Showing posts with label Cha Eun Woo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cha Eun Woo. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 October 2018

My ID is Gangham Beauty

My ID is Gangham Beauty

7.5/10
My ID is Gingham Beauty
Genre:                                                   Episodes: 16                                      Year: 2018
Romance
Comedy

Synopsis:
Kang Mi Rae has always been teased and bullied because of her ugly appearance. Before entering university, Mi Rae has plastic surgery to become pretty in order to be able to live without being ridiculed. At university she meets Do Kyung Seok, who used to attend her old school and knows what she used to look like.

Cast:
Lim Soo Hyang (Kang Mi Rae)
Cha Eun Woo (Do Kyung Seok)
Jo Woo Ri (Hyung Soo Ah)
Kwak Dong Yeon (Yeon Woo Young)
Park Joo Mi (Na Hye Sung)
Min Do Hee (Oh Hyun Jung)
Park Yoo Na (Yoo Eun)
Kim Do Yeon (Jang Won Ho)

General Thoughts:
I always like when I go into a drama not not really expecting much and end up happily surprised. I thought this drama was going to be pretty light and fluffy, with some fairly standard inner-beauty commentary, but it turned out to have much more substance than that.
A cute, fun rom-com that also has a bit of meat to it? Score.
Every time I expected this drama to take the typical K-Drama route, it tended to go in a way that I didn’t think it would. The plot overall was pretty predictable, but the characters were what made this drama so interesting. To start with, we were given a great heroine. This drama could have totally fallen on its face if it didn’t have a decent heroine to back it up- as this whole story is basically the story of Mi Rae’s experiences.
She was so easy to love
Despite the premise of this story being centred around physical appearances, it was a smart move to not have Mi Rae focus solely on being pretty- she just wanted to be average. We started the story with Mi Rae being bullied and ostracised because of her appearance, and we really felt her heartbreak and her struggles- particularly when she thought that by losing weight she’d finally be accepted, only to learn that if it wasn’t her weight it was her face that people would make fun of. It was upsetting and confronting to watch, particularly as I’m sure we can all relate to Mi Rae’s character in some way. We were all at one point either Mi Rae, the ones who teased her, or the ones that turned a blind eye. Because this situation is one we all know goes on in our appearance-focused world, it made it that much more heartbreaking for our heroine. Early on we were rooting for Mi Rae and wanting her to find that normal life where she fit in that she so desperately wanted. Then we follow Mi Rae on her journey into her new life with her new face, and see just how much (or little) things change due her now attractive appearance.
Go for it, girl

