which sounded cute on paper—bachelor attempts to outsmart pushy parents by presenting an unmarriageable fake girlfriend (and falls for her, naturally)—but in a been-there-done-that sort of way. The show launched rather under the radar with two lesser-known leads, but almost immediately picked up solid word-of-mouth, and for good reason: It was sharply written with witty dialogue, and cleverly edited to play with chronology, which resulted in a show that sounded like it should be familiar yet managed to keep springing surprises on us.

One of my favorite things about cable stations is their willingness to cast smaller names, because here’s a case where the leads just wouldn’t have worked as well without this particular pair. Both Han Groo and Yeon Woo-jin were probably a few years away from scoring lead roles in broadcast television, but as Marriage Not Dating proved, they were absolutely up to the task. I’d known Han Groo was a budding talent when she debuted in the stylish cable mini-drama Girl K as a teenage assassin, but she positively sparkled in this drama, proving that a cheerful everygirl with a trusting nature can be a winsome character, given that the right actress bring her to life. She left you with the impression that had anybody else been cast, well, the character would’ve been all wrong.

Marriage Not Dating was for the most part a conventional romantic comedy, but I credit the writing and directing with keeping the story fresh, and preventing it from falling into that late-stage slow-down that plagues so many shows. Time-skipping and playing with chronology drive me a little batty when they’re used as lazy shortcuts, but when employed thoughtfully, as in Marriage Not Dating, they’re effective storytelling devices, leading to some truly hilarious moments that I won’t spoil for you here. Let’s just say that the sharp direction was instrumental in keeping the pace moving, allowing the characters to shine as they bickered and flirted their way to their happily ever afters.

 

High School: Love On

Oh my gahhh, how is this drama still airing? When High School: Love On first hit the air, I was skeptical of its format—once a week, Friday nights, for twenty episodes—because it felt like a last resort that nobody was really happy with. (It was initially planned to be a standard prime-time drama, then got shuffled around, even considering daytime slots, before KBS created the Friday slot.)

I could complain that this format killed interest in the show before it even had a chance—and how the constant pre-emptions torpedoed any momentum that might be building despite it—but to be honest, my indignation has a limit because the show itself lacks oomph. I really, really wanted this drama to do well, for several reasons: to overcome its scheduling obstacle and prove that quality could win out; because Kim Sae-ron is an adorable and talented budding star; because it would set a precedent for “younger” shows getting bigger budgets and serious production attention, rather than being relegated to low-budget affairs; and because, most of all, the idea is great, creating an interesting paranormal world with an intricate set of rules.

Ultimately, however, it’s a show that’s better in concept than execution. It’s been an easy watch despite the many flaws, but because the world is so interesting, I’m constantly plagued by disappointment over what could have been. The acting is the most visible weak link, and even having Kim Sae-ron in the cast isn’t a guaranteed win; while she is by far the best actor of the bunch, she’s actually surprised me by being simpler and less nuanced than I’d expected, given her dramatic chops. She plays her fallen-reaper-turned-high-schooler heroine with a cheerful radiance, but her newness to human ways sometimes plays off as dimwittedness rather than quirkiness. The idol leads—Woo-hyun and Seung-yeol, both of Infinite—are a bigger gaping hole, and their stilted performances keep this drama in Saved By the Bell territory rather than Monstar, which gives us an example of a high school drama that didn’t feel juvenile and whose fresh-faced cast held their own.

The acting isn’t the only problem, however, since the drama suffers from a tonal clash between dramatic extremes—sometimes it’s adorable and sweet, and at other times the characters react with makjang levels of emotion to simple conflicts. It’s jarring and clumsy, made all the more noticeable because the look of the drama is so polished and smooth, while the content remains rough around the edges. It’s frustrating, because I remain intrigued in the question at the center of the show—will she turn human or have to return to being an eternal reaper?—and the steady evolution of the rules in the reapers’ circle hints at a well-thought-out mythology… but the expression of those ideas has been clunky, to say the least. Maybe this is what they invented fanfic for.

 

Surplus Princess

Surplus Princess was a bit of an experiment for tvN—or at least, that’s how the media depicts it, although I don’t really think the mix of fantasy and humor was that unusual. It did perhaps take an aggressive approach in establishing a cheeky, glib, quirky tone, full of pop-culture and meta references. While that may have been a bit much for viewers (the show didn’t have a strong showing in the ratings and got cut two episodes short), it’s also what makes it stand out against dramaland’s other comedies, whose senses of humor hew more conventional.

Surplus feels more like a fantasy drama than many of the other titles in that category, in that there’s a surreal quality to the show, and I don’t even mean the part where a mermaid turns human. It feels like a live-action cartoon, in a positive sense; there’s a strong directorial hand in maintaining that tone throughout, so that reality doesn’t threaten to break in and ruin the effect. Instead, we get a fizzy, slightly addled tale of a bubbly mermaid who establishes camaraderie with a motley group of misfits, and learns that being human means a lot more than sprouting legs.

In addition to the usual themes of humanity being all about love and friendship, the drama throws in the additional motif of employment—and, funny enough, manages to not make a joke of it, instead tapping into the cultural zeitgeist about what it means to be employed in Korea these days. (It’s no Misaeng, but then again, Misaeng doesn’t have butt-grabbing, French-kissing heroines, does it?)

Surplus Princess does appear to be the kind of show that inspires an all-or-nothing reaction: Either you like it, or you really don’t. If you’re in the latter group, chances are good that the entire thing is a turn-off, but if you’re part of the group who likes it, I’d pinpoint two points of dissatisfaction: the timing of the main romance, and the ending. I’ll try not to spoil anything major here, but with the romance, I’d point to mishandled timing of the two lovelines that left many (most? all?) dissatisfied. On paper the choice works, but experiencing the emotional trajectory as it unfolded onscreen pointed at some kind of miscalibration; it left us feeling wanting.

The ending is perhaps the bigger offense but also the one I’m willing to cut the show more slack on, mostly because I assume that the last-minute cutdown of episodes put the drama in a tough spot. The finale felt like a defiant middle finger to the station, and I can understand feeling backed into a corner. If that’s what happened, it’s too bad that the production essentially chose an act of TV road rage over making the best of a bad situation, because it’s us fans who are left trying to cobble together sense out of a taunting finale. For me, I choose to remember Surplus more for its zany antics and not its ending, which has the added bonus of letting me reimagine the romance the way I wanted it. (Namely: more kisses!)

 

Three Musketeers

Hype is a double-edged sword, but 2014 sure has given us a lot more of its downsides than ups. Three Musketeers definitely suffered from an excess of it, and those expectations appear to have been its undoing. With so much attention paid to the three-season format and location shoots and high production budget, focus shifted away from whether this was a good show to whether it would live up to its price tag—two very different questions.

Regarding the latter question, tvN seems to be leaning toward no, based on its vague and noncommittal attitude toward follow-up seasons (it hasn’t confirmed cancellation of such plans, but it doesn’t take a lot of reading between the lines to see which way the wind’s blowing). But as to the former, I’d say that yes, Three Musketeers is a show that on its own merits, independent of meta baggage, was solidly entertaining, capturing the spirit of swagger and cheekiness that we’ve come to expect of Three Musketeers-based stories. Humor was never far from the surface, and the camaraderie between the four leads made for light-hearted entertainment.

It’s also one of my top picks for adapted stories; I’m amazed at how fully it utilized the Three Musketeers story while at the same time feeling fully at home as a Joseon-era fusion sageuk. If you didn’t know it was the Three Musketeers, the story would work perfectly fine on its own as a fun interpretation on the Injo-Sohyeon period of history, and conversely, if you only knew it as an adaptation independent of its historical moorings, it feels very much in the spirit of the Dumas tale.

