This review may contain spoilers
Average drama with an unlikely premise and a dumbfounding conclusion.
This drama had a lot going for it--strong cast, good production values, "romance" in the title--except a script. FL Son Na Eun with her glorious scowl/RBF and mom Kim Jee Soo were the most engaging characters, but they didn't have much to work with.Most of the other (negative) reviews focus on the absurd premise of a hapless father abandoning his wife and two small children after going bankrupt and leaving them destitute, only to return 10 years (or more?) later with a pile of sketchy money and a not very well thought out plan to win their hearts back. But as bad as that is, it isn't even the worst aspect of the plot, which is the almost stupifying "I don't need no man to make me happy" conclusion. But who could blame them? In the almost complete absence of any redeemable male characters in the whole drama, the two principal female characters decide that they are better off/happy living alone. The icing on the cake comes when the young FL asserts she is happy continuing to live her celibate lifestyle and has absolutely no intention of ever getting married--despite her supposedly wonderful relationship with her nice guy boyfriend. (I wonder if she consulted him about this...) The writer even had the temerity to throw in a reference to South Korea's lowest in the world .78 birth rate in the same scene. And this was a "romance"? Mind blown.
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Not your cliche fairytale dramas
The drama from the start has been chaotic and funny but at the same time does well with the emotional moments too. The chemistry between the leads isn't fiery and passionate but kept subtle and fluffy. There are many funny moments and twists in every episode but it never overpowers the core of the story. The drama isn't your fairytale ones but a mature approach to such topics.The dynamics between the family be it that of husband - wife or father- daughter are complicated because of their painful past and struggles. Every character be it the family members or other characters have their own inner struggles that slowly comes out and is healed with the help of their loved ones.
Ji Jin Hee nailed it with his role as Mu Jin. Till now I have only seen him in serious roles but he knows how to pull off both emotional and funny moments well. Kim Jee Soo as a mother and wife showed her conflicting emotions really well. Na Eun and Min Ho too have done good with their part, they are not great but not bad too.
It is one good drama if you are looking for something more than the average cute fluffy dramas that are going on right now.
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This review may contain spoilers
Like watching paint dry
This series was a chore for me to finish and if it wasn't because of being a completionist and because I had nothing else to watch I would have dropped it a long time ago. It simply never gets better.The original premise was interesting enough but this kept me entertained for a couple of episodes tops due mostly to the daughter's character. She was very annoying and immature and as the show went on it became a struggle to watch her scenes (and she's more of a main character than any of the others).
The only element in this drama that is interesting enough was the character of the father as a flawed character that has done very questionable things, but it's almost like they didn't want to commit to anything too in-depth for his past story and how he got where he is now and they just made up a very silly backstory that wasn't even funny. I almost would have preferred he simply won the lottery or something.
The relationship of the parents is more interesting but it doesn't develop in a very engaging way, it becomes stagnant at some point and doesn't pass much farther than that (either in a positive or negative way, I mean). I didn't personally like the mother much at all so I wasn't that invested in them even if their relationship was certainly better than the daughter's for having more nuance. Their acting was overall better as well.
Obviously there could be a long debate about if the father should be accepted in the family again and personally I think that realistically no. But as the episodes passed they wanted so hard for the audience to forget what he had done. I could maybe understand the mother forgiving him as she's the masochist/enabler type (you only have to see the son to see this as well), but when it comes to their children I would expect them more likely to go no contact or maximum forgiving but not forgetting and having just a polite relationship but not one of affection or love, especially the daughter.
I would have preferred they didn't have children or they would have been very background characters because they're both very insufferable though. I get they didn't get very good parental education but it's not entertaining to watch.
Mi Rae is just extremely annoying at times and her rivalry and fights with his father got old extremely quickly. It took way too long for the mother to remind her that she's an adult and that it's ultimately her prerogative. On the other hand I think the way her mother handled kicking the daughter out of the house was very rude and wrong on so many levels but they try to sell it to me like it was the best course of action because they decided that it would work.
The son/brother is such a piece of spoiled work and they simply don't solve anything nor they dwell enough in his character, he's just background annoyance and I don't think he brings anything to the plot other than, if anything, proving once more how terrible parents the main characters are. In the end somehow he manages out of the blue and everything is fine, it was so weak and absurd. He is an inconsistent character and him saying that he's always in the dark and no one cares for him but also siding with his father from the beginning are contradictory to me. Even if the mother didn't explicitly tell him at the time the father had gone I'm sure he would have worked it all out eventually on his own when the father never came home, so it doesn't make sense that he doesn't have any resentment towards the father, unless he blamed the mother for it, but c'mon, he wasn't that young when the father left to not have seen anything of what was going on. It's simply bad writing, the end.
The relationship between Mi Rae and Tae Pyeong was so plain and boring. Chemistry where? I didn't see any whatsoever.