What made Mi Rae even more relatable is that she wasn’t chasing perfection. Had Mi Rae got plastic surgery for the sole purpose of being pretty, she risked being a character that people wouldn’t be drawn to- as that desire would be perceived as shallow. Mi Rae believed her looks were what prevented her from having an ordinary life where people would treat her equally,
'Looks don't matter' says Mr. Handsome
and so she did what she thought she needed to do in order to be ‘normal’. And it’s just hard to dislike someone for wanting to fit in. Similarly, Kyung Seok is a character that could have been perceived badly, but actually ended up being charming and endearing. There’s something inherently annoying about attractive people saying looks aren’t important (like, would you still feel that way if you weren’t a 10/10?), but Kyung Seok’s disinterest in those around him did help in making it a bit more believable that this good looking dude didn’t really care about appearances. Why would he care about appearances when he doesn’t care about people in general? Kyung Seok’s character hit the sweet spot of being cool, yet approachable. He was more or less a passive observer of life, and only really disliked those who went out of their way to hurt others- such as Soo Ah and Chan Woo. I appreciated that our two leads weren’t strangers at the start of the story, as I would have found it hard to believe that Kyung Seok wouldn’t have cared what Mi Rae looked like had he never encountered her pre-surgery.
They're so cute and awkward
Their love story was sweet and simple, and I actually ended up enjoying how uncomplicated it was. The interest in their relationship came from watching them slowly discover their own, and then each others’ feelings, and I always find that much more enjoyable than when a third party tries to butt in. I ended up enjoying Soo Ah as an antagonist more because Kyung Seok saw right through her facade. It made Kyung Seok feel smart and switched on (unlike other K-Drama heroes) that he didn’t naively assume that everyone was nice.
I love that he saw straight through her bull
On the flip side, Mi Rae did kind of believe that everyone was nice, but even that was understandable as she’d spent so much of her life thinking that people would like her and treat her well if she was pretty, that she just assumed that would be the case. Even though I usually want a bit more substance in a university romance than what you get from a high school romance, I found that the innocence and awkwardness of Mi Rae and Kyung Seok’s relationship pretty sweet.
She gave 110%
Due to the fact that both of them were isolated from their peers growing up, it made sense that neither really knew how to go about being in a relationship- which made their baby steps cute rather than unbelievable. The chemistry between Cha Eun Woo and Lim Soo Hyang wasn’t exactly fireworks, but it was cute and bubbly in a way that made it fun to watch. I was impressed as a whole by Lim Soo Hyang’s acting. For starters, I think that this kind of role is one that an actress has to be very confident to take on. The makeup was incredible, and was done in such a way that it made Lim Soo Hyang look like she really might have had a whole lot of surgery (whereas when you see her with regular makeup she just looks far less plastic). With the topic of the drama being plastic surgery, it was obvious that no matter how she looked, people were going to talk about whether the leading actress had got any work done or not. Which must be pretty intimidating. Yet Lim Soo Hyang just dedicated herself completely to acting out her character the best she possibly could. She was sweet and funny, and I adored the hint of backbone that she gave Mi Rae. Even in Mi Rae’s moments of insecurity and low self esteem, Lim Soo Hyang made her character’s desire to adapt and change prevent her from becoming pathetic or irritating.
Her insecurity was understandable rather than annoying
On the other hand we have Cha Eun Woo. I can see why he was cast- he’s super handsome and does look kinda like the character from the webtoon. But no one is kidding themselves into thinking that he’s a good actor. Thankfully his character was one who didn’t really show his emotions to begin with, so it made it less noticeable, but it was still clear that he’s got a ways to go before he can properly handle a leading role- Lim Soo Hyang did all the heavy lifting here.
Very pretty, but pretty wooden
Cha Eun Woo is improving, don’t get me wrong (he’s come a looooong way from ‘To Be Continued’), but he’s just not quite there yet. Even so, he was more cute awkward than painfully bad. Kwak Dong Yeon was absolutely delightful as the sweet Sunbae, and he smashed his role. He turned his charm up to the max and delivered an endearing character. He’s an actor that improves with every drama he films, and he’s the type of actor where seeing him in a project makes me excited to see what he’ll do next (please give the boy a leading role now). Jo Woo Ri is interesting because I feel like for a drama that seemed pretty focused on getting actors’ physical appearances to match the webtoon characters, Jo Woo Ri didn’t really look like Soo Ah in the webtoon. That being said, she did act out the character’s duality well. She was able to flip believably between Soo Ah’s sweet public face, and manipulative real face, and made her character feel unique and set her apart from regular, obviously b*tchy second female leads. I think all the support actors did an amazing job rounding out the cast, and gave 100% percent to their characters, no matter the size of their role. One thing I always find with dramas, is that you can really tell when the cast members are having a fun time- it makes watching them all that more enjoyable.
This drama was so fun
‘Gangnam Beauty’ was one of those dramas where you can just tell that people were having a great time filming it. The actors felt calm and relaxed, and able to bring their best performances, and the energy was really buzzing in scenes that involved the extended cast. 

What Was Great:

Social Commentary:
The winning point of this drama is definitely the way it approached the construct of physical beauty. It’s not the first drama to give it’s heroine a makeover at the beginning so we can see how her life changes, but admittedly I do tend to shy away from these sorts of shows (‘Birth of a Beauty’, ‘200 Pound Beauty’).
He thought she was cute and fun pre-op
Because usually in these situations there’s someone on the receiving end of being called ugly. And as this show pointed out, beauty means different things to different people, and what some people find attractive/unattractive, others might not. I’ll never get over how angry I was at ‘Queen of the Ring’ for calling the insanely adorable Kim Seul Gi ugly. For starters, ‘Gangnam Beauty’ never showed Mi Rae’s face before she had surgery.
This worked so much better than I thought it would
It was an interesting choice, as it made filming a little trickier, but in the end I believe it was highly successful. We understood Mi Rae’s pain and self-loathing, but there was never any anger or resentment for some poor girl getting cast as ‘ugly’ Mi Rae. It also happily avoided the issue of young girls (who are the target audience for a drama like this) looking at the actress playing pre-surgery Mi Rae and finding similarities in their appearances and thus forming the idea that they are physically unappealing. It’s a big tick from me, as this is usually a sticking point I can’t get over in these transformation dramas. I expected this drama to be pretty light-hearted and for its final conclusion to be that it’s inner beauty that counts- which is a nice idea, but one that is ultimately incorrect. What I adored about ‘Gangnam Beauty’ is that it took the idea of beauty seriously and didn’t wash over the issue with the typical ‘it’s what’s on the inside that counts’. Instead, this drama took the stance that inner beauty is what should matter, but it’s not, so how do we deal with that? A much more realistic, thought provoking position. Because the fact is that if inner beauty is what mattered then Mi Rae would never have been bullied for her appearance in the first place.
Looks should matter less than personality, but the sad truth is that's just not the case
Rather than simply stating that the world should be one way, this drama explored how and why our world is the way it is. And it’s alarmingly shallow. People like appealing things, and want to possess appealing things. So if you’re not appealing, it stands to reason that people won’t like you. The interesting aspect that this drama explored is definitely the natural vs. man-made stance.
I enjoyed how there was various opinions on the matter
Soo Ah was well liked because she was pretty, and considered a ‘natural’ beauty. Mi Rae was also well liked because she was pretty, however there was an underlying feeling that Mi Rae was a bit of a cheater because she had used plastic surgery to become pretty. As a ‘Gangnam’ (plastic) beauty, Mi Rae wasn’t on the same ‘level’ as Soo Ah. The way the show expressed its commentary was through the views of each of its characters. Each character had a different view on what was pretty and how important being pretty was, and each character had a different view on plastic surgery- some thought it was fine to use surgery to become pretty while others viewed it as fake. It was the female characters that felt the most pressured to be pretty, with Mi Rae being an obvious example. However, the show also expressed the pressure through other characters such as Soo Ah and Tae Hee, who felt like the world expected them to be a certain level of attractive in order to be treated well. Interestingly enough, it was also the female characters who tended to be the most judgemental of each others' looks, which I also think rings a bit true to real life.
I appreciated that the drama didn't try to pin all women image issues on men
The boys tended to just focus on the pretty- they saw someone pretty and so they liked the pretty person. Feelings of jealousy, inadequacy and superiority were often brought in by the female characters- though with that being said Won Ho also had these types of feelings towards Kyung Sung, showing that it’s not necessarily a gender-based cycle with only one gender perpetuating unhealthy ideologies. I think that each viewer is going to come out of this drama with a different conclusion on what this drama focused on, as not only are there commentaries made by the drama, but these commentaries are impacted by our own views of beauty that we hold before we even go into this drama.
I could ramble for hours about the different topics and character reactions
By having so many characters expressing so many different views, the drama was able to look at the issue of beauty from several angles, and managed to get away without offending anyone (as far as I can tell). 

What Wasn’t:

Mentally Ill, Not Mean:
Oh K-Dramas- unless the antagonists are nothing short of pure evil they will always try to save them. The redemption arc for Soo Ah in this drama I found particularly irritating. I could see that we were going down this path, and I wasn’t all to happy with it. 
Some people can just be insecure and mean without needing a sob-story
The quick backstory that got thrown in during the last few episodes just wasn’t enough to make me care about this horrible girl at all. So she had a rough childhood- is that supposed to excuse all the sneaky, hurtful things she’s done since? I really think I would have preferred if the drama had kept her as a nasty girl who couldn’t stand others getting attention, rather than making her out to be some wounded kitten. Having watched ‘Sassy Go Go’ not too long ago (though admittedly it is a few years old now) really made the character of Soo Ah (even has the same name as the ‘Sassy’ antagonist) feel dated and not very intuitive. Quick turnaround for a villainous character by suddenly painting them in a sympathetic light- done, done, and done. I’ve seen it a million times. Yes, I understand that often the case is that the writer is expressing how all people have events that have shaped them, and that detrimental behaviours don’t necessarily come from a place of evil but also from a place of hurt. But having had this spin put on so many characters it’s starting to become a bit predictable. And predictable is (usually) boring. 