In hindsight, I do wish the series hadn’t spent the entire first season on the process of forming the musketeer posse, because we got so little time to enjoy them in their fully assembled state. Granted, this is the risk you run in planning something so deep into the future, but it’s also a reminder to not save your best stuff for last—in withholding your gems, you might end up not getting a chance to use them at all. In fact, all great writing should hew to that rule in general: Show us your best now, without worrying that you’re using it up too soon. Get us hooked now, and when we get to later, well—then you can think of something even better. Always aim for better.

 

Iron Man

Iron Man was my biggest surprise of the year, in that it had the biggest gap between what I’d expected and what I actually got. Well, inasmuch as I had no idea what to expect; in the lead-up to the premiere, it looked so strange and disjointed that I couldn’t begin to predict what it was trying to be. A thriller? A hard melodrama? A supernatural sci-fi piece? An action drama? A… comedy?

Once I saw the show, it turned out to be much simpler than I’d thought, plotwise. Yes, there is a man whose body sprouts knives when he gets angry, but that wasn’t so weird once you accepted the basic comic book premise; the Hulk turned green and inflated, Iron Man has anger spikes. More than the knives, I’d say that one’s response to Iron Man depends almost completely on tone: Either this deadpan, absurdist humor works for you or it doesn’t. And while all humor is subjective, the Iron Man divide seems a bit further out-there than other comedies, and certainly when we’re talking about dramaland.

If it didn’t work for you, don’t worry; pretty much all of dramaland agreed with you (Iron Man had pretty abysmal ratings, even taking into account this year’s depressed numbers across the board). It may have been a little too experimental for the average viewer, though I found it absolutely hysterical—it was witty, tongue-in-cheek, and wry, with a dreamy fantasy touch. Iron Man felt like a classic superhero comic book brought to life; the world in the show was in no way our real world, but the director maintained such a rock-solid grip on his vision that the artifice held up up. I mean, of course it’s ridiculous that the hero could sprout knives or fly—but in his universe, I believed that he could and accepted the drama’s worldbuilding vision.

Even so, even an intentionally absurd show requires emotional grounding, and Iron Man gave it to us in the two leads (I almost even liked Shin Se-kyung in this!) and the supporting characters like our awesome Secretary Go and precocious little Chang. The knives were a metaphor made literal, and the drama made sure to bring everything back to the source, at which point our manchild of a hero could begin his emotional healing. Okay, with some physical healing too; you don’t turn into Mr. Porcupine without encountering a few occupational hazards.

 

She’s So Lovable

Oy, this show. She’s So Lovable was one of the year’s big flops, and I certainly understand why—sluggish pacing, embarrassing dialogue, terrible acting. At the same time, I thought of it as benignly incompetent—and that’s why I was always surprised at intensity of scorn the Korean media leveled against this show, from before it even premiered through to its finale. I didn’t disagree with the assessments, but found it curious that reviews would be so scathing of a show whose biggest mistake was in being dull as dirt. (The headlines were pretty snarky and entertaining, making full use of the “She’s so [adjective]” structure to call it all sorts of things, but it did feel like picking low-hanging fruit.)

One explanation might be that the press was having fun tearing down yet another overhyped project from a big star, but I’d argue that She’s So Lovable wasn’t really one of the big buzz projects of the year, nor were the producers particularly big-name. Perhaps the likelier explanation is that there’s a bubbling dissatisfaction with idols-turned-actors in the general populace, and all that pent-up ire was just looking for a target upon which to unleash itself.

Whatever the reason, She’s So Lovable did itself no favors with its choices. One could almost forgive the production for casting Rain to play a fictionalized version of himself (or really, his producer/hyung/mentor JYP) for some meta kicks, and even though she was woefully out of her element, I can sort of see what drove them to cast Krystal in the lead. (I said sort of. If I squint real hard. And if the criteria are an idol star who’s acted before, regardless of suitability for this role.) But they had no chemistry to speak of, and she was so far in over her head that I almost preferred her scenes with L (the nadir of idol-actor castings), because at least then they were on even ground. Rain, bless his heart, did his best to act, but the contrast between what he produced and what his idol co-stars did was downright distracting, and he was best when out of their vicinity.

The story was equally flatfooted, and the dialogue was consistently noted for its ability to make you embarrassed for everybody involved in speaking it. Here’s a question: Did the acting lower the writing, or did the writing lower the acting? Or is that a moot question, because once we got into the downward spiral, all that mattered was that there was no way to save the sinking ship?

 

Secret Door

Arghhhh, Secret Door. Where did we go so wrong?

This drama had SO much to recommend it, and it kills me. Secret Door came ready-supplied with a gripping, grim, positively lurid story—one that has captured the interest and imaginations of people for centuries. The story of a king who orders his son to voluntarily step into his own gruesome death is epic and fascinating in the utmost—so how do you make a drama about that and let the tension slip right out between its fingers? How is there even a way to make the story of the tragic Crown Prince Sado prosaic?

Secret Door started out with promise—it did have a tendency to inundate us with characters and names and was pretty dense with historical data and politics, but at the core we had the tension between the king and crown prince to drive conflict. No matter how dry the politics got (and it could sometimes peel paint), the drama remained a worthwhile watch because (1) the political machinations were, if sometimes bordering on impenetrable, at least well thought-out and interesting as intellectual exercises, and (2) the emotional undercurrent tracked back to the father-son dynamic, which kept us invested.

But the longer the political chess game went on, the more it felt like the drama was purposely trying to be inaccessible, and the focus shifted away from Yeongjo. (How do you cast Han Seok-kyu and then relegate him to mere snippets of screen time?) That may have been forgivable had the shift occurred to give Sun (Sado) more narrative focus, but instead the drama jumped over to side characters and day players. I won’t even blame the actress swap as the source of problems (even though I found it jarring and unnecessary). That was, if anything, a symptom of bigger issues at play, which was a loss of focus and a drifting from the drama’s emotional center. Namely, you have amazing actors playing out a Shakespearean-level psychodrama, only to dial that down in favor of external factors. Politicking between our main characters was tolerable, but outsourcing that to eunuchs and scholars and outside political agitators? Unacceptab—zzzzzzzzzz.

I don’t think it’s a reach to say that many of us were hanging in there for its ending, to see how the drama would depict the prince meeting his infamous end. Heck, the power of that one scene alone was what got us all to tune in on Day 1—and probably got the drama sold in the first place. So I stuck it out for that ending, only to literally shout at my screen, “That’s it?!” The drama’s ending told us nothing we didn’t already know, and glossed it over in the most cursory way. It’s the equivalent of being stuck in a five-hour gridlock on the highway, expecting to see signs of wreckage or carnage at the crisis point, and finding absolutely nothing but a bunch of cars driving slowly. At that point you just wanna see some blood, okay? Where’s my payoff?

All that said, Secret Door did contain stellar acting, and was in no way a disappointment from a performance standpoint. The plot may have been slow and dense, but every beat was acted with full commitment and gravitas; Park Eun-bin was particularly strong as the terse princess, and Lee Je-hoon was, as ever, commanding and wholly emotional present. Han Seok-kyu took a King Lear-ian approach in his interpretation of a well-known figure, though I might note that it did seem a wee bit studied. But is that all moot in the end? If nobody’s watching, does that mitigate its own impact? If a tree falls in the forest, is there nobody to clap for an act of thespian grandeur?

