365: Repeat the Year
8/10
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365: Repeat the Year
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Genre: Episodes: 12 Year: 2020
Mystery
Synopsis:
Ten people are called together by a mysterious woman and are given the chance to go back one year in time. After returning to the past the group realise that this may not have been the gift they first thought, as mysterious events start to put them in danger.
Cast:
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Lee Joon Hyuk (Ji Hyung Joo) |
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Nam Ji Hyun (Shin Ga Hyun)
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Kim Ji Soo (Lee Shin) |
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Yang Dong Geun (Bae Jung Tae)
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Yoon Joo Sang (Hwang No Sub) |
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Lee Yoo Mi (Kim Se Rin)
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Ahn Seung Kaun (Ko Jae Young) |
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Lee Sung Wook (Park Sun Ho) |
General Thoughts:
Boy am I just loving these smaller episode count dramas! 12 episodes was exactly the right amount for this little show- any more and the plot would have been stretched too thin and we would have got a lag around the halfway point, any less and there would have been too much crammed in there.
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Aw yeah, this show sure don't mess around
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As it was the plot moved along at a consistent pace and each new episode revealed something further about the plot the characters or both. Mystery dramas have a lot of places where they can trip up- more so than other genres, as so much banks on the main mystery remaining unknown but not so completely random that it’s impossible to guess before the reveal. ‘365’ hit a nice balance of dropping enough clues that the final reveal was understandable, but not so many that the twists were easy to guess. |
It would be a lot easier to solve this mystery if everyone didn't act so d*mn sus
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I find that a lot of K-Drama mysteries tend to have maybe two or three solid twists up their sleeves and the rest of the show will play out in a rather straight forward manner. Not here. Almost every episode had some sort of twist in it. The scales of the twists were different, but each one unpacked a little bit more of the story and the characters and helped paint a more complete picture of the overall narrative. It really felt like we were learning along with Hyung Joo and Ga Hyun what was going on, which is a good place to be. This often meant that Hyung Joo and Ga Hyun were voicing our own speculations and were exploring ideas that we as the audience also thought might be possibilities. It very much felt like we were on the journey together with the two leads rather than just watching them solve a mystery on their own. The mystery at the heart of ‘365’ wasn’t perfect, but it was complete enough that we had a truly engaging and thrilling story to follow, and the conclusion felt well earned and satisfying. There were of course an abundance of red herrings, but as the writers left most things up to speculation, the red herrings felt more like a storytelling technique rather than a blatant attempt to mislead the audience so that they could pull out a ‘gotcha’ moment later (though there were still one or two of those moments also). |
As if the main mystery lady is gonna tell you all her secrets
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I also appreciated that the writers didn’t try to cast too much doubt over Hyun Joo and Ga Hyun. There was a short while there where Sun Ho was trying to frame Hyung Joo that cast a little suspicion over him, but apart from that we always had two characters that we could rely on and cheer for. Because the other resetters had so much doubt surrounding them, it could be hard at times to really like them, as we didn’t want to commit fully to liking a character only to find out that they are a murderer. |
I'd trade a cheaty boyfriend for working legs any day of the week
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Having our two leads remain outside the realm of suspicion let us simply enjoy their character moments, the relationship they were developing, and their small victories leading up to the final confrontation. For the acting I think everyone did a pretty great job. I’ve seen Lee Joon Hyuk in a few things, and despite him never really grabbing my attention, I don’t think I’ve ever been let down by his performance either. I think Hyung Joo is the most charismatic role I’ve seen him in (I think he was supposed to be super cool in ‘You Who Forgot Poetry’ but I was so-so on him in that), and he really made the character of Hyung Joo quite endearing. Moments where I think he really stood out were when he realised his mentor was a murderer, and when Ga Hyun died protecting him. Lee Joon Hyuk just burst through those scenes with an emotional intensity I just did not expect from him, and he really blew me away in those moments. His grief felt so raw and so real, and made your heart just ache for him. Lots of actors can look super cool running and catching criminals, so I was impressed to see Lee Joon Hyuk bring something else to his character as well. He also introduced a bit of a cheeky playfulness to his character that I’ve not seen him do before, and it was actually quite sweet- it made me curious to see how he’d go in a more rom-com role (again ignoring ‘You Who Forgot Poetry’ because while that counts it also sorta doesn’t). |
There were lots of solid female roles in this show which is awesome |
