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Please Teach Me korean drama review
Completed
Please Teach Me
4 people found this review helpful
by ariel alba
Apr 5, 2024
64 of 64 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 8.5

BL and the vertical format: a marriage for the future already in the present

It is a pleasure to see Park Hyeong Seop, the popular YG model and actor, and Lee Sang Min, now as protagonists of 'Please Teach Me', the Korean romantic comedy from Top Reels, Korea's newest streaming platform. , after discovering the first playing Simeon (Chim On), in the drama 'Jun and Jun', and the second playing Woo Sun Woo in 'Why R U?', the Korean adaptation of the 2020 Thai series, and Ji Seung Min in 'Star Struck', all from the year 2023 and from the BL genre.
Rookie actors Kwak Hee Joo, Ji Jong Ho, and Lee Young Joo also join the star cast.
Produced by Astin Camel (formerly T2N Media), the drama is a collection of Korean BL shorts with 50 episodes of approximately 1 minute in length.
Its director and screenwriter, Yoon Hye Ryeom (Holy Class, 2014), is known for writing and directing the short film 'My Daddy Is a Bellydancer' and the unitary 'tvN O'PENing: Summer, Love Machine Blues', from 2023.
In addition to highlighting Park Hyeongseop's histrionic qualities, I would like to congratulate him for his humanism and commitment in the fight for the rights of the LGBT+ community and against homophobia. Specifically, I will refer to the actor's attitude when, on Tuesday, March 12, 2024, at the press conference for the official launch of Top Reels and the presentation of the series trailer, he faced some questions that those present and followers of the KBL considered homophobic.
When asked by a reporter about the "challenges" the actor faced in filming, as the series depicted a romance between two men, Park responded: "Since our drama is the same as any romantic drama, I didn't feel any burden or difficulty during filming.
I find it interesting that it was decided to film the series in vertical format, and it is in this aspect that I will place the greatest weight of my review.
South Korea has joined the Chinese dramas, as these are the first to make the leap to be designed and recorded specifically for smartphones and their screens, therefore, exclusively vertically.
And the script, content and format of 'Please Teach Me' are specifically designed for consumption on smartphones, due to its ease of consumption.
Since 2018, Tencent introduced short series such as 'My Boyfriend-ish Sister' (Boy 的 男友 力 姐姐) and 'My Idiot Boyfriend' (我 的 二 货 男友), and iQiyi launched 'Ugh! Life!' (生活对我下手了) and 'Arg Director' (导演对我下手了), in 2019, the list of series shot vertically has been expanded.
And it will continue to expand, because among the characteristics of these dramas, comedies and other productions, it stands out that they are not limited only to adapting their content to the vertical format, but also adapt many more details.
Let's start with the length of the episodes. An episode of a vertically shot series should be between two and five minutes long, so the action happens as quickly as possible. The creators and producers of 'Please Teach Me' know that their potential audience is young people, so the episodes will be consumed over coffee in a bar, on the way to university or back home, on a break between classes or the school soccer game or even before the images of a film begin to shoot in the cinema.
Every line of dialogue, every conversation and every joke is meant to come and go, offering seamless dynamic viewing. The episodes will thus be easily consumable and will satisfy the television appetite of young people. Thus, the goal is for the viewer to consume many episodes in a row and they can be mixed with those of other series without major difficulties.
'Please Teach Me' was even designed for the audience to use their hands to watch the chapter and move to the next, which is why the content is brief. We always take the cell phone with one hand and always with the purpose of looking at something casual. Can we imagine long content that was also in vertical format? It would be unbearable to visualize it.
On the other hand, the vertical format in 'Please Teach Me' was conceived as a genre and not as a simple format, since the length of the episodes requires it to be even faster. Being a series characterized by comedy and humor, these same characteristics fit perfectly in this format, since they are ideal for a fast-paced pace. Even the television narrative itself adapts better to this context than the cinematic one.
Doesn't comedy follow the same pattern as a vertical video? The producers took this quality into account, making this format ideal for transmitting joy and fun in small, easy-to-digest bites without special emphasis on the script.
That is to say, by its very nature of generating small gratifications in the form of a joke, the vertical format is perfect for generating a more frenetic pace than that of a conventional series that we consume horizontally. 'Please Teach Me' proves it.
Furthermore, not everything fits in the vertical format. Intricate dialogues, internal dialogues, abrupt plot twists or especially complex stories have no place in this format. That is why 'Please Teach Me' presents a coherent rhythm, composition and way of teaching its content. The vertical format requires thinking about all this and although comedy is not the only one that fits into this formula, it has proven to be the most comfortable to adapt to this format.
Finally, vertical series have a fragmenting visual language, so the narrative is full of quick cuts, screens that slide or split to offer two different perspectives of a story. 'Please Teach Me' manages, in this sense, to increase the number of shots consumed by the viewer and offer more information in less time.
For this, the producers and creators took into account that although the settings and in general the context of the visual space are not well used in this format, the condensed visual information is.
We cannot ignore that these works usually have quick camera cuts, split screens to see the face or the situation in which two characters are involved, funny transitions, etc. Yes, it is true that the viewer loses in spatial content, but gains in visual information. This is how in 'Please Teach Me' the scene counts much more since it focuses much more on what is important. Therefore, the experience thus turns out to be dynamic and fluid.
While large movie screens try to put the audience into a world and an experience, vertical screens, and especially smaller ones, help the viewer to more easily believe what we see in the images.
The vertical format transports us not to a world, but to what we want to see on the screen, and giving it to us in faster doses and with more information sometimes makes it more enjoyable. The creators and producers of 'Please Teach Me' know this perfectly.
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