Showing posts with label Lee Jin Wook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee Jin Wook. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 December 2018

Voice 2

Voice 2

6/10
Voice 2
Genre:                                                     Episodes: 12                                   Year: 2018
Mystery
Thriller

Synopsis:
The Golden Time team relocate to Poongsan City for a month in order to track down the criminal behind the murder of their team captain.

Cast:
Lee Ha Na (Kang Kwon Joo)
Lee Jin Wook (Do Kang Woo)
Kwon Yul (Bang Je Soo)
Son Eun Soo (Park Eun Soo)
Yoo Seung Mok (Na Hong Soo)
Kim Woo Seok (Jin Seo Yul)
Kim Joong Ki (Park Joong Ki)
Song Boo Gun (Goo Gwang Soo)
Ahn Se Ha (Kwak Dok Ki)
Kim Ki Nam (Yang Chun Byung)
General Thoughts:
Okay, a K-Drama hasn’t made me this grumpy in quite some time. This drama didn’t make me grumpy because it’s bad, or because the plot doesn’t make sense, or even because the characters are unlikeable. No, this drama made me grumpy because it’s NOT F*CKING FINISHED.
WHERE'S THE REST OF MY DRAMA YOU SADISTIC B*STARDS
Yup, you heard right. OCN has basically sat me down at a restaurant, taken my order, and then brought me out my meal. Only it’s not cooked. ‘Oh- you want your dinner cooked? Our apologies, you’ll have to order another season and wait 12 months for that.’ Like, f*cking what? Anyway, moving along.
Jang Who? We have a new hero now.
Apart from the fact that this is basically only half a drama, what it did deliver was pretty darn good. It was a smooth continuation of the first season, and despite Jang Hyuk not returning, it didn’t feel like a giant gap in the story. There was a good cover for his character not returning to the Golden Time team, and our new hero was introduced in a swift, believable way. To be honest, Jang Hyuk is probably one of the things that annoyed me in ‘Voice’, so I wasn’t all that upset that he didn’t return for this season. The show was similar to the first season (duh), but it did a great job at presenting itself in a new way. While a fair bit of the subject matter were things we dealt with in the first season, there was enough in ‘Voice 2’ that was different, that it didn’t feel like we were watching the same show with a different male lead. While we were still chasing a serial killer as our main villain, Je Soo was a very different ball game to our killer last year. Chaebol psychos aren’t exactly rare, but Kim Jae Wook gave such a great performance last year that it made the villain terrifying and interesting. This time around, we had a villain that was far more secretive.
Though, if you want his identity to be a secret you might wanna pick an actor less conspicuous than Kwon Yul
We had far less open confrontation, with much more going on in the shadows. Our villain this time around also didn’t work alone. While usually having accomplices would lead to more ways to get caught, the vast connections that Je Soo had actually made him much more frightening- because these accomplices were more than just his henchmen. With his manipulation and string-pulling,
Who's in the box, who's in the box, who's in the box today-ay?
Je Soo had basically ensured that there was a whole group of people willing to continue on his horrific deeds even after he was caught. It also meant that he had a lot more people willing to take the fall for him so that he wiggle out of tricky situations. I appreciated the added mystery in this season, and thought it brought a lot more interest to the plot as opposed to a singular, rich murderer. In fact, I think the plot as a whole was a bit tighter than last season. The first season relied heavily on case-of-the-hour situations, with the main villain being on the back burner a fair bit until he was brought to the foreground as the final obstacle of the series. In Season 2, it felt much more like the end game villain was the one we were chasing from day one, and most of the smaller cases that came up in the meantime were still somehow connected to Je Soo and his creepy killer network. Both scenarios are totally fine, I just thought it was a good move to pace the show a bit differently in order to set it apart from its predecessor. While the writing behind the characters has definitely improved, I still wouldn’t say that the characters were as detailed as I would have liked them to be.
Man, it sure would be nice to get to know some of the other people on this team

