Showing posts with label Lee Se Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee Se Young. Show all posts

Monday, 1 June 2020

How Are You Bread

How Are You Bread

4/10
How Are You Bread
Genre:                                 Episodes: 5                     Year: 2020
Romance

Synopsis:
Noh Mi Rae, a variety show writer, is tasked with hiring pastry chef Han Do Woo as a guest on a new program. Han Do Woo is famous for his How Are You Bread, which is said to grant wishes.

Cast:
Suho (Han Do Woo)
Lee Se Young (Noh Mi Rae)

Moon Ji Yoon (Patrick)
Han So Young (Do Do Hae)

General Thoughts:
Yeah look, this drama wasn’t great, but it wasn’t super awful either. This drama is a bit of an odd one as it has actually been floating around for years. It was announced, casted, and even filmed right when I first started getting interested in Korean Dramas- all the way back in 2016!
It took a while, but it's aired at last!
For four years this little show has been hovering around and only this year was it able to secure a network to air on. It makes me a little sad for all the people who put so much love and effort into the show, as it really isn’t that bad for what it is, and I have seen far worse shows have no problem securing a network.
More baking, less writing please
So props to the team who worked to get this show aired. As for the content, it was an easy enough show to get through, but there wasn’t really anything special or unique to it. It had a lot of ideas going on, but they weren’t exactly new concepts. I love bakeries and patisseries so I was sucked in seeing a show that was centred around these concepts. I didn’t expect the drama to go into the baking side of things too much (which it didn’t), but I maybe would have liked a bit more focus on Do Woo’s magic bread- seeing as that was the whole catch of the show. Apart from the first episode which showed a line going down the street, Do Woo’s bakery was always empty. Instead, the drama chose to focus on the baking competition program. This had the upside of furthering the revenge plot between Do Woo’s father and President Bang, but the downside was that the show looked kinda lame. I don’t think I would tune in if that was airing on my TV.
Perhaps if I knew more about what their relationship was, I'd care more about who wins the competition
In the acting department, Lee Se Young did a great job as the leading lady. Suho was less convincing as the leading man, but I didn’t judge him too harshly considering that this was basically the first thing he filmed.
Their sad destiny can't be sadder than wasted pastries
The cold, cool charisma works well for being a K-Pop star, but when switched over to acting it can make his characters seem a bit too arrogant or emotionless. I’d like to see Suho try out a character that’s a bit more down to earth to see if that can help him relax into his acting a bit more. The chemistry between Suho and Lee Se Young was good enough, but to be honest they didn’t really have that many scenes together that had a romantic undertone. More often than not there was a sort of angsty vibe between the two of them (resulting from Mi Rae’s memory loss), so their relationship lacked the cute, bubbly feeling that most new romances have. I didn’t really buy the idea of Mi Rae and Do Woo being a love separated by destiny (what even is that- why would destiny bother?). The ending did a good enough job of wrapping the idea up and putting a cute flavour on it, but it was pretty random. I was a bit confused by Patrick’s presence throughout the show, and found the whole concept of the memory wiping due to constant accidents a bit cringey, but the show was able to resolve it in a nice enough way that kind of made up for the weirdness. 
Doesn't this guy have better things to do than go around telling people they shouldn't like each other?

What Was Great:

Lee Se Young:
I know that I have criticised her acting in the past, but she did a great job here. Unfortunately one of the best ways to recognise a good actor is to put them in a drama with some not so good actors,
Girl had a lot of crying scenes for a 3 hour show
and that’s what happened here. While it’s a shame that this drama didn’t have a lot of great actors in it, it did serve well to showcase Lee Se Young. She was able to bring both an innocent and a sadder vibe to her character, and was essentially the emotional gauge of the show. She did a good job at elevating Suho’s performance in scenes that they shared together, and I think if the show had opted for a less experienced/less competent actor, it would have suffered for it. Lee Se Young brought a sense of professionalism to this drama, and lessened the sense that this was an amateur show. She had to do a lot of crying while eating sweets, which must be pretty whacko to act out, but I thought she did it splendidly, which really sold the idea that there actually was something special in the bread that Do Woo was making. 

What Wasn’t:

Too Many Ideas:
There is such a thing as too much, and in this case it was too many ideas. There were a lot of interesting storylines going on in this show- a father and son having a fallout over traditional Korean vs Western cooking, a revenge plot, a destiny twist, an amnesia situation, a baking show, magic bread, and a hardworking love.
Just give me a cute love story and I'll be happy
The issue here is that ‘How Are You Bread’ had only 5 episodes (at about 45 minutes each) to tell aaaaaall of these different plotlines. And it just wasn’t enough. So what ended up happening is that each idea was dabbled in a little, but none of them were fleshed out to their full potential. Instead of one really great plot, we had several not so good ones. I think the show might have done a better job if it had picked just one or two of the stories it wanted to tell and really delved into that. 

