Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Sunday, January 12, 2014

My First Venture Into Japanese Dramaland: Limit Review

Summary (from gooddrama)
"The protagonist is a girl named 'Konno Mizuki', a typical senior high school girl who is good at studying, knows much about fashion, and is good at reading the situation. She is also fortunate to belong to the cool clique of her class called the "Sakura Group". One day, the class is on their way to a field trip when suddenly, their bus falls off a cliff in the mountains. Only five girls survive the accident. They are injured, lost in the mountains, and no one is coming for their rescue anytime soon. Pushed to their limits, the girls are forced to switch into survival mode and to lay bare their innermost feelings."

Limit is an intense drama. There is murder; there is suspicion; there are lies, truths, and questions.

The inevitable reality of the situation the survivors of a bus crash are stranded in is discussed in episode after episode. No one knows when - or if - a rescue team will come to save the group. Can the survivors trust one another? Can they put their dark past behind them for the sake of survival? Will they survive at all?

Once I saw Morishige, I thought she looked like EXO's Luhan.
These questions kept me watching. Some shows hint at the answers so much that we viewers are able to guess the twists and outcomes far in advance. In Limit, few of the answers were as simple. The quest to endure the tribulations of nature and each other's suspicions was full of intriguing intricacies.

Over the course of the six-hour series, each character had to deal with their own personal demons. There were troubles at home, with each other, and within that were addressed. Some could have been covered more, but the issues didn't suffer from over-coverage. A dilemma was referred to, there were a few flashbacks, there was screaming, and then there was (usually) a resolution (sort of).

Not the best way to go...

One complaint that I read about involved the main character, Mizuki. She had decided in middle school that she would just attempt to get through high school by "reading the atmosphere." When Mizuki realized how much pain she had put her friends through, and that she had never been successful at the analysis, she shifted suddenly. Within the first couple episodes, she already has become a concerned, apologetic teenager who wants to make things right with the people she's more or less stuck with and to get them all home safely.

Meet Mizuki, who looks slightly like a Japanese
Christina Grimmie. Just with shorter hair. And no Grimmie Poof.

And that's where her development ends.

That's it.

If it wasn't for Morishige (who I thought looked like EXO's Luhan) and the students' vice homeroom teacher (or whatever his position is called), the other viewers and I likely would have been much more disappointed. However...I'd say that the character in third place for most-satisfying growth - or regression, depending on how you look at it - is the second male that's in the forefront, Hinata. Other than him, Morishige and Igarashi-sensei, there's not much to say in terms of character growth.

This show pulled me in after the first ten minutes of introduction. Limit was rarely predictable, and it kept me questioning both the characters' and my own motivations throughout its six hours. I took away from Limit new ideas about interaction with others, friendship, and guilt, whether I will ever implement these lessons or not.

I also learned a few tips and tricks that could be useful for survival, should I ever be stranded in a forest after my bus driver dies and drives the vehicle over a cliff.

-Pamela

Saturday, November 9, 2013

It's a Good Thing That This is Fiction: School 2013...Reflection

I was going to write an actual review, but then it developed into...this. If you want anything slightly reminiscent of a review, I'm going to try and be a little more reviewer-y in a post that'll be uploaded next Saturday... (Update: Yeah, the "more reviewer-y" part's going to probably be a lie...it probably will just be another reflection - I prefer reflections over reviews, I think... Update: It was a lie in the sense that I didn't post anything for a Part 2.)


Summary (Viki)
High school is one of the most tumultuous, challenging times of anyone's life. The tough coursework, the turmoil, the power struggles, the crushes, and the unrequited love. Teachers Jung In Jae (Jang Na Ra) and Kang Se Chan (Daniel Choi) try to steer their students on the proper course. Classmates Go Nam Soon (Lee Jong Suk), Song Ha Kyung (Park Se Young), Lee Kang Joo (Ryu Hyo Young), Park Heung Soo (Kim Woo Bin), and Kim Min Ki (Choi Chang Yub) try to navigate the ups and downs and survive the challenges of high school. "School" is a South Korean drama series that follows the trials and tribulations of high school students.