Saving the mean girl is getting a bit old now
I can tend to forgive these redemptions in high school dramas, because no one really wants to say that your life is set at 15, and those characters obviously have a lot of time to change and grow. And we can’t ignore the teenage angst that makes everyone kind of crazy in high school. However ‘Gangnam Beauty’ was set in university, and the characters were all on the cusp of adulthood. Soo Ah has passed the age where you can be forgiven by simply being a hurt person yourself. She’s an adult now, and so I didn’t give her the same slack I give child characters. 
Grow up, girl
I also didn’t appreciate that the show gave her a mental illness. I feel like this was a plot point that might have been revealed slower and in smaller pieces in the webtoon, but just got dumped on us at the end of the drama. All drama long Soo Ah has been horrible and manipulative, yet completely sane. Then suddenly with hardly any buildup she’s gone completely bonkers and is ready to commit suicide. Sigh. The suicide card. It’s a quick fix that I think a lot of dramas lean towards in order to create an easy, stress-free redemption for their antagonist. 
Not all b*tches are mentally ill you know
Unfortunately, I think this kind of representation can actually be quite damaging for those with actual mental illness. There’s already a lot of stigma around depression and anxiety, so I don’t really think this idea that those with mental illness are a ticking time bomb is really one that needs to be encouraged. The issue as a whole goes much further than this drama alone, but I can’t ignore ‘Gangnam Beauty’ for perpetuating the myth. In trying to create an easy out for one of their characters, the writers (most likely unknowingly), are encouraging the idea that those with depression/anxiety will at some point self-destruct. By trying to use mental illness as an excuse for harmful behaviours, the drama is also supporting the idea that people with mental illness tend to not be very nice, and take out their pain and personal issues on others. Which is just not true. I also didn’t appreciate that the show tried to make it seem as though Mi Rae was the only one who could save Soo Ah from her world of self-loathing- as if she was duty-bound to help her. 
Let her solve her own problems
The problem with this is that it then ends up being Mi Rae’s ‘fault’ if Soo Ah does end up harming herself. Which is an idea I absolutely hate. Sure, if someone has tied Soo Ah to some train tracks and Mi Rae has ample opportunity but chooses not to untie her,
Just focus on the cute not the crazy
I can buy that Mi Rae has partial responsibility in Soo Ah’s injury. However, I argue that forcing Mi Rae into a corner where she has to help the girl who has been harming her just so Soo Ah doesn’t personally choose to hurt herself is a dirty trick. It’s a personal choice and Mi Rae does not share the responsibility for that outcome. I find placing blame on others for self-harming behaviours is a dangerous practice and is more often than not an external excuse for an internal problem. The whole situation reeks of revenge-self-harm (I’m going to hurt myself so you’ll feel guilty about not treating me better), which is a topic that I personally think should only be touched on very carefully and very sensitively (and remains one of the reasons I refuse to watch the American hit ’13 Reasons Why’). For a drama that was so contemplative and thoughtful on the issue of physical appearance and self-esteem, it was painfully ignorant and insensitive in the way it handled the mental stability of the antagonist. The whole issue could have been avoided if they’d just made Soo Ah a nasty person and didn’t try to save her character in the last stage of the show.

Recommend?
Yes- for younger viewers or those who like sweet, innocent romances this is a great watch. 
An unexpected hit

Saturday, 10 March 2018

The Best Hit

The Best Hit

4/10
The Best Hit
Genre:                                                  Episodes: 16                                         Year: 2017
Romance
Comedy

Synopsis:
In 1993, Yoo Hyun Jae, a popular member of a successful boy group travels forward in time to 2017. In the modern time, Hyun Jae learns that he mysteriously disappeared in 1994.