 

Cantabile Tomorrow

Joo-won – “Innocente” from the Cantabile Tomorrow OST [ Download ]

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Aww, Cantabile Tomorrow. I will readily concede that this drama was not the show I’d hoped it would be, and that I could think of a dozen ways or more to improve it, and that the flaws aren’t even well-tucked out of sight but right there in the open. Even so, I had an overwhelmingly warm-and-fuzzy response to it, and in looking back on the show, it’s the emotionally stirring moments that come to mind, while the clumsy bits recede to the background.

It’s a shame that the beginning was as awkward as it was, because once the show found itself, it was quite sweet and punctuated with a steady stream of heart-stirring moments. The drama undoubtedly suffered from the weight of expectations, which was inevitable given the popularity of Nodame Cantabile, and took a few false steps before figuring out how to make this adaptation work. Attempting to mimic Nodame’s broad comic sensibility was a mistake that the producers thankfully adjusted away from, though it may have been too late at that point to win over people who’d already given up. You can’t blame people from being turned off; it’s always nice, of course, to be given the benefit of the doubt or a second chance, but it’s the drama’s responsibility to make the most of its one shot. So I understand why people dropped off, though it’s too bad that their only encounter with the show was at its worst.

With its easy storytelling flow and understated sensibility, this wasn’t an emotional show, per se, but nevertheless tapped into a vein of feeling. It wasn’t about wringing out sentimentality but in finding a point of resonance with the characters’ feelings; their journeys as musicians mirrored their maturation as people, and tapped into universal experiences of transitioning into adulthood. So it didn’t matter whether you understood the musical references or could relate to the specifics of playing an instrument, because the music was one way of representing a type of growth we can all connect with.

Every so often, it’s nice to get a show that reminds us that we watch dramas that move us and speak to us, regardless of their standing elsewhere. Cantabile Tomorrow was that show for me, and while I can’t quite pinpoint what about its messy alchemy speaks to me, it matters less to me why that’s so, and more just that it is.

 

Misaeng

Misaeng is the rare example of a drama that came with extremely high expectations and not only rose to meet the challenge but surpassed it. Met with universal acclaim, the drama has managed a remarkable feat and risen to pop-culture phenomenon status while successfully evading some of dramaland’s favorite conventions, like stunt-casting for star power, arranging characters into love triangles or squares or other geometric shapes, and falling back on familiar conflict setups. It is, without question, a stellar production that deserves all of its accolades.

The individual plotlines involving the company’s workings sometimes stir me to impatience at their deliberate pacing, though I don’t doubt that this is an intentional choice; the story is loosely plotted, but don’t confuse that for lacking energy or conflict. The episodes are strung taut with tension, and any appearance of meandering is illusory, disguising a sense of unease that’s always bubbling under the surface, ready to boil over in the form of the corporate crisis of the day. That’s part of its brilliance, in capturing the realities of office culture not only in appearance but also psychologically and emotionally. The directing is masterful in capturing this sensibility—sometimes in words, sometimes in images, sometimes in silence. It’s all the more impressive knowing that the director is doing this working from 2-D images of a webtoon, capturing the feel of the original Misaeng in a wholly new medium.

That doesn’t mean it has to be your favorite show; I recognize that it’s the best drama to come around all year but am not beating myself up about not feeling wildly in love with it. I find it smart and caustic and unbearably realistic at times, but it certainly isn’t a show I’m itching to rewatch—for one, it’s just so depressing. (A Korean article I read called it “the saddest drama without a single sad scene in it,” which is oddly apt.) It makes me feel bleak and a little dull inside after every episode—and is there a way to add “but in a good way” to the end of that thought? Sometimes it cuts a little too close to reality for comfort (and by sometimes I mean all the times), but that sense of discomfort may very well be part of its appeal.

Because nobody’s watching Misaeng to feel great and laugh it up, for sure. I suppose the appeal for much of the viewership is in finding snippets of oneself in Jang Geu-rae, the hapless new hire navigating the maddening politics of the corporate world, which he observes with the clarity (and horror) of an outsider. (Another Korean article cited that 44% of office workers felt they were Geu-rae—a pretty impressive number.) There’s a reason that enduring traumatic events with others elicits bonding, whether in the trenches of war or in the metaphorical minefields of office spaces. We’re all in this together, you sigh with relief to know you’re not alone.

 

Modern Farmer

You’ve got to give a show props for knowing exactly what it is and not having an inferiority complex about it. Modern Farmer is intentionally—you could even say aggressively—lowbrow, and whether you find it charming or dumb probably depends in large part your tolerance for that kind of humor.

Admittedly Modern Farmer’s voluntarily vulgar sensibility is not my bag, but I find it harmless and silly enough to follow along. There’s a good-naturedness that I like about the show; I can enjoy that everyone’s in on the joke and working to milk it to its best effect, which helps keep things fun rather than stupid. The cast is willing to do outrageous things for comedy, and I will always admire full commitment, even if it comes at the hands of the hundredth pee joke. (Oh my god the toilet humor. This drama has the joke repertoire of a ten-year-old whose idea of wit involves a whoopie cushion.)

Whether or not you find the humor hilarious or senseless, it would be pointless if the drama didn’t also have a heart, and that’s what saves Modern Farmer from being a throwaway catalogue of sight gags. The characters may spend all day (or night) running around wearing ajumma pants, perpetrating poop gags, being victimized by local wildlife, or singing to their crops, but they’ve also cultivated surprise friendships with the locals and come together in unexpected ways. It’s developed into an ensemble of interconnected relationships, becoming an example of the whole adding up to more than the sum of its parts. Modern Farmer may not make for sophisticated television, but if SBS wants to give us more good-humored, upbeat programming in lieu of fraught makjangs, I’m all for it.

 

Liar Game

Liar Game did something I never thought I’d say: It made math interesting. Fine, I didn’t always follow the mathiness in the show, but it sure spurred me to try, and that is something years of math (and subsequent years of recurring nightmares of math) could not get me to do.

This is a drama whose adaptation merits I can’t judge, having no experience of the originals—but I can say that as a brand-new viewer, I found the show downright addicting. One of my favorite things about it was that because the base concept was so strong, the drama could step away from the usual bin of tropes and take us in directions I wasn’t used to in K-dramas—no need for birth secrets or love triangles when you’ve got so much ground to cover with the Liar Game and its shady background. Rather than trying to guess what would come next, I was content to simply enjoy what was happening without feeling a compulsion to anticipate the next development.

The games did become rather convoluted and following the explanations could be a challenge, but each game was smartly written to draw out key character moments. I assume the credit for that must go to the original creator for coming up with such elaborate games, but I do also think the director deserved credit for finding suspenseful ways of depicting the underlying tension at each stage. So despite the dry rules and complicated qualifiers, the show found a way to follow the contestants’ emotional throughlines, which was a crucial point to keeping us with the characters as they lied and strategized their way through the rounds.

Liar Game also belongs in a minority of dramas this year whose ending didn’t bring about a precipitous drop, thank goodness. As the show headed toward its conclusion, rather than fraying at the seams as so many dramas unfortunately do, it became increasingly evident that Liar Game had been planned with extra care; details that had been tossed out earlier carelessly now came together, giving us an ending that made total sense while still succeeding in surprising us.

Now, all we need is a Season 2…

 

Birth of a Beauty

Necessary caveat: It’s a bit premature to write a review about Birth of a Beauty since it’s still airing, but I suppose it’ll be too late to cover in next year’s batch. And I’m enjoying it too much to want to skip over it entirely; its screwball antics are a hoot, and the two leads really sell their characters with loads of charm.