The issues are real, but there is one main aspect of this show that I've realized that I would actually hate in real life...the characters.

I would even dislike this guy right here - even though he's part of why I started this Kdrama in the first place:

I'm sorry, Socky Tree Monkey! Don't cry, or you're going to make ME cry again!
The majority of the class focused on in this drama consists of students that I might not like if they were really students at my school. Honestly, I probably wouldn't even see some of them all that much. However, this is a fictional classroom. While the problems experienced by the students are rooted in issues faced by actual South Korean (and maybe American) students, this is a show that allows me into the stories of the students with whom I would be too intimidated or annoyed by to even converse.

This Kdrama also both helps and hinders the respect I have for my own teachers. Teachers have to work hard to make sure that we learn and prepare for the future. However, my teachers don't often try as hard to meddle and assist in our personal lives. They're there to teach, to provide behavioral examples, to prepare us for the responsibilities we will have to take later on in life. Unlike Teachers Jung and Kang, I doubt any of my teachers would go searching for me if I was outside the school and suspected of being in some sort of trouble or danger; a note would be sent home, I think. Well, I've never been put in such a situation, so I can only speculate that my school would just send home a note or try to contact my parents, like they do in any other situation.

Even if the comparison is made in terms of homeroom teachers, for me, it's still very different. In most South Korea, homeroom teachers are pretty much in charge. From the little that I've learned, their role is to discipline and counsel the students. All of the classes (except Physical Education, I'd expect) normally take place in the homeroom teacher's respective classroom. The period of "homeroom" is often both before and after the regular classes. Generally, homeroom teachers are responsible for students' behaviors and grades.

In the United States, homeroom teachers normally teach another class in addition to homeroom. Unless I have that teacher in another class of mine, I'm not likely to see them anywhere else in school besides the hallways. Personally, the director of the band at my high school is my homeroom teacher, and I see him often due to rehearsals, weekly lessons, and the music class and other ensemble that I am a part of. He works hard to make sure that the concerts and most of the music-related events here are planned out and well-prepared for. He also assists in the fundraising and in Tri-M Music Honor Society. (Well, of course, the other directors have a part in all of this as well, but they're not my homeroom teacher, so I'm not really going to ramble about them as well.) I know he cares, but he - nor any other teacher - would go to the extent that Jung Seonsangnim and Kang Seonsangnim would for us...

...even if Kang Seonsangnim is more reluctant to do so at first, being somewhat similar to the instructors here, and the modern interpretation of his position in general... His teaching is grade-driven, and he doesn't want to be too involved in his students' lives, although for him, the latter has more to do with his semi-compelling past.

But that's just part of our society. We have more of a legal boundary between the students' private lives and the teachers' intervention; sure, the teachers can intervene when needed, but they wouldn't likely go searching for a group of rabble-rousing students if a student said the group was fighting. They wouldn't then accompany the students to the police station, say that one of them will serve as the students' guardian, and then take them out to eat and discuss.

The homeroom teachers in the Republic of Korea just seem to be allowed more of a reach into the lives of the students.


However, I don't really deserve to judge the different teaching standards; I don't know how many South Korean homeroom teachers are like Jung In Jae, or how many are like Kang Se Chan, or how many are a combination or rejection of the two.

I'm just a fangirling teenager who wants to give Go Nam Soon, Kim Min Ki, Park Heung Soo, Oh Jung Ho, Han Young Woo - seriously, almost the entire freaking class, when I think about it - a hug. And my tears of sympathy.

Then I remember something: there is a small number of the students in Classroom 2-2 that I could befriend.

Is Go Nam Soon one of the most adorable characters to ever grace my computer screen? Yes.


Is his bromance with Park Heung Soo a relationship that not only made me squeal but also tear up a little? In a rare admission, both the former and the latter deserve a "yes." (Honestly, before I started watching Korean movies and dramas, it was very difficult to get me to cry. The Kingdom Hearts video game series had to make an eight-year-old me think that Goofy was dead.)