Cast:
Yoon Shi Yoon (Yoo Hyun Jae)
Lee Se Young (Choi Woo Seung)
Kim Min Jae (Lee Ji Hoon)
Cha Tae Hyun (Lee Gwang Jae)
Yoon Son Ha (Hong Bo Hee)
Dong Hyun Bae (MC Drill)
Lee Deok Hwa (Lee Soon Tae)
Hong Kyun Min (Paark Young Jae)
Chae Eun Woo (MJ)
Bona (Do Hye Ri)

General Thoughts:
I put off writing this review the way I put off finishing this drama- and for the same reason. This drama is so, so, so, so, so insanely boring. How can you have two comedic goldmines in Yoon Shi Yoon and Cha Tae Hyun and not have an outlandishly hilarious show?
Why are you so unfunny, show?
It’s not like the show didn’t have anything to work with- we started with interesting characters, a intriguing time-travel plot and a fairly talented cast. But it just…wasn’t what I expected it to be. I wonder if this show was funnier to its Korean audience, because a couple of times I did feel like the show was being funny but I just totally didn’t get it.
The kiss gag was fun, but it did make me nervous that there'd be a romance
I also fail to see how this was a ‘variety-drama hybrid’ (which is what is was marketed as), as really it was exactly the same as a regular drama. I was looking forward to a sort of mockumentary style similar to ‘Producers’ (which I found hilarious), but instead it had nothing in it that made it stand out from other comedy dramas. To be fair, at first the humour was pretty good, and I found myself enjoying the show, but as the storyline progressed (and the fun at Hyun Jae flailing around in the future faded) the show’s humour seemed to fall away. The antagonistic relationship between Hyun Jae and Gwang Jae was annoying rather than funny- I would have much preferred a long-lost bromance dynamic similar to ‘Tunnel’, and the love triangle between the father and son just kind of creeped me out. There were some fun moments to be mined from the situation while Hyun Jae didn’t know that Ji Hoon was his son or that his son was also crushing on Woo Seung, but as soon as he found out the whole situation just weirded me out.
This is the most uncomfortable love triangle I've ever been subjected to
Ji Hoon himself was just far too serious to be funny, and I thought Gwang Jae was a touch to whiny and butt-hurt and wasn’t funny either. And Bo Hee was just kinda super useless. Grandad and Mal Sook were always pretty fun, and I tended to always enjoy their snippets on screen- like when Grandad tried to buy off the young boy in exchange for not playing with Mal Sook anymore. I also found MC Drill pretty fun.
He also made Ji Hoon fun which is an added bonus
Though I do wish his character had some serious scenes or moments of character development, at least he could be relied upon to be consistently funny. At first I though Dong Hyun Bae was going a little over the top with his character’s representation, but as the show and his character found their groove, he acted quite well. I also appreciated that he didn’t shy away from being labelled as Tayang’s older brother- the scene of him bursting into ‘Eyes, Nose, Lips’ was just hilarious. Dong Hyun Bae actually reminds me a bit of Kang Ki Young (who is fabulous), and I hope he continues acting and expanding his range. Kim Min Jae as the other half of the duo I usually like, but he’s starting to fall into the trap of playing the same sorts of characters. His role here was really quite similar to the prickly guy with a soft spot for his girl that he played in ‘Because It’s the First Time’ and was even a bit similar to the entitled young King he played in ‘Goblin’. I know that he’s a good actor, but I wish he’d be a bit braver in the projects he chooses and step outside his comfort zone a bit.
You can do better than this Min Jae-ah
Yoon Shi Yoon was of course fabulous, but I did find his character pretty annoying. Yoon Shi Yoon’s natural charm only just managed to make Hyun Jae a likeable character. And I thought the leading lady Lee Se Young was just bad.
Not really a fan of these characters. Super not a fan of their love-line
Similarly to Hyun Jae, her character was super annoying, and Lee Se Young just didn’t have the charm or charisma to make up for that. Woo Seung was grouchy and often unapproachable, and was petty and selfish to boot. The character was simply boring and poorly written- with her having nothing more to do than simply be around as something for Hyun Jae and Ji Hoon to disagree over and fight about. Actually that pretty much wraps up the story as a whole. I kept waiting for the big reason that Hyun Jae time travelled to the future (was it to find the money? Discover who killed him? Spend time with his son?), but it turns out that…um…yeah there’s really no reason. He just sort of comes to the future, mucks around a bit, and then steals his son’s crush. Yeah man, what the hell? The fact that the whole story just came down to an immature romance really sucked. For most of the show’s run, Ji Hoon and Gwang Jae didn’t even want Hyun Jae around, and in the end, his trip to the future didn’t change anything.
If fate or destiny or whatever was gonna propel him through time you'd think there'd be a good reason for it
Nothing in the past altered, and nothing in the future really changed either except that now Ji Hoon has no chance with Woo Seung. Ji Hoon and Drill would have debuted through
An actual expression! You've come a long way since 'To Be Continued'
World Entertainment without Hyun Jae coming to the future, so all he really did was help sign MJ. Who was a significantly smaller character than I would have liked. Unlike most of the other characters, MJ did tend to be quite funny. Cha Eun Woo has improved a lot- there was actual believable emotion on his face! I would have liked MJ to be a bit more involved in the story. In fact, I would have liked ALL the characters to be a bit more involved in the story, as most of what we got was Hyun Jae and Woo Seung which was weird and boring. There were all these other smaller plot lines in the works that just weren’t developed, and left the story as a whole feeling rather one-dimensional. The drama lacked the heart and emotional core that shows about close friends and family usually have, and I blame that entirely on focusing too much on the romance. Oh and the characters just being generally sucky.