Nam Ji Hyun has been in lots of things and she’s a great actress. I think this role was stepping outside her comfort zone a bit as she usually plays typical rom-com style heroines. There were times I found her character a bit too blunt and brash, and I’m unsure if this was Nam Ji Hyun’s acting or just the way he character was written, but as the story progressed and Ga Hyun’s relationship developed with Hyung Joo, Nam Ji Hyun settled not the character more and Ga Hyun became a lot more likeable. |
It's almost like he wanted people to get the wrong idea... |
While I feel like there were a lot of emotional scenes that Ga Hyun was a part of, I don’t super recall Nam Ji Hyun having any wow scenes the way that Lee Joon Hyuk did. The supporting cast were all great as well- Kim Ji Soo did a wonderful job at being mysterious but not completely inhuman and unrelatable, and I thought Lee Yoo Mi did such a fantastic job at making the switch when her character revealed her true, slightly crazy nature. She did both the sweet innocence and the obsessive manipulator roles so well, and did a great job at making these different faces of the same character, rather than having it seem as though Se Rin had just become a completely different person. Yes, Se Rin had changed dramatically, but Lee Yoo Mi kept certain expressions and actions that tied both of these personalities together into the one character, and I thought she handled it excellently. The editing I found could be a little heavy-handed. Most of the time it was perfectly fine, but there were a few moments where I thought it took away from the show rather than adding to it. In the first timeline we see play out where Sun Ho dies, I thought that the scene shifting to black and white with the blood remaining red just felt a bit…tacky? It felt like it was supposed to make it look cool and emotional, but I thought it came across a bit cheap. |
Mmm no thanks
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Perhaps if the entire show had these black a white moments for really intense scenes it would have worked better, but having it as a once off just seemed a bit odd, and I didn’t love it. There were a couple of other editing choices that I questioned at the time, but I can’t remember them now, so they can’t have been that bad.
What Was Great:
Character Layers:
There were so many different aspects to all of the characters. Even though we were shown so many different parts of each characters’ life, there were still ways that the writers were able to turn something around and surprise us.
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The room of doom
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Except maybe for Hyung Joo and Ga Hyun, but I liked that they were safe and unsuspicious. Each of the other resetters had so much going on. Even just from our first character that got a bit of depth- Yeon Soo. At first I thought she was going back in time to avoid marrying her husband. Then I thought her husband maybe was violent to her. Then there was the question of whether it was Yeon Soo who was the hit-and-run driver or her husband. There was so much to unpack from just this one character alone, and we had so many! |
I thought we were gonna run out of characters they were killing them off so quickly
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I liked how the impending sense of doom was a catalyst for the characters to reveal their true colours- when they thought their lives were in danger, suddenly everyone was a lot more willing to throw someone else under the bus. Jung Tae, who seemed the most suspicious and disloyal at the start actually ended up being one of the most caring characters- he was trying to make life better for his sister, and even ended up getting his protective nature taken advantage of by Se Rin. Se Rin who had seemed so sweet and innocent then ended up being a compulsive liar! I wondered early on if maybe Se Rin’s sister wasn’t actually dead, but to find out that she lied about everything in her life was a big surprise, especially when she became so emotionally manipulative by putting her physical safety at risk to get what she wanted. But I also appreciated that she wasn’t just a one-dimensional liar either. Her lies served a purpose- she wanted people to pity and care for her, and she wanted to get closer to Young Woong. Similar to Jung Tae, Se Rin also wasn’t just purely good or purely evil. While she was definitely off the rails, in the scene where she hurt Ga Hyun it was evident that she regretted harming her, and actually truly cared for Ga Hyun. While it may have seemed like Ga Hyun was wasting time and energy on a girl who was lying all the time, her efforts weren’t totally wasted, and Se Rin definitely knew that she could trust and rely on Ga Hyun. |
I was most suspicious of No Sub just because he seemed the least suspicious
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Because the mystery was so interwoven with the characters, there was a lot of thought and depth put into the resetters backstories so that they could further enhance the drama’s puzzles. It gave us a very rich selection of characters that were so vastly different from each other and very engaging to watch on screen- especially as they were forced to start to interact with each other and delve into each others’ secrets.
Partners:
Hyung Joo and Ga Hyun just made a delightful little pair! It was really sweet to see how they came to trust and depend on one another as their futures became so entangled. I liked that the writer didn’t really tie them together romantically, but there were enough hints there that laid the groundwork for a possible future romance. While I love a good loveline as much as the next person, sometimes it's a nice little change to have our leads not be romantically involved.
