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The Interest of Love - Love a Good Slow Burner
Lead Actors: Yoo Yeon Seok, Moon Ga Young, Geum Sae Rok, Jung Ga Ram JTBC Promotional Poster What’s it all about? A crazy love pentagon told in the form of a slow burning kdrama. There are a bunch of bank employees, some of which went to university together. Ahn Soo Young (Moon Ga Young) is a pretty and quiet bank teller and all of the men in the office seem to be interested in her. Ha Sang…
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socbookmarks · 2 years
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Seo Hyun Jin's senior men who made hearts swoon
Seo Hyun Jin’s senior men who made hearts swoon
Seo Hyun Jin is one of the many great actresses who can form great chemistry with her co-stars, especially with her standout men. Her previous dramas have proven to be compatible with working with any of these actors. Last June 3, Seo Hyun Jin returned to the small screen with the romantic drama “Why Her?” With only four episodes released, the actress won praise from viewers for her acting…
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mo-nroette-blog · 1 month
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my comfort dramas (4/19)
hospital playlist s1 (2020)
“there’s only one thing we, doctors, can tell our patients with certainty, “we will do our best.” that’s the only thing.”
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puffedcheeksx · 11 months
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Dr Romantic 3 Last Filming Photos 🤍
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kdramacaptures · 2 months
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survivalistghost · 1 year
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stuff-diary · 5 months
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Twinkling Watermelon
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TV Shows/Dramas watched in 2023
Twinkling Watermelon (2023, South Korea)
Directors: Son Jung Hyun & Yoo Beom Sang
Writer: Jin Soo Wan
Mini-review:
I loved Twinkling Watermelon so so much. This drama made my Mondays and Tuesdays for eight weeks. The story might not be groundbreaking, but it's incredibly well-written and fun. I was afraid the plot would be too simple to make it through 16 one-hour episodes, but it never dragged at all. There was always something to look forward to, and many of the twists caught me by surprise. On top of that, the writer gave us two fantastic love stories. Seriously, both of them are among the best I've seen in a K-drama. But the real focus of the show is the friendship between all the main characters, and its portrayal of youth was really heartwarming and nostalgic. And the whole cast was incredible too, they absolutely delivered at every turn. The only flaw I can point out is that the representation wasn't perfect, and they should've hired at least some deaf actors. Besides that, I don't have any complaints. I might go as far as saying this is one of my favorite dramas of all time, and I'm gonna miss it so much.
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andannotations · 10 months
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maybe “cut” “cut” will be our always 
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thenoonachronicles · 11 months
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My Doldam family of surgeons 😍
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passionforfiction · 4 months
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Dr. Romantic: The Way to a Dream Come True
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Dr. Romantic is made up of three seasons with a lapse of 4 years between the Season 1 and Season 2 and a 3 years lapse between Season 2 and 3. The first season we are introduced to the regular Doldam Hospital and new arrivals: Kang Dong Joo and Yoon Seo Jung. Master Kim helps these two young doctors and his regular staff to sharpen their skills and find realize their dreams. We see their growth as professionals and as human beings, while healing people and fighting to keep the hospital open. This first season ends with Kang Dong Joo and Yoon Seo Jung heading to new challenges but leaving a hope for their return.
Second season, Master Kim and his regular staff are still healing people while fighting to maintain the hospital running. We are introduced to three new doctors: Cha Eun Jae, Seo Woo Jin, and Yoon Ah Reum. In this case we have doctors returning and a doctor from a capital hospital, Park MinGuk becomes Holdam Hospital director as part of Chairman Do's attempt to take Master Kim down. But at the end we leave the hospital with a secure standing (no one can touch the property) and Dr. Park decides to partner with Master Kim and work together towards making Master Kim's dream come true - have a trauma center in the hospital.
Season 3 seems to be the conclusion to his story. Now they have the trauma center building connected to the old part of the hospital and they are about to open, but they need government funding to help run the center since this is a non-profit hospital. The staff is divided into two areas and those working at the trauma center will need to deal with their new director. Master Kim's Plan B - Dr. Cha Jin Man, who is also Dr. Cha Eun Jae's father and later Plan A - Kang Dong Joo.
I must admit that I was so excited to see Kang Dong Joo back and to see that Yoo Seo Jung returned, along other doctors that were part of the staff in the previous two seasons. It is satisfying to see Master Kim's dream come true: have the trauma center ran by his students.
You would've thought that he would want to run the center - after all, it was his dream - but he decided to stay in the old part of the hospital and have the another person run the trauma center. I loved the love stories and the new young characters. It was a really sweet way to bring this story to an end.
