Saturday, August 15, 2015

Review: High School King of Savvy (2014)

One mysterious phone call. An absurd request. Can a mere high school boy really lead a double life as asked?


High School King of Savvy is a 17-episode romantic comedy that revolves around the life of Lee Min Suk, a high school student and ice hockey player who suddenly finds himself thrown at the corporate world to impersonate his brother who looks exactly just like him. Living a double life with little to no knowledge about the new world around him, he finds solace in Jung Soo Young, a temporary worker at the company who helps him move forward with a thing or two. Together, they navigate their way into the world of adults and office drama, eventually leading to them falling in love.

Image via Tving.

Easily, High School King of Savvy isn’t your usual noona romance; but nonetheless it still was a nice surprise. It's witty, fun, maybe a little bit weird, but is simple and not at all cliche. Most importantly, it did what it actually set out to do: tell a heartwarming tale full of love and loyalty with lots and lots of Seo In Guk to boot. That alone is enough to get me hooked from beginning to end—certainly, without doubt.

❀ RAVES  »•» 


1) Comedy. Oh boy, don’t even get me started with this. If I have to describe High School King of Savvy in one word, it would be fun. comical. entertaining. Okay, so that wasn’t exactly one word... but hey, I’m serious! One aspect that High School King of Savvy is certainly good at is comedy. It did a good job playing up the comedic element of Min Suk’s double life and didn’t disappoint with its overall comedic timing. Like so:




2) Seo In Guk. Oh my goodness, Seo In Guk is definitely killing it in this role! Watching Min Suk go around and pretend to be his brother Hyung Suk was truly the highlight of the show for me, more so because Seo In Guk did an absolutely fantabulous job as Min Suk with all those body language, gestures and facial expressions. His comedic timing was flawless, gold even, and it was fun to watch him pull off both a childish high school student front and a confident company director act with so much class. Thanks to Seo In Guk, Min Suk became someone who was hilarious yet convincing and has sooooo much heart. In retrospect, he was even way more mature at times than most of the adults in the show, which I love. Like so:



But nothing, as in nothing, beats Seo In Guk’s performance here:



Or here:




3) Unique Premise. In the vast world that is K-Dramaland, it isn’t highly likely for us to get to encounter a story where a perky younger brother struggles to live a zippy double life and disguise as his poised older brother due to some inexplicable dilemma. It may sound intriguingly absurd, but that uniqueness is what makes High School King of Savvy work (and not work) in so many ways. It’s a fun and refreshing pick among other drama offerings out there. Maybe not the best, but still something that will definitely leave you with a pleasant feeling.


4) Heart. In a show with a premise such as High School King of Savvy’s, it is very much easy for reality bites to fly right off the bat given the show’s semi-fantastical concept and inclination to exaggerated antics. However, what sets it apart from all other drama in the same league is its slice-of-life approach in each of its episodes. The show is very much grounded to reality (though not all the time) with characters that feel authentic and believable. They aren’t bland or one-dimensional but have depth and heart, just like real people we can relate to; which I think is the show’s ultimate charm.


5) The Smoochies. Seo In Guk ain’t the master of kissing for nothing! High School King of Savvy has definitely got the most wonderful kiss scenes in K-dramaland—the type that isn’t done just for fan service. Rather, it is the type that leaves you feeling warm and fuzzy and very much in love just like the characters… and boy oh boy I just couldn’t help but swoon. Like so:



Or like:



Or like:



❀ RANTS  »•» 


1) Secondhand Embarassment. I love Lee Hana. Her performance was amazing, but Jung Soo Young’s peculiarity and social awkwardness was just too much to bear sometimes she’s sort of painful to watch. I couldn’t even count how many times I’ve cringed in this show because of her. She gets endearing eventually, but dang all that secondhand embarrassment. They just go through the roof.


2) Hyung Suk Less Explored. Lee Hyung Suk was one of the characters that never really got fleshed out during the whole series. He was a plot device to get the story rolling, yes, but up until the end I still don’t get why he ended up as a criminal suspect and desperately needed Min Suk to fill in for him at Comfo. Care to explain that, hyung?


3) The Ending. High School King of Savvy does have gut for taking that road less taken by most dramas in the end. However, I am among those people who were initially put off with the idea, like… Really now, show? You can’t be serious, can you? 



But I guess High School King of Savvy is unique that way. It never really settled to fit in the norm. It undermined viewer expectation and undercut the usual drama tropes almost all the time, managing to go where other dramas didn’t. The ending isn’t perfect, I didn’t like it logically speaking, but at least we got a happy ending and an ever loyal Min Suk to top. That should be more than enough, right?