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The power of friendship
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While not all platonic relationships feel deeper than romantic ones, I thought that in this case, it made sense for Ga Hyun and Hyung Joo to be a bit too preoccupied with everything going on around them to be distracted by romance- it just wasn’t a good time! The chemistry was definitely there, and Lee Joon Hyuk and Nam Ji Hyun had a comfortable and relaxed rapport that was such fun to watch. Even in their dire circumstances they were still able to care for one another, and their desire to protect the other really showed how solid their friendship had become over the course of the year that they had repeated together. |
Detective Duo (plus Pup) are on the case
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They were a great detective duo, and they worked really well together. Rarely did they go off and do their own things without informing the other, and they always had an underlying respect for each other in everything they did. When Ga Hyun went out herself to try and catch the apparent bad guy (which at that point they thought was Jung Tae), Hyung Joo was concerned for her safety, but he also never babied her or treated her as if she were the most fragile flower in need of constant supervision. When Hyung Joo realised his work partner who he had gone back in time to save had been the one who was the murderer, Ga Hyun never blamed him or criticised his decision to save his friend- she simply comforted him and worked with him toward a solution. It was a lovely partnership, and they were an easy pair to cheer for. I really loved that the drama went out of its way a bit to show that they always formed this sort of bond. In the original-original timeline (where they all die) Hyung Joo becomes a consultant on Ga Hyun’s comic and they become good friends that way. In the year they are repeating, they are obviously connected and become close through the reset. And in the final timeline where Hyung Joo goes back to save Ga Hyun, she recognises him for being the one to catch Sun Ho and once again invites him to be a consultant on her comic. |
This scene was pretty sad...
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We aren’t given much more on how the current timeline goes, but we are given big hints that the two once again strike up their friendship- and by having Sun Ho previously explain their deaths (and thus reveal how close they were in another timeline) it gave a sense of security that they could still be the wonderful team they were together even if Ga Hyun didn’t remember their big adventure.
What Wasn’t:
Just For the Lols:
Unlike how layered the rest of the characters were, our two main villains, No Sub and Sun Ho were a bit one-dimensional. So much build up was going on in the show as to who was behind the deaths of the resetters and why they were dying that it was a bit disappointing when the two people behind the whole thing said that they did it ‘just because’.
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Why is he evil? Because being evil is fun. Duh
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What a let down. It wasn’t enough to ruin the whole mystery of the show- it just would have been nice if maybe these two characters had more reasoning behind destroying so many peoples’ lives. And yes, yes, I know that a lot of actual criminals do commit crimes ‘just because’ or ‘for fun’, but as characters in a drama telling a story, I just expect there to be a little more story behind their motives! No Sub was at least a little believable, because I honestly wouldn’t put it past a rich old man who discovered he could go back in time to just mess around with people as a way to whittle away the time, but I did expect something a little more from our murderer. No Sub was the mastermind behind the whole ‘game’ so it kinda made a little bit of sense that he was only doing it for fun, but as Sun Ho was a police officer, and a detective no less, I was kind of expecting him to have a pretty darn good reason for going around killing people. Accidentally hitting someone with a car and then discovering he had a taste and a talent for killing people and framing them as accidents seemed a bit random for a guy who had otherwise lead an upright and honest life.
WHAT’S IN THE BOX:
While I found most of the mystery elements in this drama above average, one thing I could not stand (and cannot stand in any drama ever) is withholding information from the audience even though the characters know. In this case, the characters were our leads, Hyung Joo and Ga Hyun.
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Or in this case- WHAT'S IN THE BOOK
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Because these two were our eyes and ears into this world and we were getting everything from their experiences and perspective, I felt kind of cheated whenever the show revealed a piece of information to either of them without showing it to the audience also. This mainly came in the form of one of them opening an envelop or a box, or receiving a phone call after which their eyes would widen in shock and the audience were left wondering what had been revealed. Because of course WE wouldn’t be shown what was on the card or in the box, and we certainly couldn’t hear what was being said on the other end of the phone. Sigh. Unlike the rest of the show’s methods of building mystery, this tactic just felt cheap, and ended up starting to get a bit annoying. |
None of the characters are particularly good communicators either |
Thankfully it didn’t detract too much from the show as it usually only occurred as a cliffhanger in the middle of the episode and was thus resolved fairly quickly, or occasionally it was done at the end of an episode so we just had to start the next one to find out what had occurred (and as I am a K-Drama binger, the wait between episodes was very short). But honestly, this style of withholding information for a quick suspense moment usually earns more annoyance than intrigue, and I much prefer when shows don’t do this.
Recommend?
Yes- this is a fun little mystery that never gets drawn out. While it isn’t perfect, there are so many twists and turns and it’s a fun adventure.
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A twist at every turn |