Just STOP you two...Okay, no, I don't really want you to, never mind.
Nevertheless, if students similar to these two were in any of my classes - which *joking condescention* is highly unlikely :P - if I didn't care about how much these two went through, I would despise them. Go Nam Soon, stop sleeping in class!


Aish...and Oh Jung Ho, if he didn't practically break my heart with his situation, I would want to flip his desk over every time he bullied his peers or disrupted the classroom! The same thing goes for his little lackeys, Lee Yi Kyung and Lee Ji Hoon. I'm not one of the brightest students, trust me, but I at least respect (most of) the people around me at school...


Even the better students in the classroom are people I might not be friends with. I would want to slap the girls who keep trying to spread rumors about their classmates and just act mean. At the very least, I'd be very envious of Song Ha Kyung and Kim Min Ki, as they represent the students who are a little above me. Then, although I really want to comfort Kim Min Ki, I'm just awkward at that sort of thing when I'm in public. Song Ha Kyung and Kim Min Ki might be a little more likely to be my friends than the other high-ish-scoring students, though.

Ohhhh, there's another powerful picture that is related to
this one, but it would be a bit of a spoiler...darn.
There's another student who's kind of on the higher side of the classroom's grade spectrum, at least by the end. Lee Kang Joo is a bit of a conflict for me. She and Song Ha Kyung have an interesting, if somewhat unexplored, friendship, and the devotion she has to her friends, the reservations she has as a result, and her realistic brightness makes for a good friend. In these ways, Lee Kang Joo is partially comparable to some of my own friends. I give her personality an A+ in personal appeal.


The reason it wasn't very easy for me to warm up to her, I think, was the fact that something about her voice irritated me a little. However, I probably could get used to it over time. (But it's not that compelling of an incentive to want the series extended; it's really kind of a dumb one...)


Song Ha Kyung and Lee Kang Joo - and Kim Min Ki - each embody most of the general traits I've noticed within my social circle. The three of them care about school; they don't want the people surrounding them to be disappointed or malicious towards them (really, who does?); Lee Kang Joo and Kim Min Ki care about their peers, and Song Ha Kyung grows to partially do the same. I think that if these three weren't fictional, and if they walked into one of my classes one day, they'd be more "friend-material" for me than most of the people I've semi-discussed so far. 

Then, there's Han Young Woo, the student with some sort of disability who is really only a major plot point for the first two episodes before becoming an occasional outlet for the show's leftover innocence.

AWWWW! O~O

He's at the bottom of the class, but his character is one of dependence, naivete, and vulnerability that I'd be fine with helping out if he (unlikely) was in one of my classes. I've been friends with similar peers in the past, so *shrug* maybe I could be with him, too. (Don't mistake me; sadly, I'm not one of those help-all kids. Friends say I'm helpful and nice, but - ha ha ha - not at the same, community level as others are or as I'd sometimes prefer to be.)

Okay, this post isn't really going anywhere, is it?

I'm mainly just comparing little things about the world of School 2013 and my own, I guess.

Now, part of me is thinking that I should write about the bullying and suicidal issues. But I wouldn't be saying anything that hasn't already been said a million times, whether the speakers are referring to this drama or not... I'm going to sound really mean for what I'm about to type, but there's nothing original I can bring to the discussions of suicide and bullying. There's really not. (Well, this turned depressing quickly...)

WARNING: PESSIMISM AND SPOILERS AHEAD (The spoilers will be marked specifically)

The bullying did irritate me. It's prevalent everywhere, and it ends up as a haunting force for the aggressors and the victims, and also the bystanders. So "Take a Stand" against bullies and repeat everything that has been advocated on television, the internet and in a vast majority of schools. Some people will listen, some people will not.

This girl likely will not:


In some cases, it's just because those of us who physically, mentally, or verbally assault our peers sometimes don't even truly realize (or care) if any wrongdoing's being done. 