The rapport between the couple is the biggest factor making this show a winner for me; Joo Sang-wook turns in another adorable turn as a rom-com hero with a vulnerable dorky side, while Han Ye-seul plays her character with a sweetness with an edge. Together they’re a bit daffy in the cutest way, at first hilariously mismatched and then growing closer the more they see each other’s hearts behind the facades.

The drama’s sense of humor is like a lot of romantic comedies—cute, bold, fast-paced—with a wacky tinge to give it an extra spin. This extra quality goes a long way toward making the show work, because the tone is what’s keeping Birth of a Beauty from sinking into a dramatic angstfest—there are definitely plot points that could be played as aggravating, but are managed by the overall screwball sensibility. It’ll be up to the show to maintain that sense of fun as it tackles its latter half, and I’ve seen too many dramas to count on anything this early. Let’s just cross our fingers and hope for the best, shall we? And if this one crashes and burns, well, someone just might have to start a petition to ensure that Joo Sang-wook comes back with another crazy rom-com. It’s for his own good!

 

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I'm get used to not being nitpicky about korean drama before. Because I know it must be always the same formula and recycled over and over again. What makes it good is the execution. 2012 is the best year for korean drama after 2007 for me. But I've never though there is a year where I fear I might consider stopped watching korean drama after so many dissapointment. And 2014 did it for me, thanks to Fated to love you, Joseon Gunman, and
and several good start but become a snorfest afterwards shows. I just can't stopped watching because I'm already invested on their character damn you SHOW! I suffered a "can't stop watching despite it's so bad bcause I already invested" syndrome.

Thanks God, there is several a good korean drama near at the end of the year 2014. I already have faith it will become good until the end. Because the writers seems finally have direction (hopefully). Misaeng ( It's relate to me to a T) and Secret Love affair are my favourite. It's also deep and have depth. And Now I become feel good again with Valid Love, too (hopefully it will be good until the end).

My favourite rom com this year surprisingly Marriage not Dating. I dig the OTP and their story how to deal with each other's family despite being fake... Despite several plot I felt uncomfortable with because several issue they poorly handle, I enjoyed it alot. Nad I found a new respect for Yeon Wo Jin.

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My favorite drama of 2014 was Liar Game, and then God's Gift.

I ended up dropping YFAS, among several other dramas; 2014 was not a great year of dramas for me. Notable disappointments for me are Joseon Gunman, Secret Door, and Cantabile Tomorrow.

Misaeng is awesome, except that I find it a bit too realistic, and I watch dramas to sort of forget momentarily about my own life, and Misaeng only reinforces my sometimes depressing worklife.

I had high expectations for Surplus Princess (Jo Bo Ah from SUFBB!) but the writing seemed to shift halfway through the series. It's too bad the drama was cut a few episodes though.

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I was thinking Misaeng would be something I could watch multiple times, because it's not for the cliffhangers that I watch. I watch because I treasure the relationships. Every time they make the "right" decision when faced with a moral dilemma, I melt. The first 2 episodes were depressing but by the end of the 2nd one, it gave me a reason to smile real big. I appreciate that the reasons I cry or smile isn't some bogus reason but the little things we all face in life.

You From Another Star, I admit the story was not great. But as I thought about it, what it DID do right was the...magical feeling that it had. Of course, Jun Ji Hyun made the show. Without her, it never would've gotten that big. So even though there were some pretty big flaws in the drama, I had fun watching it. And that's a big ordeal when it's a formula we've seen many times. As you said, it seemed fresh.

Liar Game and Naeil's Cantabile are two I still enjoyed...more the former. More than the other dramas I've watch this year. 2014 was a terrible year for dramas.

God's Gift...thank you that someone agrees. The ending left me so upset, what started as a drama that had me at the edge of my seat...became one of the worst dramas I've seen. Well okay, I haven't seen a lot. But it definitely left a bad impression.

Fated to Love You was cute. I never planned on watching that one because I'd already seen the Taiwanese version. But somehow, they managed to make it into their own. If only they hadn't included that one part... Really, I'm sick of the cold bastards that are usually in most kdramas. So I loved the male lead. Actually, both leads did a great job with their roles.

Now if only Misaeng is a sign for good things yet to come. I hope that because of its success, more creative dramas will come out in 2015.

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You From Another Star and Liar Game are why I watch so many dramas afraid that I might miss something special like these two were.

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I've been watching High School Love On (or is it Hi! School... ?) and I've actually been enjoying it quite a lot! I agree it has it's ridiculous makjang moments (more on this bellow) but this side of it doesn't make me too upset because since it does air so infrequently it's like I get to forget how ridiculous (some of the) things were in the previous episode by the time the new one comes around. In all honesty, it's the first drama in months that has gotten me to shed real tears along with the characters (episode 18, for those watching it). This is especially rare since I only get truly emotionally invested in the characters when I can binge-watch a show and it's harder for me to feel that emotional pull when it's a show I'm watching week-to-week. I will totally agree with the acting, though... it can be a bit flat, especially from Lee Sung-yeol. I do think that Nam Woo-hyun has improved significantly as the show progressed, or maybe that's just my fangirl goggles. If anything, I find my biggest complaint from the actors is the huge age difference. They show has done a good job of never crossing the line into creep-o territory but I think I would let myself enjoy things more if I wasn't so weirded out by that.

On the makjang mother storyline... WTF?! Since DB isn't recapping this story (not that I blame them) I'm in serious need of some HSLO conversation. I don't know if this is a cultural difference that's just not coming across (I know that in Korea there is a much bigger stigma associated to being a single mother) but I just don't get this woman nor how she's been written! 1) I don't get her actions of the past, 2) I don't get how she went on for so many episodes being such a horrible human being to everyone in her life and, 3) I sincerely don't understand how she's suddenly a good person and everything is forgiven. This woman just seems like the worst excuse for a human being and I would have been much happier if the show had given her a story arch where she gets punished for her evil doings (since they chose to make such a caricature out of her... actually, I would have preferred if they wrote her completely different, actually). I guess I can accept that the writers are trying to redeem her and show how her new-self is making amends and trying to do what's right but I don't think any of it comes across in her story. The whole thing is just unbelievable, more so than a child-like reaper turned human living among us. I AM happy for the two (or three, if we consider ajusshi) boys since Mom's transfortmation means they'll all get a happy ending so I'm willing to swallow my extreme dissatisfaction with her storyline for their behalf... but, yes! It's a freaking conscious decision.

Any other people watching the show?

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Joo sang wook is great in sly and single again also in birth of a beauty... just read an article that he is crowned as the korean's jim carey because of his great performances in the two rom coms. He needs to act as a sloppy king in his next project.. it will be interesting..

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I am a serial drama dropper but this year is particularly bad. It was not so much of dropping dramas at ep 1 or 4 but never finishing them with just 2 or 1 episode to go.

YFAS - watchable but I don't get the hype. It was funny at the beginning but when things got serious, it got boring. Dropped with 2 eps to go
MND - I love this show, it was my crack but it kind of fizzle out in the end. Maybe things got too predictable.
Plus Nine Boys - another one which I liked but somehow never got to watch the last episode.
Three Musketeers - it was fun and exciting and I love the Princess. Will finish this one.
Fated to love you - Just when I got used to Jang Hyuk's laugh and liking Jang Nara, they had to do that silly twist which killed my interest.
Trot Lovers -it started good and enjoyed Shin Sung Rok. Like jb, I was half expecting him to turn into a murderous villain at any time. But once the amnesia trope came out, I ran far far away.
God's Gift - I liked it so much in the beginning but I just don't get the ending. I will allow that some endings are far from perfect but this one was deeply unsatisfying.
Misaeng - watching it because it got so much raves. Very good start but now at halfway point, I am struggling.
I always want to finish a drama and I always want to like it so I hope it will be one of the very few I complete this year.
Liar's Game - been wanting to watch after reading DB raves but made the mistake of checking out the Japanese version. It irritated me so much that I will think about trying this.
Tomorrow Cantabile - started for Joo Won with low expectations for the story. I couldn't get the hype with Nodame Cantabile and I had wished he took on a different drama when it was announced. Now that I have watched the show, it has become one of my favorite Joo Won dramas. It was one of those rare dramas that got better and better. There were no major setups, conflicts or twist but the journey of Cha Yoo Jin, Naeil and the orchestra was somehow very enjoyable, fun to watch and surprisingly heartwarming.