I liked the way Kwon Joo’s development went this season, as having her not be as connected to the serial killer allowed us to see a little bit more of how she was on a regular basis. All I got out of last season is that she had good hearing and was dedicated to catching the man who killed her father.
I feel like her super hearing was way less important this time around
This season showed that she was dedicated to her job as a whole, with a deep desire to help people. She felt trusting and loyal without being weak or easy. The relationship between Kwon Joo and Kang Woo was excellent at showing us deeper aspects of Kwon Joo as a person. Lee Ha Na did a good job at continuing her role and she slipped right back into character nicely. Personally, I think she did a better job than last time, as I thought she was able to express Kwon Joo’s inner thoughts much better than the previous season. Lee Jin Wook did a great job at stepping into a franchise that already had a well loved hero (well loved by other viewers, not me), and was able to make Kang Woo very different to the last season’s hero. Despite both of them being rather hot-headed and determined to solve crimes, they didn’t feel like similar characters at all. Lee Jin Wook brought a moodiness to the drama that suited his character well and enhanced the mystery that surrounded Kang Woo. He made Kang Woo feel lonely and a bit jaded, and at times even slightly unhinged, without letting the character fall too far into unlikeable territory.
♫Does that make me crazy? Does that make me craaazaaaayyy? Possibly♫
The two leads had pretty great chemistry, and the characters’ desire to trust one another paired with their uncertainty that they should made for some pretty interesting viewing. Unfortunately I was a little underwhelmed with the villain performance. I know Kwon Yul can be scary, and it’s not like he did a bad job, but he didn’t creep me out the way I was hoping he would.
At this point I'm questioning if the writer even knows what his deal is
While the actions and motivations of our villain, Je Soo, were highly intriguing, he did suffer a bit as a character due to fact that he was completely doused in mystery. Last season we had a pretty solid understanding of our villain and what made him tick, whereas this time it felt a bit like the character construction for the villain was sacrificed in order to keep the mystery…well, mysterious. Which is a further downside to this particular plot being continued in a separate season. I have no doubt that Je Soo is going to be a fascinating villain, but because his story didn’t play out at the end of the show like I was expecting it to, I’m left confused as to why he’s so obsessed with Kang Woo and why I should care. The side characters were all interesting enough, but similarly to last season they were all very, very underdeveloped with very little screen time. Enjoyable as our main leads are, I still think it would be nice to get a bit more development for the other characters that fill out the Golden Time Team.
What do you mean there are other people on this team?
Even during the story arc that centred around Eun Soo she didn’t get a lot of screen time for herself as a character. Yes she was on screen, but she was mostly just there as a victim and as a catalyst to get Kwon Joo and Kang Woo into action. 

What Was Great:

Never Boring:
Perhaps this is one of my biggest annoyances that this season wasn’t a whole, complete story.
Is he gonna help you or is he gonna cut your hand off? Who can tell?
It was really, really good and everything was tying together quite nicely only for it to end, which then makes me question the good aspects of this drama. Like, the aspect I enjoyed most about this show is that it was never dull. There was always something going on with the Golden Time Team, the cases they were solving, and of course the tension that came from not knowing 100% if Kang Woo was an accomplice of the murderer, unwittingly or not. This show did a brilliant job at keeping the tension high from the very beginning, and there were no lags mid-way through. This drama was always interesting to watch. But on the other hand, that’s not exactly something that’s hard to do when you tell only half your story. The reason this plot had no lag mid-way could very well be due to the fact that right now we have only just arrived at the mid-way point of the story.

What Wasn’t:

