Goblin Special: Every Moment of It Shined
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Recap Land
I'm not a big fan of recaps, and I can't imagine many people are, it's not even controversial to state so.However, this one had a spin. It's narrated by our own, secretary Kim!This special episode shows us the main character as Kim recaps the entire series through a zoomed-out lense, focusing on his commentary instead.
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An Absolute Classic!
Nowadays, when you talk about Kdramas, a humongous classic is always thrown into the conversation. Gobli, Guardian, whatever it may be called, this show has remained rent-free on so many people's heads for such a long amount o time that it makes you wonder. What is it really about?At a core level, Goblin is no better than your generic, corny, over-the-top Korean romance with all the blows and whistles, but with a few twists that really drive off an ever-lasting mystery.
The mystery doesn't really stick up at the forefront, but it's ever-present and slowly, but surely, gets revealed as you also get more and more attached to the characters and start paying more attention to the non-romance plot line, which in my opinion is a very underrated aspect in this series that's not talked about enough.
It also helps that the show is such a binge-able series, especially in portions, or as you may view as mini "arcs". Let alone, the rewatchability.
I won't say more for spoilers-sake, but give it a watch!
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Doo Doo
Man, I should not have trusted my intuition on this one.I feel like I'm not the only one who decided to check on this drama solely to sort of check up on how much Yahagi has grown and developed as an actress, but it seems, that sometimes the plot restricts the actor no matter their talent.
This whole series felt like one of those cheap, low-budget online series with shady sponsorships that are just to market some makeshift product, the only difference is that the product this time was so embarrassing they decided to to even shout it out.
I hated so many things about this show, but without any spoilers, the ending was straight up dog shit, and I'm sorry for my language, this was more than disappointing, it was a stab to the end.
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Bloopers
I guess every popular show has these, it's a tradition by now.it was a weird mix of bitterness and sweetness going through these clips as they remind you of how intense the pace was in the show but also how happy the crew looked while delivering that A-star performance. You really get to see more endearing sides of the characters from the show and disassociate their character from what they really are. Especially the bully cast, you know the show made a point of making you have them.
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Generational
Lately, I've been on a K-Drama strike, going through multiple genres, while it's been a repetitive grind, I have stumbled across some real heavy hitters. Weak Hero Class 1 was one of them, and an unexpected one at that.This is a story about the extreme end of bullying, school violence, and cliché gang shenanigans. Of course, in the most classical K-Drama fashion, the schools are teacherless, leaving the canvas wide open to all students to act how they see fit, which is funny in hindsight but very good for creating tension. And this show takes full advantage of that.
I'm very impressed by the detailed choreography of the fights, pretty much all of them, from the pro to the mature, they really sell the weight of every punch, the swiftness of every dodge, and the danger of every weapon used. No character feels invisible yet you see some of them having through mobs of people with no problem.
It was Choi Hyun Wook who brought me here, along with a recommendation, and it turned out it was worth it. The acting was great, the action direction was amazing, and the hype was there. Better even that some battle Shounen Anime shows. All throughout, it never felt "fake" or forced, and that seems the common problem with most K-Dramas.
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Mastercall
It has been a staple ever since I remember, that K-dramas are associated with, corny, mid, pacey, and shallow stories on the level of every other bland soap opera trash show. With all the rosey plots that have the same characters, the same build-ups, and the same resolution. They feel like lazy reskins of otherwise, very boring third-grade media releases. Or so I thought, prior to watching Twinkling Watermelon.Before watching, or even attempting to give this show a go, I was recommended to do so, but to avoid looking at any posters, or reading the synopsis, or even looking up the tags or the genre. I went completely and utterly blind on the show, and I think, that was the best way to experience it, as those mentioned give off way too much about the whole mystery running the narrative.
Think of it as the coming-of-age story that would change your outlook on all sorts of levels. Family, friendship, education, compassion, and dreams.