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Yes, it's a story about the growth of characters. It's like watching a plant bud. Even though a few aspects of the show weren't perfect, and the beginning was a bit rocky, as the story progressed the characters minor and major were each fleshed out realistically which made them easy to relate with and cheer on, not to mention all the wonderful music pieces for each episode. Cantabile Tomorrow was really a heartwarming gem among the dramas for this year.

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For the record this year was the year I learned Joo Sang-wook was capable of smiling in a drama.

For me She's So Loveable is an odd drama see when it was airing I liked it and overlooked it's flaws. However when I watched it a second time with my mom, a tradition of bonding for us going back to the early 90's when we'd watch Star Trek: The Next Generation, I couldn't watch the whole thing and ended up leaving her to watch whole episodes in the second half by herself.

Blade Man is my first real experience with a bad drama ending. Most "bad" endings don't really bother me especially ones where characters die for instance someone who should have died in an elevator being alive bothered me more than Dong-chan's death in God's Gift. However Blade Man started out as my biggest surprise of the year as I went in expecting nothing then lo and behold I loved it but that ending turned it into my biggest disappointment ever in my 3 solid years of drama watching.

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What no "It's Okay That's Love" one of the best dramas this year.

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Seemingly contrary to the majority POV evident in comments, I really enjoyed 2014 Kdrama year. Even though we didn't have one fantastic drama after another, there were several that really touched me, that were clever, entertaining and lingered behind that I really loved.

Of Javabeans' list I thought Misaeng, Liar Game, Marriage not dating, Miss Korea and The Three Musketeers were wonderful and so much fun. I think, also, that this years dramas have been rather moody overall. But I really enjoyed the moodiness and like jb said, we don't always watch dramas for comfort. It was refreshing to have so many intellectually engaging dramas that also managed somehow to make a emotional impression. The understatedness of dramas like Miss Korea, Misaeng and even Marriage (the MIL and fake-daughter-in-law-to-be relationship) made other more popular ones like YFAS and Pinocchio feel a little heavy handed and superficial in comparison. It's not that i think they were bad dramas... they just didn't move me the same way, I guess.

Gonna give Birth of a Beauty a Watch! Thanks for the review jb can't wait to read the rest :)

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I been loving korean dramas for about a decade and i was so addicted but one day i find myself being bored of korean dramas,i did not even watch a single drama this 2014..I'm so sad that Moon Chae Won don't have any drama this year but im also glad she did not take any drama this year..

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Because this is part 1, I hope you'll be reviewing it's okay that's love, and plus nine boys! Because Im so in love with this dramas :D Anw, thank you for reviewing!

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YFAS to me nothing came close to this drama. I even managed to convince friends(males) who do not watch drama to finish it and they enjoyed it. Distant second is Modern Farmer, 3rd Marriage not Dating.

i like High School Love On because of the poignant song by Afternight Project "For You" same with Fated to Love You because of Jung Dongha's "Destiny Sonata".

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Wow, JB...
Thank u so much for this great review.
Always looking forward to your yearly review.
About Wonderful Season...
At first I want to watch it solely because Lee Seo Jin in it (love him in GOF).
But after reading your review, I have to rethink it.
Maybe I'll watch only LSJ parts... hahahahahaha..

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2014 dramas I've finished

It's Okay, It's Love: At first I didn't really like it because it looked simple and all about lovey dovey, but things got interesting later on, and this drama ended up being one of my favorite. GHJ is an exceptional actress.

Liar Game: Until now, it's the only drama that makes me keep reading every comments on DB recaps. It has so many layers we have to discuss every scene. The rules can be confusing but once you ignore and let the game begin, it's actually easy to digest. Not to mention the sizzling heartwarming interaction between LSY and KSE (I kinda ship them in real life), also our sexy villain Shin Sung Rok.

YFAS: It's not my cup of tea, because I have a tendency to judge a drama based on the way the characters sleep (weird, huh? But I really don't like when they sleep very beautifully with full make up), so I'm surprised I like this one. JJH is hilarious, the rom-com is fresh, though it has weird ending.

on-going:
MISAENG: no doubt, it's the highlight of drama for the end of the year, if not this whole year. It's depressingly realistic, I have to skip some part because my weak heart cannot take it (JANG GEU-RAEEE ;__;). And bromance's everywhere. Geu Rae-Chief Oh, Geu Rae-Dong Shik, Geu Rae-Baek Ki, Baek Ki-assistant Kang (the sauna scene got me ROTFL), even Young Yi and the employee whose cubicle is beside her (I don't remember his name) but I think that becomes bro-sis romance, LOL. Practically every character has a bromance line, not that I complain though.

Watched, not finished:
Angel Eyes: I love LSY and GHS (thanks to this drama I'm interested in LG because of LSY), but the conflict is no-no for me.

You're All Surrounded: even LSG cannot make me continue after 1 episode

Tomorrow Cantabile: I love Joo Won, so I kinda feel sorry

My Lovely Girl: mediocre at any level. I think Rain chose the wrong project.

Wow, I just finished 3 dramas.

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I liked Misaeng and YFAS too ^^

I started watch Cantabile for Joo Won too, but after I finished eps. 5, I found out that this drama really enjoyable, rewatchable, and suprisingly heartwarming.

My favorite character of this year probably Yoo Il Rak. Just finish it chingu :)

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Thank you for this. I really agreed with your sentiments about Marriage Not Dating, especially about the fact that the show would not be as good if those actors weren't the leads - they did such a good job making JangMi and KiTae endearing, lovable and characters you rooted for even when they exasperated you.

I also agreed with your thoughts on Surplus Princess and Misaeng. I'm actually stuck on episode five of Misaeng and while I'm incredibly happy to see it do so well and receive so much acclaim, I also find it hard to watch because it's so real and depressing and tense. It's a really, really well made show but it's hard to say that I'm excited to watch it.

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1. I think Joo Sang Wook has found his calling as an actor. He's so good at playing a dork in rom-coms, I hope he gets more of these roles.

2. Misaeng is a hit because misery loves company and there's so much misery to be had working at an office.

3. Marriage Not Dating was such a fun rom-com. I will definitely check out Han Groo's next project.

4. I don't think I would consider Hong Ki as the lead anymore since Modern Farmer is such an ensemble cast that he doesn't even stand out. I swear he gets less screen time than some of the other cast members.

5. High School King of Savvy, Fated to Love You, Marriage Not Dating, Witches Romance, Sly and Single Again, Emergency Couple, My Love From the Stars, Miss Korea and Bride of the Century are this year's dramas that I enjoyed. Currently enjoying Misaeng, Birth of a Beauty and Pinnochio.

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Most of the TVN dramas are good. I really enjoyed The Three Musketeers. Great production team and good script. Lee Jin-Wook is outstanding. He plays his role very well. Excellent acting!
I really really hope The Three Musketeers get another season.

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my faves this year: Misaeng, Liar Game, Tomorrow Cantabile

then, just realize...
those're adaptation!

