Hi! School Love On
Genre: Episodes:
20 Year:
2015
Romance
School
Fantasy
Synopsis:
Shin Woo Hyun
and Hwang Sung Yeol are two high school boys who come from broken families. Woo Hyun is
involved in what should have been a fatal accident, but an angel- invisible to
all others, saves his life. Due to interfering in the natural order and saving
a human who was supposed to die, the angel loses her immortality and becomes human. She
gives herself the name Lee Seul Bi, and not knowing any other humans, follows Woo Hyun. The two begin to attend a new school together, the same
school that Sung Yeol attends, and attempt to hide Seul Bi’s true identity from
the other students.
Cast:
Nam Woo Hyun (Shin Woo Hyun) |
Kim Sae Ron (Lee Seul Bi) |
Lee Sung Yeol (Hwang Sung Yeol) |
Choi Soo Rin (An Ji Hye) |
Lee Chang Joo (Jeon Byung Chul/Sunbae) |
Na Hae Ryung (Lee Ye Na) |
Kim Young Jae (Choi Jae Suk) |
General Thoughts:
It was nice to
see a group of younger, less experienced actors having a go. The acting wasn’t
necessarily all brilliant, but it got the job done and I wouldn’t go as far as
saying anyone was explicitly bad.
Except maybe Choi Soo Rin who didn’t appear to bring her A-game to set.
Kim Sae Ron gave an enjoyable performance as the naïve angel suddenly stuck on earth,
and her innocence and complete love for Woo Hyun were totally believable. The
two Infinite boys also gave convincing performances- a little weak at some points, but mostly they delivered the required emotions nicely.
The pre-existing
closeness was easy to see in scenes of boy-bonding and definitely gave the
bromance an authentic feel. The whole supporting cast delivered believable,
interesting and enjoyable performances- my interest was piqued by a fair few of
them and I look forward to seeing this new generation of K-Drama actors grow and
develop. Now on to the story. It’s a quirky fantasy-romance that’s a little
unusual (in the good way). Along with the actors, the story felt fresh and new
and happily managed to avoid a whole lot of K-Drama clichés- I know! A high
school romance that avoided clichés! I was surprised too. The plot takes off at
a zippy pace, with our main couple facing a lot of obstacles early on, which
did wonders in presenting a solid picture of who our characters were. The
issues faced by our three main characters felt believable and realistic (give
or take some angel shenanigans) for high school students with broken and
confusing family dynamics. However, it really felt like there was no need for
the drama to be 20 episodes long.
Unfortunately the length of the drama did
cause it to drag in places where it should have been building conflict, and it
lost a fair amount of its momentum. The cinematography was beautiful and the
music wasn’t terrible.
Just look at all the fresh faced cuties |
♫Brooooomance- nothin' really gay about it ♫ |
Conflict- what a CAKEastrophy |
What Was Great:
Cinematography:
Every scene in
this drama was simply visually stunning. There was not a wasted shot in the
whole drama. It really gave off the feel that all the staff working on the series sat
down for every scene and thoroughly hashed out what setting, angle, lighting
and distance would give them the most appealing image. It was wonderful.
Even
when characters were just talking, rather than having one angle and one shot of
the conversation, we get gorgeous light and shadow, and different face shots of
our characters. It was definitely one of the most beautiful, visually appealing
dramas I have ever watched.
Actually one of the prettiest dramas out |
Jealousy is always funny |
Humour:
Despite the
uncontrollable amout of angst that surfaced in this drama, there was a lot of
fantastic humour going on. The writers really capitalised on Seul Bi gaining
most of her knowledge on humans from dramas, which lead to mass hilarity born
from her innocence and misunderstandings. The two main teachers (while a little
irritating and not so relevant plot-wise) also brought about a lot of laughs.
The joy of watching an over 40 bromance. The first-human-turned-angel was a
hoot- he really displayed how funny not giving a f*ck is. The undying
affections and constant advances from one of Jae Suk’s lackeys towards Lee Da
Yul was never boring to watch. I could have happily watched a whole drama centred
solely on those two characters.
I vote for a whole drama about these two ↑ |
Bubblegum Kiss:
I always find
the most enjoyable and memorable K-Drama kisses are ones that are a little
unique. There’s something different about them that makes them easily stand
out. If you can make a good, recognisable parody from just one kiss- you’ve got
a successful kiss scene on your hands. We have the Coffee Kiss (Secret Garden),
Cola Kiss (Lie to Me), Candy Kiss (IRIS), Frozen Kiss (My Love from the Stars),
and now- the Bubblegum Kiss.
Let's not think about the mess that gum would've made |
Magic is great.
Magic in dramas is great. It adds that little bit of ‘wow’. Throughout the
whole series we got little snippets of the supernatural and it was delightful.
Sure, it wasn’t a main point, but it was enjoyable whenever there was a little
bit of angel spookiness going on.
What Wasn’t:
20 is Too Long:
There just
wasn’t enough plot to sustain the drama for 20 episodes. There just wasn’t. The
series also tended to focus on the less important parts than it should have.
Rather than seeing development between Woo Hyun and Sung Yeol- we see Sung Yeol
being a d*ck. Rather than seeing An Ji Hye struggle with what son she should
look after- we see Sung Yeol being a d*ck.
Rather than seeing the danger
surrounding Seul Bi due to increasing suspicion- we see, you guessed it, Sung
Yeol being a d*ck. In all honesty, there wasn’t a whole lot of reason given as
to why Sung Yeol had turned into a sloppy, angst-filled mess, so it wasn’t
entertaining to watch. It felt far too much like the writers didn’t have enough
material to last the whole run, so they just filled a bunch of episodes with
poor Sung Yeol being an asshole. The middle of the drama felt long and drawn
out, and yet the ending still felt rushed. Again, it was basically one of those
dramas where everything was fixed because all our antagonists suddenly decided
they didn’t want to be meanies anymore. It was a little awkward.
I feel sad for you- but you're still a butt |
Broken
Bromance:
The key to this
whole drama was basically the bromance. When the bromance was going strong the
series moved along at a nice pace- plot and characters developed, and it was
interesting to watch. When the bromance faltered and all Woo Hyun and Sung Yeol
did was fight- momentum dwindled, our characters lost focus, and it was just
plain frustrating.
Again, a lot of the problems here stemmed from the fact that
we weren’t given sufficient information about what was up Sung Yeol’s butt. The
step-mum/birth-mum thing just didn’t seem to justify what a knob Sung Yeol was
becoming. Woo Hyun’s character was nothing if consistent- it was a shame his
bandmate’s character was so all over the shop.
The Infinite dorm room must be a lot of fun |
Re-watch?
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