Generally speaking I didn't like their acting much either, especially hers. I think Min Ho tried, although I've seen him acting better in other dramas than in this one. I had never seen Son Na Eun in anything before and I don't know her, but her acting was pretty bad, communicated the bare minimum and so many times it was so stiff, especially when she had to convey emotions and especially when it was a romantic scene. It was not enjoyable.
Tae Pyeong as a character was just so stereotypical. Son of a CEO but he doesn't care and tries to do something else but OH LA LA he falls in "love" (if we can call it that because it's left very superficial) with the FL. He would have been more interesting if he had been only a taekwondo teacher. Him being the CEO's son added nothing and was only used for that office drama at the end, and his father being in fact his brother also added nothing to the plot. It's almost like they wanted to add there a cinderella story or something but they didn't commit enough to it so they just kept it as her scoring the jackpot in meeting him.
The neighbours are so annoying as well, why are there so many as background characters and what do they add to the plot? none of them is even that close to the main family, it's pure filler. I didn't care for any of them, not even the hairdresser friend, that becomes extremely background once her connection to the ML is revealed and she's just there for that lackluster relationship with ML's tax accountant.
The general plot is extremely basic other than the father's unknown past, and at the same time I feel like they didn't explain properly many things or they just forgot about them what is an achievement with such a thin plot and that many episodes. Office scenes are generally boring and nothing out of stereotypes happen. The last minute office drama because of their relationship is such a overused trope, I couldn't care less. You can have a linear overused plot if your characters are making up for it, but here the characters just made it so much worse. The last two episodes are fillers as well, once the anticlimactic backstory of the father is revealed they just did scenes here and there trying to close a bit things but nothing in an interesting way, I found myself fast-forwarding bits here and there. It was boring and also quite slow many times, with scenes that added nothing. At some points I had it at 1.5 speed and I couldn't even tell. This is a lot coming from someone that likes both slice of life dramas and mumblecore films and doesn't mind at all the slowness as long as it's meaningful.
Instead of spending so many episodes with the raging of the daughter for the father like a spoiled brat I would have preferred they had moved on from that a lot earlier and we got to see more of the new mother's career as a model for example, it was more entertaining and not something you see as often for a middle aged character.
Product placement is on the face at times, and that one in the last couple of episodes with the freckles removal was one of the worsts sponsorships I've seen in a drama. I know, I know, they hate freckles! But it was so cringe and such a bad taste to me that I can't help it.
I personally can't recommend it.
- Comedy? no, I didn't laugh once.
- Romance? not much and quite dry.
- Complete characters? not at all.
- Likeable characters? If you like plain characters then maybe Tae Pyeong and not much else.
- Interesting plot? no, it doesn't know what it wants to focus in and it's left at very superficial and everything is forgiven because blood and past relationship.
- Melodrama? Not sure, the most melodrama here is the daughter being a childish brat instead of dealing with the problem in a more mature and rational way.
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Interesting Family ?
The series depicts the story of Byeon Moo-jin, who went bankrupt a dozen years ago and got divorced, and who appears in front of his daughter Byeon Mi-rae and wife Geum Ae-yeon 14 years later as a multi-billionaire.I have thoroughly enjoyed Romance in the House. I just finished episode 12 . The character development has been great. It does see, slow at times, but that is because the actors and producers have worked hard to create real or authentic relationships between the characters.
So as not to give spoilers, I will say the story line with the slowly developed over time with gestures and actions has been my favorite part. It has made their story that much sweeter and long lasting
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This review may contain spoilers
Easy and fun :)
This show was a definite rollercoaster ride for me. There were instances I absolutely laughed my heart out and enjoyed but then there were times when I hated it so much.What I did not like:
1. The gaslighting of the daughter's feelings. It feels like although the family and society were largely accepting of her feelings, they did overlook them under the garb of "too much pressure/responsibility" or whatever that nonsense was invalidating her feelings.
2. Too much interference in relationships - while the daughter's feelings were valid, her babying her mother so much as to interfere in her relationships was just a pain to watch.
3. How bad they did to Sanha's character. He's been so poorly written when in fact it could have been a strong storyline. We see that in the last 2-3 episodes. Way too much emphasis on the same old "how did he make the money" mystery. It gets old after a point of time.
What I liked:
They addressed most if not all the issues I have which I like. The dislikes 1 and 2 are more like character flaws, which we have to accept considering character development is the entire point of watching the drama. I like how Mi-rae grows as a person and her mother grows as an independent woman. I like how they made these characters human, who though wrong, learn from it over time and do better. I also found many instances to be funny. It was a light and easy watch for me that I thoroughly enjoyed. Also, as a Minho fan, it was so endearing to watch him in this role. He's super cute and I'm all for it. The man is fine af. Also, the acting by Jin Hee is top-notch. He's just as good as one would expect him to be. I also like how they have given equal weightage to both relationships and given so much time to a rather mature couple, which we rarely see. It's been a fun ride.
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A good lighthearted show!