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my faves this year: Misaeng and Tomorrow Cantabile

Still havent finish Liar Game. But I will check it cuz you mentioned all my favorites drama.

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I dont know, but i love cantabile tomorrow..
The first few episodes were kinda tough to watch, but once they found their pace i fell in love with it, hard..
The chemistry between the 2 leads were superb.. and you can literally tell that yoojin is really, truly, care about naeil, and it shows in his eyes every time he looked at her..
Marriage not dating and three musketeers were also great..
Fated to love you and discovery of romance were watchable..
As for she's so loveable, i watched that just and only for rain.. hahaha..

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If anyone can make love with their eyes, it's Joo Won. Okay, it's not just his eyes although they are darn mesmerizing. Joo Won has a very expressive face and it's not exaggerated at all. Just small changes to his expression conveys different emotions and layers.

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I think it's because I don't watch everything that I didn't think it was such a bad year.
I only ever watch two or three at any given time so I guess it filters out a whole lot of rubbish that I'll never get to.
The biggest problem with most kdramas, I believe, is that they're longer than they really need to be.

The best shows that I followed this year were on mostly on cable. Bad Guys, in my opinion, is the best kdrama I've seen all year in terms of writing, acting and cinematography.

But I did enjoy Blade Man, Liar Game, Angel Eyes, Fated to Love You, and even Three Days. Jang Bo Ri was good in the middle but went down hill towards the end.

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Oh... and I forgot Yoona Street...
How could I? It's an underrated gem, in my opinion.

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"omg so many dramas. I watched a ridiculous amount of television this year." Ditto for me too! I'm surprised at the number of dramas I actually completed this year. Content & context matter.

Miss Korea ― Yes indeed, "it contained a lot more depth than you’d expected from its frivolous-sounding pageant premise." An underrated and little gem of a drama or as I call it "The Little Engine That Could.”

http://www.dramabeans.com/2014/02/dramabeans-podcast-20-miss-korea-edition/

You From Another Star ― Thanks for the fond memories. A blast to watch live and live in the moment...to experience it and be a part of contributing to its popularity.

God's Gift - 14 Days ― The way episode 16 ended was a disappointment, no doubt about it. But, I still think that GG14D had one of the strongest & most memorable gut wrenching premiere episodes of any other drama in 2014.

Golden Cross"I appreciated that the bad guys were, for a change, not genius masterminds who always knew how to skirt the law; they were scared, panicky, and very human. Completely corrupt, to be sure, but this wasn’t villainy for villainy’s sake, but weak men acting desperately out of self-preservation."
Sums up GC perfectly. And, the sister leaving home expecting to live the high life but instead finding herself in a situation of being conned and violated sexually was harrowing.

Trot Lovers ― or as other Beanie's adeptly termed it here...Trope Lovers. The expression Woulda Coulda Shoulda is what comes to mind. I give TL credit for at least letting Jung Eun-Ji sing Trot Music in every episode, Shin Sung-Rok, & sisterhood. No use in dwelling on what should have (shoulda), could have (coulda) or would have (woulda) happened/been done.

Joseon Gunman ― Really great promo posters. "Lee Jun-ki sort of spoils you for action scenes forevermore, because you can’t beat an actor who performs stunts completely on his own, negating the need for distracting edits or obscured shots." So true!

Not Good Enough? “You will never be good enough for everybody, but you will always be good enough for someone who really appreciates you.” ~Unknown

Marriage Not Dating ― a fun watch and casting of Han Groo and Yeon Woo-jin as the main leads was spot on.

High School: Love On ― started off with promise and potential but ultimately it just fizzled out. There's only so much bad acting that one can take in. No where near the so bad, it's good sense either. Still searching for and hoping to discover another Monstar.

Surplus Princess ― amusingly unconventional, awesomely quirky, eccentric, campy, zany, and fun. Bummer the initial episode count of 14 episode was axed down to just 10.

Three Musketeers ― Disappointed that Seasons 2 &...

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Continued...

Three Musketeers ― Disappointed that Seasons 2 & 3 are more than likely nixed because Season 1 was really good and such a delight.

Iron Man ― Admittedly, I made a snap judgement with my first impressions of Iron Man’s cinematic style and visual images. Only judging Iron Man (aka Blade Man) by the first few episodes doesn’t do it justice. It’s the type of drama where people have to watch for themselves and make up their own mind. Because truthfully it’s hard to tell what a person’s reaction will be particularly since it was originally slated for 20 episodes and was chopped down to 18 which truly impacted the story’s flow/direction, the way certain truths were/were not revealed, and character endings.

IM takes time to grow on you and is a drama that can best be described as a hodgepodge of so many things – unique and different in its own right. Genre combinations so random that it’s kooky: a comic book/manga, a video game, a fairy tale (Snow White & 6 dwarfs?), a rom-com, science fiction, a fantasy, a melo, a mystery, etc.

Visually, there’s always something that draws your attention whether its in the background or the forefront of a scene. Moments can be fluid, beautiful to watch, and emotionally stirring.

She's So Lovable ― Who would have guessed that this was the same writer behind Scent of a Woman. Humdrum of a romance, thoroughly questionable, and mediocre at best. Rain & Dalbongie the Golden Retriever would have been a much better OTP for the drama. The storyline/scenes they did have together never failed to rouse and stir up interest. Who knows, maybe if Rain's leading lady/co-star had been Sooyoung, Jung Eun-Ji, Jung So-Min, or even IU if it would have made any difference?

Misaeng ― So far perfect, even if sometimes it hits to close to home.

Modern Farmer ― A nice ensemble cast, good-humored, plus its rare to see all the major & minor characters each have their own share of relevant storylines.

To Watch List: Gap-dong, Liar Game, Sly & Single Again

Maybe Someday I'll Complete: Wonderful Season

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I agree with almost all the conclusions of our beloved javabeans, yes, even Iron Man. It's the only drama I've seen in the year where the contribution of the director is noticeble.
I have only one objection. Golden Cross. The IMF aftermath surrounding made it the only show that truly made me relate. And it's not a romance nor did it need to be.
Marriage not Dating was the greatest of the year along with the Three Musketeers (...sniff... sniff) for me. I love tvN in general since their shows, UP TO NOW, were all from a level up with no weird turning of the storylines. MFAS was fun to watch while been broadcasted but I wouldn't re-watch it.
As far as the little gem of Surplus? What to say? How great could it have been in its own bizzare style...
And as far as Birth of a Beauty is concerned, javabeans you are so right about the actor. Though a bit unlucky in the projects, he came back after the two Ten a transformed actor and a great one (he was great in Good Doctor, too, in part apparently written for a much older actor).

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Just want to say that I love what you guys say about Surpluss Princess in your Drama Ratings!

<3

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My favorites this year
1. Misaeng (Can this show please go on forever?)
2. Surplus Princess (It feels like watching a standup comedy, an J-anime and a romantic K-drama at the same time. I need good laughs like this twice a week.)
3. Liar Game. (I still have a few episodes to go with I love it so much so far. Entertaining and smart!)
4. Discovery of Romance (Oh this show, what a emotional rollercoaster! It also gives so much food for thoughts. Many dramabeaners write book-length comments on it and I enjoyed reading them so much.)

Other shows that I actually finished:
1. You're all surrounded (Go Ara is really adorable! The plot was interesting actually, I thought.)
2. You from Another Star (This feels a bit like a play rather than a drama show to me. Nothing was really believable enough to keep me engaged with the story, esp. the lack of investment in the extraterritorial story line.)
3. Angel Eyes (It had a heart-rending start. But it was really hard to watch towards the end... Ugh.)