❀ RULING  »•» 


To sum up, High School King of Savvy is a charming drama that has just the right dose of humor, romance, heart, and of course, Seo In Guk. It is one good show that would tug at your heartstrings and would give you warmth you never thought you needed, especially if you just let the man steal your heart and run away with it. 


Review: I Remember You (2015)


Criminally underrated. 

If there's something I have to say about I Remember You as it ended, it's how criminally underrated the show is. Makes me wonder how rating systems in Korea work when a show this good doesn't even get the ratings it deserve.

Image via Saram Entertainment.

Genius young boy Lee Hyun (Seo In Guk) lost his family a few years back to criminal Lee Joon Young whom his father was instigating then for confession of the crimes Joon Young has committed. Carrying in him the ghost of his tragic past, Hyun then went to the States and made name for himself as a noted criminal professor with books published all over the world. However, sometime in 2015, he receives a mysterious email from an anonymous person. This pushed him to finally go back to Korea to confront his past, look for Joon Young, and put an end to the ugly, decade long thread that tied them to each other.

Image via OhmyNews.

Shady plot? I thought so too. I Remember You originally started as something not anywhere near my cup of tea, to be honest. I thought it was too heavy and psychological for my liking, but alas, curiosity won me over... because of Jang Nara. I peeked once, marathoned three weeks' worth of the show in just one day, and decided to follow through until the end.

And yes, that I did not regret.

I Remember You was a pleasant 'comeback' drama for me who had been in a watching-hiatus for almost a year now (my last I think was Joseon Gunman which I haven't finished yet until this day); and I'm so glad I picked it up over its competitors.

❀ RAVES  »•» 


1) Seo In Guk. Watching I Remember You has opened a door to someone really dear to me now — Seo In Guk. He was a keeper I learned about through this show, and if it wasn't for I Remember You, I probably wouldn't have known of this wonderful gem. Seo In Guk did great as Lee Hyun: his performance of a genius profiler devoid of much emotion was so spot-on I find it hard to imagine Lee Jin-Wook (whom the crew originally recruited) doing the lead. Don't get me wrong, I love Lee Jin-Wook. He was awesome as Sun Woo in Nine, but I don't think he'd be as awesome if he was the one who did Lee Hyun. I just couldn't imagine, probably because Seo In Guk nailed that portrayal compellingly well: be it the noted stoic expression of Hyun, the restraint from smiling and showing so much emotion down to the calculating genius profiler that he is, Seo In Guk was definitely perfect as Hyun.  


2) Other notable performances. Park Bo Gum was another pleasant surprise I've come across because of this drama. Much as I loved the bromance between him and Seo In Guk, I loved more how complex his role was and how he was able to bring justice to it. He can be cute and innocent one minute, then be totally cold and scary the next. So much potential, this man has. And Choi Won Young! Ooohhh Choi Won Young!




3) Romance. Contrary to what the show initially marketed itself to be, the romance does not take center stage anywhere in this drama. Romance isn't its focus, and rather than a framework basis for the show, the romance serves only as a plot device to get the story moving. Yet it works, and the romance-not-romance there is between our leads was something I absolutely love. Seo In Guk and Jang Nara's chemistry is hilarious but at the same time endearing, limited but at the same time swoon worthy... and I was totally sold.


4) Brain. Aside from Seo In Guk and the roster of notable characters, what I love most about I Remember You was the way it kept me on the edge of my seat thinking... and thinking... and thinking. It is not your usual drama where everything gets thrown at you for you to eat. Rather, it engages its viewers to be part of the show by weaving clues and forming their own conclusions. I actually had fun myself identifying who Joon Young really was and analyzing how Min was connected through all of this. The symbolism is also pretty much heavy on this drama, which I love.

❀ RANTS  »•» 


1) Open-Ended Ending.
 How I Remember You decided to wrap itself up wasn't as emotionally satisfying as the previous rides were, in that Joon Young didn't really get caught and Min didn't get fully redeemed.



❀ RULING  »•» 

Yet all in all, I Remember You was definitely worth the 16 hours I've spent watching. Sure there may have been some lapses here and there, but other than that, everything else was good. I love how tightly woven the plot was and how it continued to surprise its viewers up until the end. Truth be told, I was ready to give up on it come episode 15 as we were already near the end but a lot of questions still remain unanswered. I was afraid I Remember You would turn into another God's Gift experience which I loved first but got disappointed at in the end, and I'm so glad it didn't. Partially, at least.


