Completed
DramaHeroine
0 people found this review helpful
Nov 14, 2023
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 6.5
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 6.0
This review may contain spoilers
I probably would have given this drama a 9 or 10 if the last four episodes had matched in quality with the first 8. A lot of the MDL comments I saw before going in called the female lead too self-sacrificial, a claim I always take with a grain of salt. I personally find that while there are plenty of legitimate complaints about female leads who will literally lay themselves on the train tracks or burn themselves at the stake or sit themselves in the electric chair for some of the most foolish and unreasonable of reasons, there is also lot of disdain out there for too much kindness in female leads, like if a female lead sacrifices herself or something she wants for another character, even if it's truly a noble sacrifice, she actually Deserves to be laid on those tracks or burned at that stake or put in that electric chair. With this in mind, I decided to go into Usokon open-minded. I truly like kind and self-sacrificial characters, and I'm always happy to see them represented in dramas, so I was hopeful and excited for this drama.

For the first 8 episodes, I can genuinely say Usokon is very solid. I enjoyed the episodes so much, in fact, that I struggled to understand what people had been complaining about. The female lead can be more self-sacrificial and kind than she might need to be, but all of her kindness and sacrifices are for truly kind and worthwhile reasons. She never did anything I found to be outrageous or stupid. I really, really, really liked her. Of course, like most everyone else, I found the male lead charming and adorable and a riot to watch as he acted surreptitiously silly and excited over his feelings for the female lead. The romance was so easy to root for, because the leads were sweet apart and together.

But then came the last four episodes.

I'll just jump straight in and say that a random girl who went on one date with the male lead in high school and who he obviously didn't really like back shows up and is all 'I've loved him for ten years! Give him to me!' (I'm exaggerating a bit, but that was essentially her attitude), and the female lead...acquiesces. Granted, two of our side characters have a heart-to-heart with her telling her she's being foolish and way too self-sacrificial and she sort of, finally, sees some reason, but the whole plot twist is completely unnecessary and leads to a rushed finale where the female lead and the second male lead have to fake a wedding ceremony in order to lure the male lead there, because He is so heartbroken over the female leads behavior that he decides to walk around moping about it. As you can see, this ^ story choice...is a real buzzkill.

Now, I know there are going to be people who disagree with my assessment of the female lead as a character in the first 8 episodes. In response, I can only say that there's a vast difference between sacrificing your job on behalf of for your single-mom co-worker who is struggling to make ends meet and giving up your man because some girl he went on one date with ten years ago shows up saying she's in love with him and she'd very kindly appreciate it if you'd gtfo. The first scenario is relatable and shows just how much the female lead cares about other people's well-being. The second scenario is stupid.

I do have to disagree here with some viewers who have said the female leads nice-to-a-faultness rubs off on the male lead, because I think they missed some important context clues from the flashbacks about his character. He starts liking her when they are children but never makes a move until in his late twenties. The reason? Because he's intimidated by the other friend in their friend group and feels like he has to prove himself in order to be good enough for the female lead. He believes (we never find out if he is right or not) that the female lead likes this other friend, and he (the male lead) doesn't measure up. The whole drama, there's this big, neon sign over the male leads head telling us he struggles with insecurity/self-doubt. This is fine with me, because I think it works for his character, and I really felt for him, but I don't think you can act like his difficulty with expressing his feelings are because of the female leads influence. No, he already had that problem. I will, however, agree that his response to the female lead stepping aside for this nobody girl is pretty dramatic. Why he doesn't confront this girl and be like 'We went on one date. You need to grow up and leave the woman I love alone' is beyond me, but he doesn't, and we all just have to live that.

I honestly went into this drama hopeful that it would be a more positive portrayal of a kind female lead. I don't need, nor do I want, all drama female leads to be super kind, but I would like to see more dramas treat female leads who exhibit such kindness and self-sacrificial behavior with the respect they deserve. True kindness and self-sacrifice, the kind that actually puts good into the world, is not for the faint of heart. It's for the strong.

I'll end my review by saying that if the female leads kindness had continued in the same vein as what we'd seen in the first 8 episodes, my opinion of this drama would be very different. It's amazing how much only 4 episodes can completely change the way you feel about a story, isn't it?

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Dropped 10/12
Yui Shiyon
0 people found this review helpful
Sep 30, 2023
10 of 12 episodes seen
Dropped 5
Overall 5.5
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 6.5
Rewatch Value 1.5
This review may contain spoilers

Have seen unrealistic, stupid FLs, but this beyond everything!

I had high hopes for this drama since Kikuchi Fuma did a very good job in acting from day one. Especially in the first episode, we were only shown that Takumi doesn't like Yae. But in the second episode, that's a whole different story. The immediate changes in facial expressions (when Yae wasn't looking, he was cheering and such) were so cool to me. At first, I thought of him as a cold, arrogant male lead character. Fooling me was what got me hooked on this drama despite the FL's stupidity. I thought, 'Yeah, character development must be awaiting.'

But what the heck was episode 10? When it's clear that Takumi doesn't have feelings for others, much less a stalker ex who came back after, what, seven years? It's fine if Yae doesn't have feelings for Takumi, but pushing an ex whom he didn't even date for a month towards him? The girl did him dirty, and she absolutely has no right. And it was so unrealistic when an ex asked a wife to divorce her husband. Man, what the hell?

Also at this scene, I strongly believed this must be the turning point for Yae. Maybe from this point, she would start thinking for herself because where the hell do we have any other time to develop her character when we're already in episode 10? I was hoping she would have a proper talk about this before things escalated (maybe after episode 10 she may have, but no, I won't watch; I'm fed up). The logical thing to do was to ask Takumi if he has any feelings for her and confront the ex to make things clear, so she won't barge into Takumi's life again.

Finally, I know this is a drama. I've watched dramas with unrealistic, stupid FLs, in which they had at least some common sense, but this level of unrealisticness can't be tolerated. Writers should think twice about whether the audience would buy it when they make a character extra vulnerable and out of this world.

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Usokon (2023) poster

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