(They=parents and teachers,
but mainly referring to parents in this context)
Yes, there are signs, commercials, conventions and TV episodes devoted to raising awareness, and there are people that may change as a result. However, not everyone is like Lee Ji Hoon:


***Kind of SPOILER...***
He came to realize that he wouldn't go anywhere good in life if he didn't try, and turned himself from a bully's henchmen to a friend who tries to change the dark future he and his buddies are headed towards.
  *END OF Kind of SPOILER*

But not everyone can make a successful shift like this character does.

Not everyone can survive the trials of high school, as evidenced by the rising teenage suicidal rates all over the globe, with South Korea having an infamously high rate itself. There's more pressure placed on modern young people now to take responsibility for not only their families in some cases, but for their own future as well.

***SPOILER*** 
Kim Min Ki almost did succumb to his desire to rid himself of his mother's push for him to continue on a path that, however financially beneficial, he did not want.

 

I saw his attempt coming, and I had a little bit of trouble getting a steady breathing pattern back as he stood atop the roof of the school, ready to step out of the seemingly hopeless possibilities his life held. But at least he didn't. 

All too often, though, there are those who succeed in giving up on life. They felt like they had no Teacher Jung. 


***END OF SPOILER***

Now, I could repeat that same cliche from those ads directed at the ones (more specifically, the LGBT community) who don't have a bright outlook on their current and future lives: "It gets better." But that would just be one more act of repetition that still doesn't reach the minds of too many people.

I know this seems mean. I'm aware that it's a very pessimistic view on these two topics. I apologize for that.

It can get better, though. I don't want to sound like a broken record. But don't take that jump.

Now, I should probably end on a happier note, shouldn't I?

Let's get some of the bromance in for a cute ending, because that's the aspect that the creators of School 2013 put the most time
into.
Don't forget the cutey-cutey gifs!
Ah, sweet irony...
Ah, you know what? I've barely done anything about the awesomeness that is Teacher Kang in this post. He deserves a gif, too.

I am Kang Seonsangnim. The ball is also me. The action is my life. :P

Hopefully, that helped end this on a better note than before, despite the lack of conjunction of the post :)

-Pamela

(gif URLs in order: 

Saturday, October 26, 2013

I Was Not Expecting That - My Sunshine Girl Review

(Okay, it’s time for my first Kdrama review! Let’s see if this goes well…and if I spoil anything. :P I’ll try not to, though. The screenshots look bad, though, because I had to take pictures of my computer screen with my phone...I'm just warning you ahead of time. This was written before I discovered how to take screenshots on my computer.)

From January to March of 2012, My Sunshine Girl / My Shining Girl / Glowing She aired on KBS N Drama.

Summary:
This drama is about the events that happen in a broadcasting company. This drama also focus on the love triangle between the three main characters. Kang Min (Kim Hyung Joon), a top star in the Korean entertainment business who is a bit temperamental. No Yong Woo (Park Kwang Hyun), a well-known producer and Jun Ji Hyun (So Yi Hyun), a newly minted scriptwriter.

As it's currently not available on Viki ("not available in your region") or Dramafever, I watched it on a website that basically just shows the Youtube-uploaded episodes. Yes, it's not subbed on Hulu/Viki/Dramafever right now, but I was intent on watching this drama, despite only knowing these two things:

1) Kim Hyung Jun plays one of the male leads. He is going to be that rich jerk.

2) The female lead and the other male lead are writers.

Now, it's a cable mini-series, so I was aware that it wouldn't be all that similar to the dramas on the better-known channels. However, the only cable drama I've seen as of yet is Flower Boy Next Door, so I was expecting cute (due to the belief that it wouldn't be as dark as some of the other cable dramas I've put on my TBW list recently). 

However, I was not expecting that, within the first two episodes, three people would find out they have HBV and that there would be two make-out/foreplay scenes, one of which involves Kim Hyung Jun on a bed with one of the girls he infects with HBV.

Shirtless.

And it's not the last time we see him without a shirt on. This setup: 

See, I told you the picture quality wouldn't be that great.
...is very prevalent in the last few episodes. The director knew who would be slaving over their computers to watch this drama, apparently; and I doubt that any of us Kim Hyung Jun fans really mind...