For me, this show taught me not just about life, but also that I shouldn't underestimate Korean dramas anymore, because this has been peak television.
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This Is How You Recap!
Compared to the previous recap special. This one clears and by miles.What makes this one better is that it has character, thanks to Lee Dong Wook and Yoo In Na's thorough commentary, the recaps did not feel grueling to watch.
There are also a lot of blooper scenes, behind-the-scenes, and even production talk for some of the scenes and how they were filmed.
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Itazura na Kiss: Love in Tokyo Season 2
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Return to Form
The OG story that this show is adapting has always been a weird case of curiosity for me ever since I was a child, albeit it was the Koren version "Playful Kiss". I have only discovered that there are several different adaptations to this, and after watching the first season I was left kinda wanting for more.The first season felt like a cookie cutter in many areas, blame my nostalgia for "Playful Kiss" on that, but this second season really sets up this one on a different league simply because it went beyond the weeding, there is an entire life after Kotoko and Naoki get married in the first season and having grown up over the years, I definitely appreciated the more mundane adult life of the couple as they moved on past school and college, and to the real world.
I would argue that this season, as it tacked the relationship outside school and home put both leads into more believable scenarios that definitely pushed their characters to be develop more, especially for old cold folk Naoki.
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A Fall From Grace
I can't put into words how shocked I was after watching the first season and how unexpectedly good it was, but at the same time, I was too afraid that it was only going downhill from then due to how high a bar it set.I guess my nightmares turned out real. As much as it pains me, this season was a claustrophobic mess of intertwined plotlines that tried too hard to complicate the picture and raise the stakes that at more times than not ended up killing all the setup from the last season in favor of some newly introduced characters that are hardly relatable, likable, or redeemable in any way, shape, or form.
In short, this was such a snoozer with only the first part of the seventh episode that had any substance or enjoyment to it.
I do hope the third season redeems the image of this series, or else, this would be such a shame.
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Zombie Survival Done Right
For something that I expected to fall off short, I'm still in awe of what I saw. Sure, I've heard a lot of praise about this movie, but at the end of the day, it's just another zombie survival, how good can it get?I take it back. How good can it NOT get?!
When even Hollywood can't sell off a plot with its seemingly unending budget, you'd think nobody else can. Well, I guess I'm stepping into a territory where nothing of that matters.
This movie had everything, cast, plot, budget, and most importantly, it was enjoyable. The acting was superb, I really connected with all characters. The gore as unforgiving, and the stakes were racing the high skies. This is a really special experience as a first-time watch, and ever more so as rewatch material.
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What an Innocent Love Story
One thing that's definitely gone over-saturated in the medium is how over-the-top and over-dramatic everything is acted out. Sue, it makes for bugger stakes, larger-than-life storytelling, however, in today's world, there is so much like that's it's daring to stumble across an unassuming, unadulterated adaptation like Kimi Ni Todoke.Kimi Ni Todoke is an innocent, wholesome, and pure romance told through the lens of a high school outcast, Sawako, buried deeply under stacks of rumors and deep-fried gossip. And you know how superstitious some of those remote rural Japanese towns can be. Until that is, she meets this pleasant, loved-by-everything high school sweetheart, Hazehaya, who breaks through the social cage keeping the FL away from any meaningful interaction.
The synopsis seems generic enough to pass you by in an instance, however, the approach and the execution are what kept me engaged. This is a family-friendly showing of innocent, coming-of-age romance with no vulgarity to show. Not even a single kissing scene and you know what? That's fine, in fact, it's what makes it stand out in my opinion because even without any intimacy of that kind, the direction of the movie makes it work, and beautifully so.
What drew me originally to watch this is Tabe Mikako herself, I'm so in love with her acting, she has such a way of expressing emotional frequencies through her talent as an actor but nobody told me I was in for discovering such an amazing male lead, Miura Haruma who stole my heart in this role. Unfortunately, I was hit by the news of him dying a couple of years earlier at such a young age of 30 too.
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