I was surprised to see the other reviews on this drama. No-- this drama was nowhere near amazing, but it wasn't bad! I'd even say it was pretty good; I thoroughly enjoyed it.It was genuinely funny; I found myself loving the female lead, and it was enjoyable to watch. The plot was interesting, and I feel like it was slightly different from the typical kdrama plot. I also feel like this show wasn't so high stakes; a lot of shows always have intense stuff going on, and it's nice to watch something not so intense occasionally.
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drama of the year !
This drama is so far very well written, the story line is good, the actors are really talented (especially our dear choi minho). they portray very well their emotions, it feels like we’re living with them through the screen, they all worked hard on this project ! I’m very excited to see the next episodes !Was this review helpful to you?
Beautiful drama
Let's keep it crisp and short- This drama is beautifully written and has a very good pace
- Every actor has played his/her role beautifully
- Best thing is their is no love triangle, breakup, jealousy stuff etc
- ppl may hate her father in the beginning but sorry i don't think he deserve that hate
- Everything is in limit ..makers made sure they are not overdoing anything
- Among all ongoing dramas around this one - it is my fav
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Great family drama with all the feels!
Love the storyline and great casting. I especially enjoy watching the two young lovers. Their storyline is sweet, endearing and relatable and helps to carry the momentum of the show. The family dynamic is also true to life with many difficult themes brought up and examined. This is definitely a rewatch for me. I strongly recommend!Was this review helpful to you?
Mediano
Achei bem chatinho.Começou bem mas depois foi desandando e ficando cada vez mais chato de assistir.
A família é totalmente tóxica, a mãe é uma chata e os pais são pais ruins, erraram muito com os filhos e ambos sofreram demais com as atitudes dos pais. Fique com pena do Hyeonjae pois ele foi excluído da família o tempo todo e só deram um desenvolvimento pra ele no último ep, onde começaram a pensar nos sentimentos dele.
O Taepyeong e a Mirae tiveram 0 desenvolvimento e as cenas deles duravam no máximo 10 minutos, uma pena que não conseguimos ver mais dos dois.
Mas, apesar de tudo, acho que foi um final realista e coerente e bem diferente do que a gente costuma ver nos dramas, porém não assistiria de novo e não indicaria.
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This review may contain spoilers
At the beginning I had high expectations, since there seemed to be a great mystery behind the death of the owner of the house and the reappearance of the ex-husband. But essentially a plot that's nothing special. I was more passionate about the couple formed by the daughter with the security man (Minho). There were cutie together but nothing extraordinary there either.My rating rewards the cast a little otherwise I would have been lower.
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Potemkin Family Villa
"There is an idea of a Patrick Bateman. Some kind of abstraction. But there is no real me. Only an entity. Something illusory. And though I can hide my cold gaze, and you can shake my hand and feel flesh gripping yours, and maybe you can even sense our lifestyles are probably comparable, I simply am not there." -from the opening monologue of "American Psycho"While no one in "Romance in the House" is chopping unsuspecting victims to bits with an axe while jamming to Huey Lewis and the News, this drama is not hip nor square nor a shape of really any kind. It's an amalgamation of scenes and characters and workplaces and drinking scenes and backstories that not merely don't add up, but don't make any semblance of an impression at any point.
No actor and character, whether lead or supporting or guest, connects convincingly with any other. Perhaps it's a function of how stock the roles are - the driven, young, humorless corporate salarywoman, her flippant younger brother, the cute boyfriend that's both connected to power & money and with a tragic family backstory, the collection of stereotypically nosy supporting characters, the office gossipers and the former hero athlete. To his credit, Ji Jin Hee goes full tilt to bringing Mu Jin to life, but there's nothing to connect him to. Kim Jee Soo's Ae Yeon is so busy being resigned to her fate that their rekindling romance never feels credible. Meanwhile, Son Na Eun thankfully gets a role that isn't the petulant pretty girl but she overcompensates by being so grim and cranky that she comes across as an unpleasant scold. And Choi Min Ho is simply not a lead actor. He's a cute and chipper supporting gem, but he simply can't express any emotion other than wide-eyed aw shucks surprise. Even when he's acting out a scene where he's supposed to be in a rage or inconsolably sad, he looks like, on the inside, he's just jazzed about the mint chocolate chip ice cream cone with extra sprinkles on top that he'll get as soon as the director yells "CUT!"
The plot attempts to gin up tension by concealing the mystery of Mu Jin's whereabouts for years, his reason for suddenly returning and how he acquired new wealthy status during his absence. The issue is that the tone of the production makes it impossible to imagine that all the hints and speculation of possible illicit means being involved could be true. With no believable mystery of whether Mu Jin has a dark side, there's just a lot of aimless and circular meanderings until the inevitable pairings and reunifications conclude.
The result is much like Patrick Bateman's description of himself - an empty shell - only without the catchy 80's pop tunes and exquisitely crafted business cards.
Not recommended.
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