Incomplete:
I don’t know about you guys, but part of what made me fall in love with Korean dramas and helps keep my obsession strong is their single season format. I don’t like commitment, so I love not having to dedicate years of my life to the same show. I also don’t like waiting, so I love not having excruciating gaps in a story I’m enjoying (seriously, I feel like I’ve spent half my life waiting for ‘Game of Thrones’ seasons).
I kinda feel like doing this to you right now, writer-nim
That being said, I’m not against bringing in a second season into K-Dramaland. ‘Voice’ is actually the type of drama that is perfectly set up to be multiple season show. The police setting allows the show to have an ever changing cast (with a few staple characters of course) without rocking the boat too much- which makes it easy to add new faces to freshen the show up, or replace old characters should the actors not want to return.
Plus, does anyone actually believe they'd kill off this heroine? No. Not at all.
The police setting also gives us a reason to have multiple antagonists. Essentially, all you need to keep this show going is for Lee Ha Na to keep coming back as our heroine. And yet…they kind of mess this format up. Because for me, unless you’re going in knowing it’s a long story that will have more than one season (indeed, like ‘Game of Thrones’), I expect the seasons to be able to stand alone. We have a mystery, work all season to solve it, then move on to a fresh mystery in the next season. I thought that was what ‘Voice’ was doing, because Season 1 wrapped up all nicely and left us all with a satisfied, content feeling. Season 2 was a bonus! More of what we liked as kind of a Take 2 rather than a direct continuation. We had a new story. It would make sense for the show to continue that way- wrapping up Season 2’s mystery and getting a new mystery together for Season 3. But instead, Season 2 cuts off right as we get towards the main part of our mystery. This left me feeling like we had accomplished very little, if anything at all in Season 2.
I want to know what's going on and I want to know now
The PD (who is not Kim Hong Sun from the first season, I might add) said that two seasons (seasons 2 and 3) were planned from the start and as the story ‘couldn’t be wrapped up in just 16 episodes’ a third season was brought in and Season 2’s episode count was lowered to 12. I would seriously much rather have a 16 episode series that is absolutely jam packed with content than cutting off the story for a season change.
I am going to be at least this angry if 'Voice 3' doesn't deliver
Seriously, I have never once complained that a K-Drama has tried to cover too much content in its episode count, yet I have frequently complained of story lag in the middle of a drama/season due to there not being enough story to spread over all the episodes. I’m also skeptical because it didn’t seem like there was much more to discover for our current villain, Je Soo. All we had to do was arrest him (because legit the whole world knows he’s a murderer now) and figure out how he was connected to Kang Woo. Even Kang Woo’s back story was pretty much filled in at the end of Season 2, so I’m not exactly sure what it was that made it ‘too much’ for 16 episodes. I actually went in thinking this drama was 14 episodes (so it was like a double shock when I got to episode 12 and found out 1- this was the end, and 2- there is no closure.), and as I was watching the final episode, not knowing I was minutes away from the season’s end, I honestly believed this story could be wrapped up in a satisfactory manner in the next two episodes.
Aren't...aren't we pretty much done here?
Why they need a whole other season is just beyond me. Money, I guess. But the thing is, if Season 3 doesn’t turn out to be the BEST THING EVER, it’s going to be really disappointing.
My expectations for the next season are weirdly low
There’s been all this build-up, and you’ve left us hanging for a year, so if it’s anything short of excellent, not only season 3, but also Season 2 (which apart from being incomplete was actually a really solid show) will be ruined. Additional seasons with complete story continuation also make me nervous for the simple fact that the cast may not even sign on. There’s been whispers that Lee Ha Na and Lee Jin Wook have both signed on for Season 3, but nothing has been confirmed yet. And I mean, Lee Ha Na has done this for two years in a row now- who says she even wants to do it for another year? Maybe she wants to try something new? And I’ve heard literally nothing about Kwon Yul coming back on board, so who knows what’s happening there. Essentially what this boils down to is that this season can’t stand alone, so as well as being unsatisfied with the conclusion thus far, I’m hesitant to say if I even like this drama or not- because how good or bad Season 2 is, is now tied in with how good or bad Season 3 ends up being. And I don’t love that.

Recommend?
Not unless you are 100% committed to another season. 
We don't even know if Season 3 will be the final one...

Friday, 15 January 2016

I Need Romance 2012

I Need Romance 2012

5.5/10
I Need Romance 2012 
Genre:                                   Episodes: 16                                   Year: 2012
Romance
Comedy
Melodrama

Synopsis:

Joo Yeol Mae and Yoon Seok Hyun were in an off-and-on relationship for 12 years before breaking up for the last time three years ago. Although they have been broken up for quite some time, the two remain incredibly close friends and continue to live together in the house they grew up in as children. Yeol Mae still has lingering feelings for Seok Hyun, but he appears indifferent towards her. Shin Ji Hoon, the owner of the coffee shop Yeol Mae frequents, confesses to her and tries to sway her feelings from Seok Hyun to himself.

Cast:
Jung Yu Mi (Joo Yeol Mae)
Lee Jin Wook (Yoon Seok Hyun)
Kim Ji Suk (Shin Ji Hoon)
Kang Ye Sol (Woo Ji Hee)
Kim Ji Woo (Sun Jae Kyung)
Kim Ye Won (Kang Na Hyun)
Heo Tae Hee (Kim Tae Woo)














