To Be Continued
3/10
|
To Be Continued |
Genre: Episodes:
12 Year:
2015
School
Fantasy
Music
Synopsis:
The day before
their singing debut, three boys from a new boy-band travel back in time to
their high school days when their band was just forming.
Cast:
|
Kim Sae Ron (Jung Ah Rin) |
|
Cha Eun Woo (Cha Eun Woo) |
|
Moon Bin (Moon Bin) |
|
MJ (MJ) |
|
Jin Jin (Jin Jin) |
|
Rocky (Rocky) |
|
Yoon San Ha (Yoon San Ha) |
|
Yeo Reum (Yeo Reum) |
General Thoughts:
I still have no
idea what the actual point of this web drama was. Like, I understand that it
was to launch boy-band ASTRO and build curiosity for them- but
plot-wise…I’ve got nothing. The whole story just didn’t make any sense. All the
boys (and the two girls) seemed happy enough when the drama started- they were
about to head onto their debut stage and everyone was chipper.
|
That's what I'd like to know- what did we just go through? |
And then they go
back in time. Um…why? No clue, because it doesn’t get explained. Why do only
three of the six boys time skip? Again, not explained. And nobody knows what
the hell Kim Sae Ron’s character Ah Rin has to do with anything. Whew, okay,
deep breath and let’s all go back to the beginning. The series just jumps right
in. There are no gradual character introductions nor relationship explanations.
It’s as if the writers just expect
you to know who the boys from ASTRO are.
|
Thanks for making me feel a million years old, boys |
Which I totally didn’t. Oops. The boys
are cute and…I wouldn’t go as far as saying they’re interesting to watch, but they’re not boring either. It’s just
blaringly obvious that they’re a bunch of kids- I mean I’m older than 83% of
that band…and I’m not old. Yoon San Ah and Rocky are just babies at 15 and 16
years old. Undeniably these boys can all sing/rap and dance amazingly well, but
acting…not so much. They are cute and energetic 'lil babies though and truly give it
their all. The girl characters Ah Rin and Yeo Reum don’t really have a point in
the story, save to add a bit of estrogen to the set. Yeo Reum is acceptable
enough as the female side-kick who’s around for the ride and will inevitably
hook up with one of the boys, but it seemed as though the writers had tried to
set up something more with Ah Rin. She was constructed as some sort of time
skip master, with this having been her third trip into the past, and yet she’s
at just as much of a loss as the boys. Not only that, but she fails to actually
do anything. It was as if her whole purpose was to make sure everything went
exactly the same as it did in the past. But then one begs to ask the question-
why time skip at all? Kim Sae Ron is by far the veteran actor of the bunch.
While being only 15, she’s been making notable appearances from around
2009/2010. She definitely delivers one of the most consistent, believable
performances, but her character was bland and frankly a tad boring. The music
was great (thank goodness) and the dancing was great, but that only added to
the feeling of the whole drama just being a big music video or advertisement
for ASTRO. Which would have been fine, had there been enough plot and substance
to distract from what the agency was trying to do. As it is I just feel like their agency was bashing my head into the TV going “LOOK AT
ASTRO! AREN’T ASTRO GREAT? THIS IS ASTRO! LOVE ASTRO!”
|
"IT'S A DRAMA FOR ASTRO!" |
What Was Great:
Half of ASTRO:
So basically
MJ, Jin Jin and Rocky were all pretty okay at acting. Yay! While occasionally
the boys didn’t quite hit the nail on the head, these three definitely pulled
their own weight.
|
Two okay actors and Cha Eun Woo |
Being the oldest (and the character that stayed in the past
longest), it was a relief that MJ could hold his own. His character was upbeat
and refreshing, if a tad overacted- but that fit into the overall tone of the
drama well enough anyway, as the whole series had an air of dreamy, juvenile
wackiness about it.
|
Quadruple Threat |
Jin Jin also gave a steady, believable performance, and the
scenes that combined him with MJ were enjoyable to watch overall. The two boys
were able to translate their pre-existing relationship from life to the screen
which was delightful. And really, I doubt there’s anything Rocky can’t do. It
was already clear that he’d be able sing, but he can rap too. Oh, and he’s a
killer dancer. Then (in the few moments of the drama we see him in) he proves
himself to be a pretty competent actor as well. And all that’s topped off with
his gorgeous face. It should be illegal for someone to have that much talent.