Recommend?
Nah- it isn’t quite short enough to be one evening’s worth of quick story, and it isn’t quite good enough to be anything else.
Now I want pastries...

Tuesday, 10 April 2018

Hwayugi

Hwayugi

6.5/10
Hwayugi
Genre:                                    Episodes: 20                                         Year: 2018
Romance
Fantasy

Synopsis:
Jin Seon Mi is a girl who can see evil spirits. As a child she released a deity, Son Oh Gong, from his prison. As a reward, Oh Gong offers to come to her aid and fight evil spirits whenever she calls his name, but also removes the memory of his name from her mind. As an adult, Seon Mi meets Oh Gong again, and uses a magical bracelet to trick Oh Gong into loving her so that he will protect her.

Cast:
Lee Seung Gi (Son Oh Gong)
Oh Yeon Seo (Jin Seon Mi)
Cha Seung Won (Woo Ma Wang)
Lee Hong Ki (PK)
Lee El (Ma Ji Young)
Lee Se Young (Bu Ja/Ah Sa Nyeo)
Yoon Bo Ra (Alice)
Jang Gwang (Yoon Dae Shik)
Sung Ji Ru (Soon Bo Ri)
Sung Hyuk (Winter General/Summer Fairy)
Song Jong Ho (Kang Dae Sung)
One (Hong Hae Ah)