Shows that I cannot finish:
It's Okay It's Love: Maybe because how psychology and psychiatry are depicted...
Tomorrow Cantabile: I know I should have more patience... But the girl who plays Na Il is so annoying.
Fated to Love You: It's so boring... The main male character is like he's smoking something all the time.

Looking forward to Misaeng and Liar Game season 2 and really enjoying Valid Love right now.

Thank you dramabeans for such a great blog!

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Wow..it's been a year..time goes by so fast.
I like to join this group to share my 2014 k drama.

Like some of you I'm not finish most of 2014 drama, mostly I stop around ep 5 or sometime I just stop before end of drama and sometimes I just FF while watching just to get to fun part of the drama.

For me this year it's cabel who should have the champagne since all the good come from cabel tv.

Here the 2014 my favourite k drama list , I hope you all have a nice year in 2015 stay happy and be healthy.

1. Secret love affair
2. My love from another star
3. Maried not dating
4. Let's eat
5. I need romance 3
6. Can we love
7. Beyond the clouds
8. Blade man
9. It's ok it's love
10. Secret ( is it 2013 or 2014?)

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Miss Korea: Good. I'd recommend it.
You From Another Star: I enjoyed it..
Sly and Single Again: Did about 4 eps and dropped..
God’s Gift – 14 Days: Okay, wouldn't do it again though..
Gap-dong: Disappointing. Had potential. Eventually dropped..
Trot Lovers: T T What a mess. KBS fumbled it. Dropped it.
Joseon Gunman: Zzzzz Dropped it..
Marriage Not Dating: Lost me. Dropped.
High School: Love On: Said I'd watch it when it was done. Probably won't..
Surplus Princess: Silly, too bad it was cut short..
Three Musketeers: Enjoyed it . Too bad about season 2.
Secret Door: Enjoyed it..
Cantabile Tomorrow: The less said the better..
Misaeng: Drama of the year finalist..
Liar Game: Loved it..
Birth of a Beauty: 2 minutes was all I could take.

2 Eps and out. She's So Lovable and Modern Farmer
Didn't watch:
Wonderful Season, Golden Cross, Iron Man

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Miss Korea was so wonderful. Lee Yeon Hee's "everything's mine" line gets a lot of traction on tumblr, lol. Really loved the slice-of-life style of this writer and the sweetness in the romance and realism in the characters. Would love for LYH to play more characters as wonderful as this. I think it could have even been longer and still have been great.

Marriage Not Dating was as wonderful as I had hoped. (I'm watching it over at the current time!) Loved Yeon Woo Jin and Han Groo, their chemistry, and their characters. Also loved the mothers in this one and how the cold, prickly mom trope was subverted to show mothers who just really wanted all the best for their children-what they never had- and not just "the best". I thought these family dynamics were realistic. And I liked how the heroine family was not that great either. Usually one character has a *~great~* family to counter the other character's not so great one. There was so much love in both, though. I appreciated it all around.

Sly and Single Again, I went into because I liked the leads but I don't think I was expecting to like it so much. I thought the two were great in it and it was Lee Min Jung's most winning role in a while. I loved her character. It was lovely rooting for this couple to get back together and fix the mistakes they made the first time around. When I finally got to the end, I was so happy. In a bubbly way.

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I know there were alot of duds, mediocre dramas and lower ratings than usual but I actually enjoyed more dramas this year than I did last year.

Now, The first 6 months of the year, I was so bored with kdramas (after finishing Miss Korea) that I took a hiatus from watching. Then Cunning Single Lady came out and I was enamored by a drama again. Also High School King came soon after which was a treat to watch and from then on, I always had something to watch. I really enjoyed Marriage, Not Dating also and I'm now loving Misaeng which is on a whole other level. There's also Pinocchio, Modern Farmer and Birth of a Beauty which are enjoyable.

I feel like there are always numerous duds and dissapointments every year in kdramas but there are always numerous standouts. It's the same thing this year.

I think the real issue is that people might be getting tired of the same cliches, tropes and storyline being used over and over again.

I just feel like many dramas from the past (not the stellar ones that stood out) that instead came out this year would have been met with much lower ratings and general dissapointment.

I hope the kdrama industry catches on to this fact. They need to realize they have to be more creative and steer away from cliched storylines, archetypes, etc. Even if it's the ever familiar girl meets boy scenario, there are still ways to inject something new and fresh to it to captivate viewers. Also, I hope more talented writers are utilized and less id

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...idols take the place of new, fresh talent.

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Also had to comment more about Misaeng.

I could watch Misaeng forever. It's a very special drama for me. I'm pretty much where Gu-Rae used to be before joining One International. The first 2 episodes literally made me cry because I could deeply relate to feeling so out of step with the world and a failure. It is an intense show and can be somewhat somber and slow paced but it has become one of the most inspiring kdramas I've watched. There's so much insight and wisdom in the show and I learn something from every character. There's just such glimmering hope and strength lying underneath the grey day to day workings at One International. I also look up to Gu Rae and Young Yi in different ways and this is rare for me with any show i watch. They are my favorite kdrama characters of all time now. Im Siwan is superb as Geu Raw, I can't even express how wonderful he is here.

Anyway, shoutout to the cast, crew, writers and producers that have put out this wonderful show. Thanks to TVN also for allowing the show to be without limiting it.

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+10 :)

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I don't find Misaeng as depressing because it really is reality and i disagree with the part of over exaggerated with some parts cause all the scenes are really happening to the working environment. I would say Misaeng won the best drama for this year.. it's really different and let's say I'm sick and tired about love stories with different plots.. This is the real drama that will struck you even after you watched it.. you started thinking about your own job and your own life... thinking what should I do to make it better?...

The worst for me is She's So Lovable.....man, this thing is so good at the beginning but became a tragedy in the end. They really should have listened to the fans that Krystal and L should be paired in the end... Only Dal Bo The Dog knows what acting is compared to krystal ( no offense to her fans )

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I think this year had some solid and fun rom-coms. I realized that I am really a sucker for rom-coms!!

Loved:
Sly and Single Again, Marriage Not Dating, Birth of a Beauty;
Liar Game (mainly because I am just crazily addicted to the original and the clever executions of the K version)

Conclusion:
Yes - Joo Sang Wook stick with playing the dorky beta male role!!

Also, YFAS was way too overrated for me. Kind of reminded me of the BOF hype. Though JJH's performance was STELLAR. She's such a gorgeous girl and her acting is just so natural and easy to watch.

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And on my gawd-awful list...
She's So Lovable (why Rain why) & Trot Lovers (why everyone WHY!! Ji Hyun Woo's horrible hair style is just... I can't even... though Shin Sung Rok is a jewel that I discovered in that show)

Oh, this is a super underrated show but I really enjoyed Beyond the Clouds. :) Melo-dramas are nice once in a while.

To watch based on recommendations here:
Surplus Princess, Misaeng

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AK ~

I really enjoyed Beyond the Clouds.Me too. A sleeper hit. Well worth watching.

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Great write up thank you! I'm looking foward to Part II.

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Misaeng wins for me, I think we all had some if not all what Geu Rae went through. Agree totally abt Sang Wook doing comedy roms, he is great when he is dorky or sweet. I was disappointed w Cantaible Tomorrow, I was expecting better from the two leads.

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I enjoyed Marriage Not Dating the most for 2014. Marriage Not Dating to me was beyond my expectation, interesting, funny and its really rare for kdramas to have 2nd leads to give up sabotaging early which make them not so annoying. Han Groo and YWJ had perfect chemistry too...

