This review may contain spoilers
We have the closure of Nam Yi and Jae Min's love story.
A young and sexy South Korean gay couple must face different obstacles to achieve happiness. Both would like to seal their union and live together, perhaps even get married, but equal marriage is not legal in the country and homosexuals are discriminated against and rejected even by their families, who see homosexuality as a crime.
Let us remember that in the first season of this South Korean miniseries of four episodes each, the love relationship between Kim Nam Yi, played by Lee Hoo Rim, and Choi Jae Min, a role assumed by Choi Seung Jin, did not have a happy ending, because between The two intersected the homophobia that persists in South Korean society, in which LGBTIQ+ people face legal challenges and discrimination not experienced by the rest of South Koreans.
Once this obstacle is overcome by the two boys' decision to move forward in their relationship, the couple's harmony and happiness is put to the test once again, when Tae Ha (Jeong Ri U), a handsome university student, is placed between the two. two after falling in love with Jae Min and causes him to doubt his love for Nam Yi.
Will adversity be stronger than love between young homosexuals Kim Nam Yi and Choi Jae Min?
The bad news is that this is a low-budget miniseries, so the visuals and sets aren't as impressive as blockbusters. But isn't that the case with so many works of art that emerge in support of gay aesthetics?
Being low budget, it needs a good plot to captivate the viewers. This is how it tells a moving story of eternal love between two high school friends who meet again some time later, living between their 20s and 20s. They have both lived their lives trying to conform to heteronormativity, but have failed because they have essentially sought each other and long to form a couple.
Even though they face social pressure and jealousy, their love still manages to become something beautiful.
Let us remember that in the first season of this South Korean miniseries of four episodes each, the love relationship between Kim Nam Yi, played by Lee Hoo Rim, and Choi Jae Min, a role assumed by Choi Seung Jin, did not have a happy ending, because between The two intersected the homophobia that persists in South Korean society, in which LGBTIQ+ people face legal challenges and discrimination not experienced by the rest of South Koreans.
Once this obstacle is overcome by the two boys' decision to move forward in their relationship, the couple's harmony and happiness is put to the test once again, when Tae Ha (Jeong Ri U), a handsome university student, is placed between the two. two after falling in love with Jae Min and causes him to doubt his love for Nam Yi.
Will adversity be stronger than love between young homosexuals Kim Nam Yi and Choi Jae Min?
The bad news is that this is a low-budget miniseries, so the visuals and sets aren't as impressive as blockbusters. But isn't that the case with so many works of art that emerge in support of gay aesthetics?
Being low budget, it needs a good plot to captivate the viewers. This is how it tells a moving story of eternal love between two high school friends who meet again some time later, living between their 20s and 20s. They have both lived their lives trying to conform to heteronormativity, but have failed because they have essentially sought each other and long to form a couple.
Even though they face social pressure and jealousy, their love still manages to become something beautiful.
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