What Was Great:

Yoonie:
I really only kept watching for Yoon Shi Yoon (and the fact that I hate leaving dramas unfinished). He did a great job trying to drag this dead drama along, and a couple of times he actually got me to care about what was going on in the story.
Oppa~ let's pick better projects now, okay?
He did a pretty good job at building the romance, because Lee Se Young didn’t really help him there. He was flamboyant without being unrealistic and brought his dramatic charm to a character that otherwise could have been too haughty and arrogant. I adored Yoon Shi Yoon’s ‘90s style and he pulled it off surprisingly well. 

What Wasn’t:

Kinda Gross OTP:
I just couldn’t get into the love-line of this drama. Not at all. It’s an awkward time skip to include a romance. In fact, because of the amount of time that had passed,
Does it not weird you out at all that he's actually your best friend's father?
I really wasn’t expecting there to be a main romance at all- because it just wouldn’t make a lot of sense. It would either be Hyun Jae with Bo Hee- who was now old enough to be his mother and was raising their son with another man, or with Woo Seung who was the same age as his son and was in fact the woman his son was in love with. It’s just weird either way. Most time travel dramas that work in a romance can do so because the time between the two timelines is so great- I’m talking hundreds or thousands of years. So you don’t really picture one of the characters being significantly older than the other- you just go off their biological age, which is usually pretty similar (think ‘Queen In Hyun’s Man’). But by having such a small amount of time between the timelines (a mere 24 years) everything changes. Because there are people that the hero knows in both timelines, it seems creepy for him to get into any sort of romantic relationship. Because Woo Seung was the same age as his son, I found it super icky that Hyun Jae would even consider her in a romantic sense. I know they’re technically the same age, but it still kinda grossed me out.
Guys...it's not cute. It's just creepy.

Kinda Boring:
Because I was so disengaged from the main romance, as soon as the drama started centring its story around the love-line between Hyun Jae and Woo Seung, I just wasn’t all that interested.
Why does she get so much screen time? Just why?
Due to being so weirded out by the whole relationship, I struggled to find their interactions fun or cute, and as a result, their scenes together just became boring. And there were SO many scenes of them together.
What a stupendous waste of time
As I mentioned before, as the romance took centre stage, everything else in the drama just fell away. We didn’t really discover what happened regarding Hyun Jae’s disappearance, and when we did it sucked. What- he wanted to secretly die rather than let people know he had an illness? That’s possibly one of the stupidest things I’ve heard in K-Drama. And I’ve heard some pretty stupid things. Gwang Jae and Bo Hee’s romance was brushed over super fast and even Ji Hoon’s dreams of becoming a singer and his debut were just glossed over at the end. I tend to like my dramas to have some kind of meaning- not necessarily deep meaning, but at least have things happen for a reason. There were so many directions this drama could have taken, and in the end it opted for a sporadic series of events that revolved around an awkward romance.

Recommend?
Nah. Nothing was really done all that well- not the time travel nor the love-line.
I recommend not watching this drama