This story is one of my favorites on the doctors-drama category. A most watch, the three of them. I would watch them back to back, that way I would catch on things I probably missed since I saw them when they came out and time has past between each viewing.
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adamwatchesmovies · 7 months
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Train to Busan (2016)
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Train to Busan makes great use of the familiar elements of a zombie movie by centering its plot on a single location and injecting societal commentary into its plot. While this 2016 horror film does not reinvent the wheel, what it does, it does well.
Seo Seok-woo (Gong Yoo), the divorced, workaholic absentee father of Su-an (Kim Su-an), agrees to bring his daughter to Busan so she can visit her mother. Onboard the train, a young woman suddenly bites one of the attendants. Soon, an infectious disease has reduced most of the passengers to gnashing ghouls. Those who remain must work together to survive.
After introducing Seok-woo and Su-an at their home, nearly all of the story takes place inside the titular train to Busan. We get a couple of stops along the way but these are at a train station and at a terminal, which are extensions of the train itself. On top of the usual fears of having to face possessed loved ones and rampant infection, we also deal with claustrophobia. The space inside the train is already small and it keeps getting smaller. When someone becomes infected, everyone rushes to the next compartment and blocks the entrance. The safe space has shrunk. Sometimes, people are forced to hide in the tiny bathrooms, holding the door shut as best they can while fingernails scrape the other side. The limited space and ressources requires ingenuity - both from the characters and the filmmakers. This is one of those movies where you can tell writer Park Joo-suk sat down and wrote every aspect of the train he could use. Tunnels, the bathrooms, luggage, doors, passengers, etc. You feel a certain satisfaction whenever he ticks off one of these boxes - you were just wondering how the characters would deal with X. They need to use their wits to survive and you’re glad to see that they’re all pretty sharp.
You can also tell care was put in the writing by the number of well-rounded characters. Not everyone gets equal amounts of screentime but you get to know many passengers. They’re not just bodies waiting to get infected. There’s character development and growth. You understand what makes these people tick. This is also where the movie injects some commentary about our society (or Korea’s, I guess). If there’s an antagonist - besides the zombies - it’s a rich businessman called Yon-suk (Kim Eui-sung). You can see he might represent Seok-woo's future. Both are well-paid tie-wearing men who are all about their jobs, and nothing else. Both are disconnected from the world, as evidenced by their treatment of the other passengers. Unlike the altruistic blue-collar Yoon Sang-hwa (Ma Dong-seok), they hesitate to help anyone. With his relation to his daughter already strained, you can picture Seok-woo becoming exactly like the older man - and you hate that guy. He’s a worm but he’s also got power. The attendants and the train’s captain all turn to him - the rich guy - rather than the common people when a crisis arises. They don't realize he only cares about himself. Everyone is scared but his fear threatens to doom everyone. We’re used to this idea that “the worst monsters are the people” in zombie movies so it doesn’t feel out of place, and it gives you something to think about too.
The picture maintains a steady level of suspense throughout. Whenever you get a reprieve, it’s either to set up somethig even bigger or allow you to get to know the characters. Now that you care about them that much more, the stakes feel bigger than before. The body count grows, the number of people shrinks, those who remain you’re even more determined to see survive. Best of all, you’re not sure who will make will live and who won't.
Train To Busan is one of the better zombie films in recent years. It’s got the right amount of gore and suspense to keep horror fanatics happy and it shows restraint when needed to make it nice and accessible to the rest too. (Original Korean with English subtitles, April 2, 2021)
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gozdziak · 9 months
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Binge watched all three seasons of Dr Romantic. Enjoyed it quite a bit. The protagonists were well depicted and the drama included lots of life-affirming lessons. Pretty good acting.
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k-star-holic · 10 months
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Master Kim3 Yoo Yeon-seok, Han Suk-kyu "You were the one to be from the beginning"
Source: k-star-holic.blogspot.com
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Hospital Playlist. 1-2 7/9
Story: 9
Acting: 10
Chemistry: 10
Comparable to: Reply: series (kdrama) ; Live (kdrama) Prison Playbook (kdrama)
So depending on how you watch the series and your type of genre, you’ll either love this one or hate it. I mistakenly at first started to binged the series episode to episode which was a mistake on my part. For me, this is not a bing’able series. It’s a great show don’t get me wrong, but I think the best way to watch it is a few episodes here and there sparingly. If you watch too much at once it starts to get into that draggy territory which overall it really isn’t draggy. It’s a episodic show with long episodes which tends to feel like it’s very very long sometimes if that makes sense whatsoever. The acting is phenomenal though and the music, oof, the music in this absolutely love. While this is more of a ‘slice of life’ drama with the episodic medical parts it has the bes friendship I’ve seen in almost any kdramas. Hands down .
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