RATING: 15 points plus alpha. Nuff said. ๐Ÿ˜‰

PS. I found it amusing how Seo In Guk plays a super neat and clean man in the drama and how shocked he was to find Cha Ji An's house so un-lady like with all the mess when he's a lot messier than her in real life. Haha! Ji An's house was nothing compared to his house in I Live Alone! ๐Ÿ˜‚

Lee Hyun complete with apron.
Seo In Guk a complete mess!

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Random Thoughts on Seo In Guk & I Remember You

Wow. Just. Wow.

Image via OhmyNews.

I never expected to fall for I Remember You this much. Although I love(d) Jang Nara, the plot initially felt quite heavy for my inkling. That, plus Seo In Guk was someone new to me. I didn't know what to expect, or if I really should be expecting anything. But alas, my curiosity won me over. And boy was I glad with the results. ๐Ÿ˜

That being said, here's some random thoughts on the show and Seo In Guk. Just because I couldn't get enough of these two.


On Seo In Guk. One of the most valuable and unexpected gem I got to know from the drama: the handsome, manly and very talented Seo In Guk. Though High School King of Savvy (which he also stars in) piqued my interest in so many levels when it got released, I never really got the chance to actually have it tried since I was, well, busy. That being said, I Remember You was the official drama that introduced me to Seo In Guk; because if not for this show, I still would have put Savvy on hold until now. Watching these shows made me realize what I have missed all these years because yes, In Guk is really one hell of an actor. I am absolutely amazed by how great his acting skills are especially when he wasn't originally an actor but a singer who debuted from a reality search. Discovering In Guk is like opening my eyes to a set of other good dramas I've neglected for so long (hello, Reply 1997, I've heard so much about you) and I do plan to marathon EVERYTHING that involves him going forward especially if it cures withdrawal symptoms I'd experience once I Remember You ends. (Sorry, Junki-ssi. I think I finally found THE ONE — someone to love forever, and a lot dearer than you at that. I'm also pretty sure I'll be able to finish all of his dramas faster and sooner than yours. PS. I haven't even started Hero yet. But don't worry, I still love you.)


On the plot. Heavy and dark psychological dramas aren't really my cup of tea, so if I spend my precious time watching these instead of romcoms or crimes or immersing myself in a book, it sure has got to be pretty, pretty good. Otherwise I wouldn't give a damn. Haha. Say for instance: the last mystery/thriller/ drama I've watched was God's Gift over a year ago. That show was a blast. Well yes, except for the ending. And some other loopholes. I Remember You is going to be a pretty different story compared to that though. and I'm very very sure of it. It's intriguing, interesting and simply cleverly written I have confidence that it will. I haven't seen any plot holes from it yet, and I hope to not see any going forward (given the fact that we only have two more episodes to go with still a whole lot of mysteries to solve). Everything that this show throws on us seem to have been carefully planned from the get-go. Everyone is interconnected in one way or another, and no one can get away without being suspicious. The people you least expect something from turns out to be the actual people you should expect something from (hi, Eun Bok), and I love the shocks I get every single time. Writer-nim has been pretty witty in laying out a story like this right before our very eyes, and I believe she wouldn't thwart our confidence in her by writing an ending unacceptable both to us viewers and the plot as a whole.


On the romance. Oooohhh. This is one aspect that's pretty hard to handle in this kind of drama. I sometimes worry that the romance would soon fly out of the window given how serious and heavy the tone of the show is, but I'm glad to be proven wrong everytime a new episode comes up. The slow but sincere romance hidden beneath I Remember You didn't fail to get me, and I am very much addicted to both In Guk and Nara right now. Really. I even fear for my sanity sometimes. Haha! I feel like an idiot for laughing and squeeing like a hopeless fangirl when there isn't even much of a fan service between them. Hats off to writer-nim for making a romance like this work despite the very limited "romantic" interactions. I take it that she knows how to write her script a little too well, because yeah... how else will she be able to pull off a romance as cute as this if not for some witty and clever writing? Never in my life have I swooned over a simple peck in the forehead, nor an awkward good morning smile especially in terms of a drama. But with I Remember You... I've been moved beyond comprehension. And that's incredible writing I should say. Let's admit that no matter how great In Guk and Nara is in making the chemistry between them work, great actors can't do justice to great romance alone. There has to be a story to win the audience over — a backbone of some sort — which then lies within a writer's script. Struck me gold. ๐Ÿ’˜

I believe I still have a lot more to say, but it's way past bed time and it's Monday tomorrow. I have to sleep! That being said, let me collect my thoughts come Tuesday and I'll be back with a review after the show ends.

In the meantime... let me end this post with this.


Ang pogi! In Guk-kie fighting! ❤