Dark Mode Light Mode

Keep Up to Date with the Most Important News

By pressing the Subscribe button, you confirm that you have read and are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

Fight My Way and Suspicious Partner K-drama Reviews

[ad_1]

I started out last drama cycle with sooooooooo many shows on my list, but at the end of the day, I really only managed to finish two—Fight My Way and Suspicious Partner. Both had moments I really, really loved. Both also disappointed me in some ways. So let’s review both shows and see how they fared!

Fight My Way Review

Fight My Way started off on the slow side, but wow, did it steal my heart somewhere in the middle. I’m a huge sucker for friends-turned-lovers stories and slice-of-life dramas, so this ended up being an extremely pleasant, at times laugh-out-loud funny watch filled with well-rounded, lived-in characters who felt like real people.

Advertisement

I loved Kim Ji Won’s Choi Ae Ra from the get-go—she was brash and stubborn while still being vulnerable and human. It took me a little longer to figure out Park Seo Joon’s Go Dong Man, but I ended up falling for him totally and completely by the end. 

I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a K-drama male lead quite like him. I mentioned this in the comments on my initial thoughts on the show, but in some ways he seems more like a K-drama female lead (in the vein of Weightlifting Fairy‘s Kim Bok Joo, for example) than a male lead. K-dramas are peppered with female leads who rely on brawn over brains and are a little dimwitted and naive when it comes to love, but have genuinely good hearts. That, to me, is Dong Man to a t. I kept being completely shocked every time he just blurted out whatever was on his mind, and I found it both refreshing and incredibly attractive (okay, Park Seo Joon doesn’t hurt the attractiveness) how open he was willing to be throughout the entirety of the series. 
WHO CAN SAY NO TO THIS FACE?

Whenever you get interesting characters, there’s always the fear that they’ll stop being interesting halfway through the show, but these two never really lost their uniqueness. 

I guess I have to mention the second leads.

Yeah, they existed. I guess while watching I was sorta invested in the character growth there as well, but today is a hot summer day and trying to analyze this part of the show makes me so sleeeeeeeepy and bored that I just..can’t…muster…energy…to…care….

Things that made me roll my eyes and/or sigh in annoyance

  • The whole mom plot. WE DIDN’T NEED IT. For a slice-of-life show, it would have been perfectly fine to leave her as the quirky, badass landlady. Instead, we ended up wasting time cramming unnatural resolution to that whole story into the finale when we could have been resolving Ae Ra’s whole problem with Dong Man’s fighting instead.
  • The “brother.” Yup, I’m using two bullet points on the mom plot. I did not care about this guy and his mommy issues. Again, whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy are you wasting time that could be spent resolving more important plot points? *Pouts and throws things*
Also, too much Chicago Typewriter definitely made me think he was going to cause a lot more trouble than he did.


  • Hye Ran. Another unnecessary character whose resolution seemed shoehorned in. Surprise! She’s human after all even though absolutely nothing in the first half of the series seemed to indicate that she was anything other than a cardboard cutout.
  • Dong Man’s fighting. This. THIS. This is the thing I wish they had spent more time addressing instead of any of those other things. Soooooooo he might be permanently injured. Except then he’s not. And Ae Ra makes us have a weird time skip of them apart because she haaaaaaates his fighting. Except then they’re getting married. Because that’s what happens when your mom suddenly shows up out of nowhere and makes us spend time resolving issues with her and your jealous adoptive brother.
  • Choi Woo Shik’s character. I loved how this extended cameo initially represented a completely realistic depiction of “nice guy syndrome,” where he tries to manipulate Ae Ra into dating him just because he’s “nice.” The resolution to his storyline kinda cheapened the realism, though it did force a confession out of Ae Ra and allow me to realize just how much I enjoy Choi Woo Shik in all the things, so that’s probably a win overall.

Is Fight My Way worth watching?

That would be a hearty yes from me. If you have any kind of emotions, even the minor side characters will grow on you—and if you have no emotions, at least you can enjoy lots of Park Seo Joon shirtless and bickering with a hilarious Kim Sung Oh.

Where to watch Fight My Way:

Suspicious Partner (Love in Trouble) Review

Suspicious Partner. A show that did so much right, and yet somehow I ended up forcing myself to finish it by the end.

All the good stuff

Ji Chang Wook and Nam Ji Hyun are a match made in K-drama heaven. They’re both excellent comedic and dramatic actors, and sparks flew every time straightlaced Ji Wook interacted with the hot mess that was Bong Hee. Their romance was fun and filled with fantastic chemistry from episode 1.

As we know from recent experience, a cute central couple alone isn’t enough to keep a show afloat, and fortunately, this series filled its cast with talented actors playing fun supporting roles. Eun Hyuk and Chief Bang were two notable standouts, though it took a few episodes for me to shake Choi Tae Joon murderer vibes after his previous role on Missing 9. (So, SO glad he wasn’t the murderer in this, or I probably wouldn’t have been able to watch him in anything ever again.)

Even the murderer plot kept me engaged thanks to a winning turn from Dong Ha, though I do have to admit the whole “handsome, charismatic killer” thing wasn’t quite as captivating the second time around from this writer after I Remember You.

Where it lost me

Towards the end of this drama, I was texting very whiny complaints to a drama-watching friend of mine, and she said she thought I was being overly hard on this show. That may be true, but I tend to get extra irritated when a show I really love wastes potential at the halfway mark. 

I’m the Tyra in this scenario…and in all scenarios.

If Suspicious Partner had been 16 episodes instead of 20 (or I guess 32 instead of 40 with the split-episode format), it might have become one of my all-time favorites. Instead, somewhere around episode 12, it started to lose direction, and I couldn’t help but feel that every passing episode and nobly idiotic decision the characters made (seriously, how many times did we need to do the “Ji Wook hides the truth to save Bong Hee, but Bong Hee finds out anyway and wants to break up” cycle?) was more a function of needing to fill time than doing things the plot required.

Just think: at 16 episodes, we could have skipped the whole my-dad-maybe-killed-your-dad-so-we-must-not-be-together-because-reasons thing altogether, and I maybe would have saved myself some eyestrain from rolling my eyes so hard so much. 

Basically my face for the entire duration of the daddy fire plot.

Dear Drama Writers, 

I really, really don’t need every single character to be weirdly connected to every single other character on every single show. Sometimes people just meet and fall in love without their long-lost cousins possibly being related and/or maybe murdering each other in the past.

Sincerely, 

Vivi, A serial K-drama watcher who can’t keep her eye rolling under control

Is Suspicious Partner worth watching?

If you’re okay with abusing your fast forward button for the last third, then yes. Even the plot slowdown couldn’t diminish my absolute adoration for the Ji Chang Wook/Nam Ji Hyun pairing, and this show is still an excellent way to tide drama lovers over while Ji Chang Wook heads off to military service.

I can forgive a lot for failed Ji Chang Wook aegyo.

Where to watch Suspicious Partner

[ad_2]

Source link

Keep Up to Date with the Most Important News

By pressing the Subscribe button, you confirm that you have read and are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Add a comment Add a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Previous Post

10 Best K-drama OST Songs

Next Post

All the Ridiculous Reasons I'm Not Watching Any K-dramas

Advertisement