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Joseon Gunman was definitely underwhelming for me. I loved the characters, and the storyline flew by in the first few episodes and then...snail crawl was the best way to describe the rest of the series. I love Lee Jun Ki and the way he sizzles the screen even in that funny hair do and the glasses. I definitely finished it though, because they did make you 'feel' for the characters and wish for their happy ending.

You From the Stars was a drama I started and then dumped for like a few months. But then I couldn't get over the continuous hype so I went back and chained myself down to watch it. And got hooked. That's why in some cases, it's not right to judge a series by the first - or second or third - episode. Except maybe series like Blade Man, where anyone who can watch even till the end of episode one deserves an award!

Tomorrow's Cantible was a surprising series, because I never imagined it was possible to make that kind of theme look good. The supporting cast actually outshone the two main leads for me haha, first time that's happening. Still, it was an emotional ride and I respect the whole struggle that came with every character.

Pinocchio - Another surprising find for me because I was sure I wouldn't like it. I was pretty much just feeling sad from the first episode and I hate a drama that does that! So many tears and so few laughs. I guess that's what makes it such a powerful show.

Birth of a Beauty - oh mmyyy! Really my fave series for now. After the hurdle that was episode one, and after suspending all suspendable belief...I'm just in it for the take-home humor coming from the male lead whom I simply love ever since Good Doctor.

I think I'll try out the others mentioned in the post, such as Misaeng and Marriage Not Dating. However I do believe time is precious and would rather not waste it on a drama I can sense will be a drag. So thanks for your thoughts on the many dramas of 2014, good AND not so good - cos it would be unfair to the many hands behind each drama to call one outright BAD, right, lol.

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Marriage not Dating was so much fun! It was all I wanted in a rom com and more, and for once the lead was actually dressed nicely, unlike most dramas where the lead doesn't care about appearences etc...

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It was one of the greatest dramas of the year!!!

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Thanks so much for this review, javabeans! This was the first year that I've visited your site regularly, and I credit you, GF and the rest of your crew for making Korean dramas stand out to me more than dramas produced by other Asian countries... I enjoy READING your posts just as much as I enjoy WATCHING the dramas themselves. Isn't it a mystery how your opinions alone (since we're no witness to your other physical deeds) actually matter to so many people?

Thank you for this early Xmas gift, and for creating this community of drama-loving readers... : )

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I just wanted to comment regarding The Joseon Gunman.

I think the reason why it started great and captivating, but lost the "captivating" part later, is that they lost focus.
It's a given that a hero is not a hero because everything works like he planned it, but because he was thrown into difficult situations, and managed to stay strong and overcome them.
*However*, IMO, there were enough stories in that drama to feed at least 3 more (the mercahnt father-daughter, the politician father-son, the new movement people). I think they should have added more episodes. In the last 5 episodes or so, I was gasping and going "Oh, No!", every 5-10 minutes (I timed it), because of all the plot twists and what not. Everyone did a great job, and you got drawn into all the stories.
On top of it, we could hardly see the leads!!! Not only the romance, but the revenge/fight for justice/truth, was also almost gone!
It wasn't enough that the hero was drawn into strange situations, and seems to make strange decisions (strategically), he was hardly seen!

Getting the "feels" scattered and invested in many stories, made it very hard to get the feels focused on one story, and that by itself made the drama far less captivating, even though everything else was there for it to be a great drama.

I don't understand why that happened- they had LJK. He is great as a hero, and can most definitely draw the audience into the story. I really don't understand why he wasn't given a chance to be the lead, as in leading the whole story, like he could and should have done.
In the first few episode he had much more of a presence, and it made the drama more exciting and captivating.

It took me a long time to realize that the lack of focus (for the feels) is what was bothering me later on in the show. And by "bothering", I mean that I knew in my head that everything was perfect- the cast, the costumes, cinematography, the directing, acting, story- but something was missing, and I couldn't pinpoint what it was.
It was a bit frustrating that everything was perfect, except I couldn't say it was perfect.

Oh, and I really want to pretend that the last few minutes of the show didn't happen.

>_< Ugh...

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I'm late in reading this year-end review, but no less appreciative.

Thank you javabeans for this review ..... but not only for this. Thank you and the entire Dramabeans team for all you do and for making Dramabeans the awesome place that it is.

Speaking of awesome ----- Chun Song-yi! She's definitely one to remember!

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"Miss Korea" and YFAS - contrast in K-romcoms.

One got huge ratings (not surprising w/ 2 huge stars) and the other went under the radar, but it was the less appreciated/watched one, MK, that was the superior romcom.

Better overall story-line/writing, dialogue, characters (including supporting characters), more believable/earnest emotional scenes and yes, better acting (LYH should have gotten an award for her acting).

While I enjoyed YFAS a decent amount - it was basically fluff and I had to overlook some of the more soap-operaish.makjong elements (was able to bear w/ those elements in YFAS than in other highly popular romcoms from years past) and not something that I would watch again.

OTOH, there are numerous scenes from MK that I have rewatched and it joins my list of the top K-drama romcoms ("Discovery of Romance" is another one from this year that joins that list).

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My Baby Joo Sang Wook, thank you for your two romcoms this year. You're really perfect in comedy role :* :*

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I think "It's Ok That's Love" also deserve to be part of the review. :)

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On the topic of Misaeng, it has been an enjoyable watch for me as seems to be the overwhelming consensus. The fact that the story can be as engaging as it is while staying inside the scope of the lives of everyday salary workers is no small feat. The depth of periphery characters is quite brilliant at times(even ones introduced halfway through the run of the show such as chief Chun). It's also worth applauding the lack of typical storytelling tropes. Instead, the writers engage the audience by carefully constructing pathways for the viewer to connect to a multitude of characters. You'll be invested in their lives as if they were people you are actually acquainted with. This type of character driven narrative is so much more rewarding for the viewer. It's a shame that it's far less common(probably because it's far more challenging to write) than the typical plot driven shows that keep people tuning in with a nuclear arms race of absurdity. Praise aside, I have a couple of bones to pick with the show that I can't quite overlook.

Firstly, I feel like it is over glorifying the salaryman a bit too much. Don't get me wrong, it's commendable to work hard in order to provide for one's self and family, but the manner in which the show frames the characters' achievements at times makes it seem as if they've made some grand contribution to society. This for me is a problem. The workers give their heart, soul, loyalty, and everything else to a cold, lifeless entity which has the singular purpose of making money at their expense. Is the show rebuking this? It seems to me like it's lauding this worker-bee mentality. Chief Oh is painted as a hero when he puts the livelihoods of himself and his coworkers on the line in order to save the company from embezzlement. The team's "successes" essentially serve to perpetuate the system which puts them at an eternal disadvantage. My criticism is that I can't tell if the writers are intending to denounce this aspect or simply portray a natural and acceptable part of living in a world ruled by corporations.

My other qualm with the show comes from Gue rae's character. Is he not meant to be the sort of everyman character that the audience can to relate to? He's drawn as a normal guy who is just trying his best to succeed even though the cards are stacked against him(something a lot of people can relate to). This depiction however comes into stark contrast with all of his most consequential character traits. He's an incredibly good looking genius(able to memorize a dozen or so names and phone numbers at a glance and memorize a dictionary of foreign language acronyms in a matter of a few days) who also has powerful enough connections to get him in the door at the most sought after of companies. How can someone in the top 1% in terms of looks and IQ be an everyman? Perhaps I misread the writers' intentions...

All that said, this show is certainly a cut above the average, and...

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I never thought I will say this but I love Iron Man. Go, Secretary Go...hahaha....he's so adorable!

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how come You're all surrounded is not included?

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