It’s not Long:
The episodes
were nice and short, rarely making it to a full 20 minutes, and there are only
12 episodes. While the shortness of the episodes does prevent any real
complications or tension to build in the drama, I highly doubt that would have
happened if the writers had gotten hour long episodes. The small number of
episodes keeps the very, very thin plotline from becoming ridiculously
overstretched. The few, short episodes allowed the drama to maintain its
fluffy, youthful vibe without letting it sink into becoming flat-out boring.
|
Easy to ignore the plot for the cute, because the plot's not there |
Bloopers:
Putting the
bloopers in the credits was just delightful. It was a smart choice as us
viewers get to see a bit of personality from the debuting boys beyond just who
they were being in the drama, which could be a polar opposite of their real
character. It was also good for a few laughs.
|
Best humor in the drama technically wasn't even in the drama |
What Wasn’t:
The Other Half
of ASTRO:
Cha Eun Woo,
Moon Bin and Yoon San Ha…weren’t that great. Which is surprising considering
that two of them were given huge roles in the drama.
|
Minimalist Approach- one expression for all scenarios |
But on the other hand, Cha
Eun Woo is very pretty, and Moon Bin is probably the only one
that could pull off anything close to a ‘bad-boy’, as the rest are just so cute
you want to carry them around in your pocket. Cha Eun Woo plays a pretty pivotal
character (well as pivotal as this drama gets) in that he’s the leader of the
band and the composer. And yet, all he seems to do is sit around half dazed
with a very blank look on his face. Sure he sings and dances a little (and he
is good at that), but his acting was…well, it was why people complain about
idols getting cast in dramas. Then there’s Moon Bin who was conflicting to
watch. Sometimes his acting was quite sincere and believable- mostly in his
chatting scenes with Kim Sae Ron where he was convincing as a youth with a
crush. But then other times he was very awkward and didn’t quite know what to
do with himself. I suspect that his character is probably quite different from
his actual personality, whereas the other boys get to basically act as themselves.
|
Most innocent looking 'bad-boy' ever |
And Yoon San Ha was definitely cute, but never managed
to come across quite natural. His character wasn’t the brightest bulb and
played up the aegyo, but poor maknae San Ha never quite made it to a convincing
performance. Nevertheless, I still think the boys did a pretty great job with
the cards they were dealt- even ignoring who was acting them, the characters
themselves were sloppily written and not developed at all.
So Many Plot
Holes:
|
16 at max. |
Oh my goodness
the story was bad. It was just horrifically, laughably bad. Nothing gets
explained, and by the end nobody is any better, wiser, happier, or anything-er
than when they started. First off, it’s a huge stretch for you to try and
convince me that Kim Sae Ron is 18, let alone 20. I’m sorry, but when I look at
her all I see is a young teenager. Sweet and cute, but a young teenager all the
same. And then her character doesn’t even make any sense. She has a rather
ambiguous relationship with all the boys, and no romantic inclinations for any
of them. Biggest plot hole right there- no young girl is surrounded by that
many cute, talented, friendly boys and doesn’t have a crush on at least one of
them. Unless she’s a lesbian, and I just don’t think South Korean school fluff
dramas are quite at the point of exploring homosexuality. For a good part of
this drama I firmly believed she was some sort of time-jump angel sent to
ensure that the boys made it to their happy, predetermined future with as few
hiccups as possible. But no, she’s just a high schooler who unexplainably hops
back in time now and then. Then there’s the fact that only three of the boys
head back to the past, when all six were in the exact same situation when they
were blasted through time and space. Is this explained? Of course not. And at
apparently random intervals the boys then slip back into the future, leaving
their past selves with no memory. Is a how and/or why given to us? No, don’t be
silly. Then the biggest, and most irritating black hole of plot holes. In the
end, the time jumping is redundant anyway because we’re back to where we
started and literally nothing has changed.
|
BUT THERE WAS NO REGRET- JUST FAME AND PARTIES |
The boys who had a brief stint in
the past now apparently can’t remember it, except for MJ (what, why?), and the
girl (who also randomly remembers all her time trip shenanigans) has learned
and gained nothing from the experience. It’s actually the first ever drama I
have watched that just plain doesn’t have a point. Y’know, beyond ‘This is
ASTRO. Love ASTRO.’
Gypped Juniors:
I feel bad for
Yoon San Ha and Rocky. Even in this sad little world of irrelevant, no-plot drama, their
characters don’t matter. If the two boys hadn’t been there, the story would
have carried on the same regardless- except the band would only have four part
harmonies. For a series that was supposed to showcase the boys’ talents and
introduce them as a new band, the two youngest boys were hardly in it.
|
Wait, what? Yoon San Ha's not an extra? He's actually in the band? |
Yoon San
Ha has maybe one big moment were he plays guitar and sings for a street
concert, but that’s the only time he manages to sneak onscreen for more than a
minute.
|
Well, the writers sure acted like you weren't there |
Rocky gets a bit more TV time, but not much. Which seems horrendously
unfair given his bags and bags of talent. He got a dance number (with Moon Bin)
and a rap number (with Jin Jin), but never got a chance to really sparkle on
his own. Boo, for a drama that really had nothing going for it except getting
to know the new boys in K-pop land, it would have been real nice to get more of a look at the boys. It’s a shame, but they’ll undoubtedly get more attention down the
track.
Re-watch?
No. Unless I
somehow, for some unexplained reason, go back in time to when I was 15 and I can
just ogle the boys for their young baby cuteness. But then they’d be 9 and this
drama wouldn’t be out yet. Oh well.
|
ASTRO, please do continue boy band-ing...but not drama-ing |
No comments:
Post a Comment