General Thoughts:
No. This drama can p*ss right off if you want my brutal, honest opinion. What even was that? A monstrosity of an ending that’s what. Seriously, that ending gives ‘Big’ a good run for its money in ‘Worst K-Drama Endings of All Time’. Okay, seriously though. It’s not all bad- on the contrary, a lot of it is very, very good. Very good. I enjoyed a large portion of this drama immensely. Which sadly only made its slow and gruesome death that much more upsetting.
It just...didn't meet expectations
It turns out, it’s the exact opposite of ‘I Need Romance 2011’, in which I disliked a large portion of the series, but its beautifully poetic and justifiable ending made everything make sense and left a sweet aftertaste. In contrast, ‘I Need Romance 2012’ was an interesting and well-crafted drama whose unexplainable and absurd ending made everything make less sense than when we started, and left a rather vomitus aftertaste.
And it was at this point my love for the drama died
The writing in ‘I Need Romance 2011’ was so subtle that the audience was gently guided toward the ending the writers had in store, and everyone left remotely happy. Over the course of the whole drama, the couple acknowledged their mistakes and learned from them, giving the couple an authentic, long-lasting feel. The writers were like a parent holding the back of your seat while you learn to ride a bike, letting go only when you have the confidence and balance to ride on your own. The writing in ‘I Need Romance 2012’ however, was like a parent holding the back of your seat while you learn to ride a bike, letting go when their arm got tired and they couldn’t be assed supporting you anymore, only to watch you fall. And break your arm. On the road. Where you’re hit by a truck. I trusted the writers the way I trusted them for ‘INR 2011’ and they betrayed me. The sad fact is, Yoon Seok Hyun is a weak character with little development that only becomes open to the idea of changing himself in the last episode where he then promptly runs away from everybody after quite splendidly ruining everyone’s life. Top bloke. Throughout the drama he was short-tempered, uncommunicative, and selfish. By the end of the drama he has made no visible changes, yet a year has passed and suddenly he’s an enlightened man who knows how to communicate and treat his woman well. Believable? Not in the slightest.
He cried for a year, then magically learned to love
Joo Yeol Mae was a bit abrasive and could come across rude, but was likeable for the most part. She voiced her opinions and feelings and wanted Seok Hyun to do the same so they could discuss their problems, address them, and move on. She gave Seok Hyun every opportunity to grab onto her, but he didn’t, and right up to the end Yeol Mae was the one seeking out Seok Hyun to comfort him and help him while he sat in his puddle of self-pity tears.
Actually too perfect to be Man No. 2
And then there’s Shin Ji Hoon who is apparently perfect in every way. He’s supportive, understanding, and is able to communicate in order to resolve misunderstandings and fights. And he just gets massively screwed over here. Because apparently the writers (and Yeol Mae) are totally bipolar, and a little bit masochistic. The support characters are actually quite delightful. The acting’s not spectacular and does seem a little forced on occasion (particularly from Kim Ji Woo), but it quite nicely gets the job done. While not without their flaws, Yeol Mae’s friends and their men are constructed as continually changing and developing characters who learn from their mistakes in order to shape their future (unlike our supposed ‘hero’). The story arcs for our support characters are interesting enough and come to logical, satisfying conclusions. The relationship between the three girls was refreshing, and while they didn’t have that initial spark of chemistry that the girls had in ‘INR 2011’, they felt more like real, functional people than our original girls as they could talk about things other than just sex. Like work, social problems, and emotions.
Better characters, but slightly worse acting
The soundtrack was rather unexceptional and forgettable- bar Lasse Lindh’s ‘I Could Give You Love’ which I’ll be singing for the next week.

What Was Great:

Initial Character Setup:
The original character set up in the drama felt similar to the 2011 series. We have an interesting, driven woman with two extremely close friends, and a man she’s had a close relationship with for an extended period of time. Enter new, younger girl that puts a strain on the relationship between the main couple. Enter new, younger man that steps up to comfort the heroine while main man acts like a butt. Two side friends have their own story arcs with separate men.
New characters spice up a familiar situation
Very similar, but also new enough in that the characters were sufficiently different from the original. Yeol Mae was outspoken and headstrong, not afraid to chase after what she believed was her own happiness. Seok Hyun was withdrawn and mildly mysterious.
Got his happy-ever-after a year later (in true K-Drama style)
Ji Hoon was open, understanding and willing to let our heroine search for her happiness while simultaneously insisting that it was with him. There were enough differences with our characters and their relationships that it was interesting to imagine where the writers would take us this time with the differing dynamics. Spoiler alert: they take us to the same place as last time. Also, it was hilarious and interesting to see Heo Tae Hee return as Kim Tae Woo- who happened to be the ex-fiancĂ© of Kang Hyun Joo who he dumped in ‘INR 2011’ for not being sexy.