I've seen shirtless idols in dramas before, but this is the first drama I've seen in which sex is implied TWICE within the first 55 minutes. Not only that, but talk of sexual implications and of the physical intimacy itself occurs a LOT. Needless to say, I was not prepared for that... Actually, in South Korea, they had rated My Sunshine Girl as 19+ (kind of like America's "M," I guess... *shrug*) before deeming it suitable for people 15+. Okay, now I feel less like a rebel.

Glowing She is different from other Kdramas. It's not just the make-out scenes that make it so; the female lead and one of her friends are two prime examples.


Meet Jeon Ji Hyun, the female lead played by So Yi Hyun. She dreams of being a writer for educational programming, but she's around 30/31 years old and still has found neither a steady job nor a husband. Not only that, but her new place of work forces her to be a junior writer for variety shows under her ex-boyfriend (No Young Woo, played by Park Kwang Hyun), whom she dated for five years before he married - and divorced - one of her best friends.

Ooooooh - scandalous!

What her job ends up mainly entailing is that, aside from helping with the writing, she has to convince Kang Min (Kim Hyung Joon) to participate in the programming. He's one of the most famous singers in South Korea. What other better way to boost ratings than to have a top star appear?

She also has an annoying older brother who's only tolerable when he gets drunk. Seriously, that man cannot act cute without irritating me. But back to his dongsaeng.

Jun Ji Hyun is not your typical kdrama heroine. In fact, she is probably the farthest thing from it. She gives everybody an attitude, no matter to whom she's speaking to. She does not take crap from anybody...until the last few episodes, during which she sometimes just bows her head and tries to forget about her first-and-second-male-lead dilemma...and a couple times early on - but overall, Ji Hyun is an aggressive female lead whose mannerisms remind me of Joan Cusack.
Seriously, I noticed their similarities within the first ten minutes. Maybe not necessarily in appearance as much as in facial expressions.
You don't often see such a selfish, non-passive female lead in Kdramas. She grows into a more caring person - mostly when it comes to the two male leads - by the end, but she holds onto her inner feminist.

However, that doesn't mean that the Yoo Young Eun and Son Min Soo (the writers) neglected to include the female doormat. Kim Kkot Min, say hello and pout.


Kkot Min and the other best friend annoy me.


Kkot Min just mopes around and pouts for the whole series. Near the end, she becomes just a tad less pitiful, but she's still an overall boring character. Part of that is her lack of expression. Yes, the actress tries to cry and look jealous, but she just comes off as pathetic.

Young Hee (on the left) isn't much better. I don't even care about her budding relationship with one of her co-workers, despite the sweet aura he gives off. She's just a very boring actress.

Actually, most of the story is work-based, so maybe that's why I think of parts of the show as boring. I didn't really care about most of the conflicts that arose, because I didn't have enough of an incentive to care about who was going to succeed in the primary and secondary plotlines. Yes, I understand that there are only twelve episodes; however, movies are able to do this, and they only have a couple hours, not 11-12.

Most of the supporting characters aren't as energetic as the female lead. At first, I just thought that they all acted somewhat like a normal person, and that So Yi Hyun was severely overacting; I later realized that almost all of the actors don't bring much life to their roles, and that she's actually trying.

Even one of the male leads, No Young Woo, is not immune to this. Sure, he grows as a character from being a condescending jerk towards Jeon Ji Hyun at the beginning to protecting her as if she's a child, but...there's not a lot of range. His nice-guy energy near the end just seems like exhaustion. The drama is only 12 episodes, and he doesn't even show up that much until the last five or so episodes!

At least Kim Hyung Jun exhibits some competence in expression as Kang Min for...most of the drama. I dislike how obsessed his character is with the female lead, but it fits with his bratty persona.

 "He's such a child!" I whisper-shouted at my screen in almost every one of Kang Min's scenes.