General Thoughts:
I feel like this drama should have been better than it was. There were so many elements in it that were really, really good, but then there were also quite a lot of parts that were below standard.
I wish it had been just a smidge more exciting
I missed the Hong Sisters’ last drama ‘Warm and Cozy’ as I just heard so many terrible things about it, but I did catch ‘Big’. I’ve also seen a lot of their better works, and I think ‘Hwayugi’ falls somewhere in the middle. It’s not one of their best, but it’s not one of their worst either.
I don't like fantasy, I LOVE it
I’m not sure how much of the world-building they took from the original Chinese novel, but that was one of the better aspects to the show. The way these deities and demons were so naturally disguised in society was brilliant and I loved all the fantasy elements of the characters’ powers and limitations and all the various rules in place from heaven. The heavenly hierarchy was interesting, though mildly confusing at times, but it made all the interactions between our characters fun. The characters were all extremely unique and interesting, and were really the draw for this drama (because there wasn’t really a lot going on in the plot). The different demons were delightful, and each had a story of their own. Having all these personalities interacting was exciting and fun, however after a time it did get a little stagnant. ‘Hwayugi’ was a drama that needed a big plot to move it, as we had all these big characters with big powers. However, as the drama progressed and we got used to the way the characters interacted with each other (Oh Gong and Seon Mi’s push and pull, Oh Gong and Ma Wang’s bickering bromance etc) there was no big force that really pushed our characters into any sort of action- which led to a huge slow in momentum and my interest starting to fade.
I much prefer the pull over the push
The acting was pretty good all around, with the Hong sisters drawing on a lot of actors from their previous dramas. Of course, these actors were brilliant in their previous roles, and so they did well again. Cha Seung Won was hilarious as the bull demon running an entertainment agency.
He's just so hilarious
While his false bravado was slightly reminiscent of his character in ‘Greatest Love’ he managed to add an air of superiority that made Ma Wang feel like a brand new character. Cha Seung Won has such great comedic timing, and such fabulously humorous chemistry with others that sometimes I find it hard to believe that he was ever a serious actor. But then in the heavy, serious scenes he really switches over and shows you what he’s capable of- raw and rich emotion. PK’s character had quite a few similarities to Jeremy in ‘You’re Beautiful’, but similarly to Cha Seung Won, Lee Hong Ki managed to add a unique flavour in his representation of the character that prevented PK from becoming a Jeremy copy-paste. Lee Hong Ki added a bunch of arrogance and tonnes down his innocence for this role, and I really enjoyed the PK he brought out. I’ve not had good experiences with Lee Se Young in the past, after hating her character in ‘The Best Hit’. I really thought she had little to no acting talent at all after seeing her in that drama, and I was happy to be proven wrong here.
She ended up being one of my favourite characters
Lee Se Young was delightful and extremely likeable as our zombie, Bu Ja. She was cute and funny and did an excellent job at bringing in zombie-ish characteristics- such as her slowed speech. Despite how odd these characteristics might have been, Lee Se Young was very natural and made them feel like an authentic part of her character,
Gross yet funny
and I didn’t feel her acting as much as I did in ‘Best Hit’. Her transition to Sa Nyeo was believable and she played the priestess well. However, I do find that she lacks that appeal that makes me intrigued by her whether I like her character or not (something an actress like Lee El has in spades). While there was nothing wrong with her performance as Sa Nyeo, I wasn’t nearly as interested as I was when she was playing Bu Ja- though I think a large part is simply that the character wasn’t as entertaining. I thought One was a bit of a scene stealer, and the cheeky, rebellious grandson role suit him well. The weakest link in the cast was definitely Oh Yeon Seo. She’s gained a lot of popularity recently, and I remember finding her hilarious in ‘Come Back, Ajusshi’, but I really didn't feel it here. There were so many moments when I could see her acting in the scene, and I found that she very rarely seemed natural. Seon Mi was a horrifically boring character on paper (typical useless heroine who is only there to be loved by the hero), and I feel Oh Yeon Seo really struggled trying to give her some life. Sadly, her chemistry with Lee Seung Gi was pretty flat, so I didn’t really buy the romance. She seemed to only have one sweet smiling expression and it just felt kinda fake.
This is the face you make when you can't slap someone who deserves it because it's not 'mature'. This is not an in love face.
I found myself really wishing that Seon Mi had been given more supernatural powers or given more to do in the plot so that Oh Yeon Seo had something else to do other than struggle to look like she was in love with Lee Seung Gi.
A part of me is still pretty disappointed Ma Wang never got horns
The CGI started out pretty well (ignoring the colossal f*ck-up where they aired a half finished episode because they were so far behind on editing). Son Oh Gong’s fire and disappearing and reappearing were awesome, and I adored the demons’ red eyes. The scent of Seon Mi’s blood was done well too- it can be pretty tricky to put a scent into a visual format, but I thought that ‘Hwayugi’ did a pretty convincing job. Maybe they blew their budget on the earlier stuff because after  a while it just seemed like the CGI went downhill. Fast. Ma Wang’s 100 years of suffering was brought down to a few poorly done lights and the big, bad dragon that was supposed to bring about the end of the world was pretty laughable. After how much talk had been going on about what a monstrosity this black dragon was going to be, the final result was definitely a bit lacklustre. One aspect of the show that was brilliant throughout was the soundtrack. As a non-Korean speaking viewer, OSTs that rely on lyrical ballads all end up sounding a bit the same. The soundtrack to ‘Hwayugi' was filled with interesting and easily recognisable songs.
Cue the badass soundtrack
Not only would I be able recognise these songs outside of the drama, but within the drama they served to heighten the mood and give us a hint about what was to fallow. Say if Track 1 played then I knew Oh Gong was about to unleash his powers and get reckless, or if it was Track 2 it meant his feelings for Seon Mi were growing. While some aspects of the drama were a little less exciting than the blockbuster we were promised, the soundtrack carried more than its weight and was undoubtably epic.

What Was Great:

Monkey King:
Did you think I’d forgotten to take about Son Oh Gong played by the dynamic Lee Seung Gi? No, I was just saving it for now.
♫ I don't want to, why should I? How much will you give me? ♫
While I’ve liked Lee Seung Gi in the past, I’ve never quite understood what it was about him that made people lose their minds. I get it now. This was the perfect casting for him and a brilliant way to mark his return from the army.
I am 100 times more into Lee Seung Gi after this drama
Oh Gong’s childish and arrogant ways suited Lee Seung Gi ridiculously well (in a good way), and he gave the character an amazingly endearing vibe for someone who was so…well…so annoying. By all rights Oh Gong should be unlikeable- he’s selfish, rebellious, self-centred- and yet Lee Seung Gi makes all these totally negative traits seem fun and sexy. It’s the perfect example of the bad-boy. You know he’s no good, but you just can’t help loving him. The geumganggo was a nice plot device to tie Oh Gong to the heroine, but Oh Gong was still well aware that he didn’t really love Seon Mi. Lee Seung Gi was brilliant at portraying these totally conflicting feelings of wanting to be near Seon Mi but also wanting nothing to do with her. Having him whine endlessly while he followed her around was just delightful, and of course it was extra fun to watch him slowly start to fall in love for real. Lee Seung Gi matched every emotion of Oh Gong’s perfectly, and we could easily see all his desires and fears that came about due to the geumganggo. His bickering relationship with Ma Wang was always fun, and the two actors had great chemistry (more so than the actual romance).
May bromance never die
While I wasn’t always on board with the main love-line, I was at least convinced that Oh Gong was in love with Seon Mi. All in all, I think a large part of what made this drama watchable was the mischievous nature of our Monkey King hero, and his perfect portrayal by Lee Seung Gi.