Second Male Lead Syndrome:
So basically Kim Ji Suk is adorable, and he plays an adorable character. Shin Ji Hoon is every woman’s dream and the most unrealistic thing in the whole series is that he would still be single at 30. Because he’s more or less perfect. Granted, Lee Jin Wook is pretty gorgeous when he smiles- but sadly for him, his mopey character doesn’t do that often. Which means that Kim Ji Suk/Shin Ji Hoon was able to brilliantly outdazzle him in both looks and character. 
This is what we wanted. This is what we all wanted.
What Wasn’t:

F*ck Off:
This male protagonist just didn’t cut it for me. I felt he was selfish, irrational, and his decisions made less than no sense. For starters, he had clearly given Yeol Mae up and was not interested in having a relationship with her that had any sort of definable future.
His puppy-eyes are like a dead puppy's eyes
Why, you may ask? Because his family has a genetic disease which he may or may not have inherited, so he may or may not die. And yet he sticks around not having enough guts to bugger off, starting weird undefined relationships with our leading lady on a whim, then breaking them off on a whim- all while openly flirting and toying with the feelings of his younger co-writer Kang Na Hyun. Sound like a bit of a jackass? Probably because he is. He constantly hurts and pushes away this woman who he says he loves (in voiceover no less), then when she is finally moving on, being happy and forgetting him- he butts in to try and take her back. Only when she comes back…he doesn’t want a relationship with her. And he moves house…and vanishes for a year…so he can…cry? C’mon bud, get your sh*t together. Had there been an understandable reason behind why he’d been so secretive and pushing her away, his character may have been halfway acceptable. But there wasn’t. So he can’t promise a future to her because he might die and he wants to spare her that pain. Okay, acceptable reason- if you then let her go and have a future with someone else. But no, he keeps her hanging around in limbo, where his death would still end up hurting her just as much.
Once a wanker, always a wanker- that's what I always say
Also, what a selfish, d*ck move to not tell her about his sister’s death? Yeah, he’s trying to keep his family illness a secret or whatever, but he wasn’t the only one Yeol Mae grew up with. Yeol Mae had a relationship with his younger sister that was all her own and extended beyond ‘my boyfriend’s sibling’. She had every right to know about that death and mourn it in her own way. Seok Hyun just flip-flops more than any character ever should, and with no clear, understandable reasoning behind his decisions.
"Should I dump you? Nah. Should I date you? Nah."
He was so sweet and thoughtful to start (though still rather uncommunicative), then randomly became bitter, closed, and disagreeable, before arriving at expressive, communicative and understanding in the last 5 minutes. It was unbelievable that he could have such a turnaround in the space of 1 year when he’s spent the last 12 or so years making the same mistakes and being unwilling to change. From 2/3rds in right until the end, all I could think when Yoon Seok Hyun was on my screen was ‘F*ck off, buddy’.

Not Expressing Love:
Ji Hoon was actually the only character that was able to express his emotions through his words and actions. With our leading couple, unfortunately the writers relied far too heavily on the voiceovers as a tool to explain what our characters were feeling. I don’t want a voiceover telling me that Seok Hyun has realised in an instant what he couldn’t see for the last 12 years. I want you to show me how he came to that realisation, and how he’s going to express this change of heart to Yeol Mae. I don’t want to hear a voiceover telling me Yeol Mae is in love with Seok Hyun when all I’m seeing is her being perfectly happy and in love with Ji Hoon. It’s the tricky balance that the original struck just right that the sequel has sadly fallen short off. We heard about the apparent unbreakable connection between our two leads, but we didn’t see it. What we saw (and didn’t hear) was the connection between Yeol Mae and Ji Hoon, which led to their relationship being much more understandable to the viewers.
That tree got more loving looks than Seok Hyun ever did
What was so magic about the original ‘I Need Romance’, was that it was blaringly obvious that the main couple loved each other deeply and belonged together- and some sort of witchcraft kept the main male lead from coming across as the world’s biggest prat. There was also a viable reason behind why the newer relationship wouldn’t work that went beyond ‘I think I might still love my ex’. Sadly, in this drama our main couple was just plain unconvincing. While there was undoubtedly some chemistry between the actors, they sold an unbelievable couple.

Re-watch?
No. I repeat myself: f*ck off Yoon Seok Hyun.
Perfect example of how a sh*tty ending can ruin an otherwise fantastic drama