However, and this may be due to me being a fan of Kim Hyung Jun, I enjoy watching him. The character is immature, selfish, cocky, and rude, and I find his annoyed faces adorable. 

And his vocal inflections are fit for a top star who's "a bit temperamental." (Psh..."a bit"?) It gives off his "I'm a brat who doesn't give a crap" attitude.
"What's wrong? You should apologize when you bump into someone!"
He's still a child at the end. A persistent, obsessed child.

I guess that's his main weakness,  as well as the weakness of most of the cast. You can blame it on the fact that the series is only 12 episodes, but that doesn't entirely excuse the lack of growth for the characters. Jeon Ji Hyun may be a little nicer by the end, but she's still rude and disrespectful. The same goes for Kang Min, as much as I squeal over his cuteness.

Speaking of Kang Min, and returning to No Young Woo, one of the main plot devices in the series is the familiar love triangle. The concept itself was somewhat interesting. Will the single woman choose the safer man who is her age, but broke her heart? Or will she choose the risky romance with a younger man who doesn't respect her? Both are jerks at the beginning. Both vie for Jeon Ji Hyun's affections and try to protect her from the backlash of her scandal with Kang Min. But who will win?

I don't know. This is probably considered a SPOILER, but it's true: it's never clear with whom Jeon Ji Hyun ends up with. The writers hint at it, but it's done in a confusing way, especially if you combine the hint with the last shot of the last episode. Could that mean that she chooses one guy, but is still able to work and be friends with the other guy? Maybe. Probably. But the conclusion is foggy and unsatisfying all around; if the writers had scrapped those last thirty seconds and just stopped at Jeon Ji Hyun's self-encouragement, the ending wouldn't have been that much better, but still. 

Viewers don't like implicit conclusions. At least I don't. So I'm warning the few people who will read this ahead of time.


Here's another frustrating aspect of the writing, though this is mostly the director's fault, I guess: the transitions. The tones of scenes, and the tones of the episodes themselves, often change quickly, sloppily cutting away from one storyline to focus on another without a lot of fluency.

The soundtrack usage is plagued by this as well. Now, I like some of the songs on the soundtrack; granted, most of the songs that are played are the four the Kim Hyung Jun recorded, so that's part of it. His songs are used the most often, and even before I began watching My Sunshine Girl, I thought they were sweet. I still do. However, the transitions from song to song, or from scene to scene-with-song, are abrupt. Maybe that's just because my personal preference is that the specific music being used starts off subtle at the beginning of a scene before moving into the chorus. Instead, a calm, music-less (or less musically...loud) scene suddenly ends and flashes to a different scene and starting off with  the loudest part of the song.

I think I've attacked the show for long enough... There's more for me to negatively talk about, but I feel like some credit should be given to other aspects of the show besides the heroine that stands up for herself, the slight character growth, and the cuteness of Kang Min.

While the humor may have just been me feeling a little uncomfortable, it's still there. I laugh at the sexual jokes (...this is where the uncomfortable humor lies...keep in mind that I'm a teenager with a weird mind). Kang Min's incessantly combined wardrobe of sweaters and ripped jeans is funny in that secondhand-embarrassment sort of way. 

Then there's this guy, the president (I think) of the station No Young Woo and Jeon Ji Hyun work at:

Seeing the president and Kang Min's managing team squirm is...interesting, to say the least. I especially enjoyed the sarcasm throughout the series, primarily in the scene the screenshot above is from.

Also, I said earlier that Jeon Ji Hyun is not the standard, passive heroine who doesn't stand up for herself. Seeing her scoff at anyone who looks down on her is a breath of fresh air in the world of Kdramas. While watching the Kdrama, I felt the need to applaud the character in her crusade against those who look down on her.


In the end, My Sunshine Girl features female empowerment and sexual humor that is not often seen in Kdramas. However, the lack of life in most of the actors and of more than a few compelling story, added with strange scene and soundtrack transitions might be enough to turn you away from the cuteness of Kim Hyung Jun's capable approach.

-Pamela (Phew, my first review's done...I will improve, I promise.)