What Wasn’t:

Lame Conflicts:
The biggest issue this drama had is that all its problems were so easy to solve. And often had loopholes. The first time I really felt this was during Ma Wang’s 1000 years of suffering.
It started out legitimately sad
This was Ma Wang’s whole story. He loves this girl, sh*t happens in heaven and she’s getting however many reincarnations of suffering. Ma Wang finally finds her and offers to take her punishment (like why didn’t he just do that to begin with?) and we get a lame light-show,
That...that's it?
a couple of minutes pain for Ma Wang paired with short-lived blindness and…that’s it. For what a big windup the show had to Ma Wang’s big sacrifice, he didn’t actually have to sacrifice all that much. From what I can tell, apart from a brief discomfort Ma Wang’s life really wasn’t altered that much after taking one thousand years of pain. It just didn’t seem all that painful is all I’m sayin’. Then we had this to-ing and fro-ing with taking off the geumganggo and we had so many close calls and spent SO MUCH TIME with Seon Mi and Oh Gong deliberating if they were going to take it off that I really stopped caring if they would or not. If you tease something that many times, you’re going to wear out my patience. And I don’t have a lot of it to begin with. By the time the geumganggo finally came off I really didn’t care. We all knew that Oh Gong loved Seon Mi for real- even Seon Mi knew and she’s pretty bloody dense. The biggest and stupidest and most annoying conflict in this drama was actually the main one. All series long we’ve been told that Oh Gong has to kill Seon Mi, and all drama long I’ve been (sort of) interested to see how/if they’d get around this rather large stumbling block in their relationship.
The bell is a lie
Where the drama really started to lose my interest was after it introduced Sa Nyeo. She came right after some other spirit that tried stealing the geumganggo and thus Oh Gong’s love,
Bring back Bu Ja
so I was super underwhelmed when Sa Nyeo seemed to be going for Oh Gong’s love too. Like, we’ve just seen that- give us something new. Sa Nyeo’s arrival of course meant there was no more Bu Ja, and it turns out that PK and Octopus Prince are kinda boring when Bu Ja’s not around- so not only did we lose Bu Ja, we pretty much lost the others too. Things happen and Sa Nyeo decides to call a dragon for Dae Sung, and turns out it’s going to be this giant black dragon that ends the world. So far I can roll with it. But then the characters all start discussing the end of the world (which we’ve been hearing about for around 7 or 8 episodes now) and it's mentioned that only Sa Nyeo can call the world-destroying dragon. Um, hello? Just kill Sa Nyeo while she’s in the body of a weak zombie then. Problemo solved. But no. No one does this. No one really entertains this notion at all. These super wise godly beings who have lived for thousands of years decide that the best course of action is to wait until the dragon is summoned and then try and fight it. Like what the actual f*ck people.
You should have done this AGES AGO
I just couldn’t take the situation seriously from that point on because all I could think about while the characters were discussing how tragic and awful this situation was was that they could literally just kill the only person capable of summoning the dragon and be done with it.
It doesn't even do anything! Just kinda floats around menacingly.
 Sure the dragon is still technically there, but if you just keep getting rid of the people able to summon it (who are way weaker then the dragon itself) isn’t that the easier option? Anyway after a lot of mumbo jumbo bullsh*t the dragon gets summoned and Seon Min is stabbed by Dae Sung. Like really, if you’re going to kill a main character at least put some effort into it. It was like they forgot they were killing Seon Mi off and just squished it in there in the most random way possible. Maybe I would have felt some emotion over Seon Mi’s demise had Oh Gong somehow been cornered into killing her, but no. Also, Dae Sung killing Seon Mi also means that the whole death bell fate scenario was just blatantly wrong. In my not so humble opinion, this drama could have been way more interesting if a lot less time had been spent on the dragon summoning (which was super underwhelming with terrible CGI).
A journey through the underworld to save her soul sounds way more interesting than what I just sat through
Maybe instead of having Seon Mi die at the end and not even seeing Oh Gong's search to find her the show could have condensed the whole series into the first half or two-thirds and then ended with Oh Gong’s journey to the underworld to rescue the girl he loves. That would have been cool. 

Recommend?
If you want to know what the fuss is with Lee Seung Gi then I totally recommend this drama. Otherwise, no.
At least the cast was good

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