Cette critique peut contenir des spoilers
There is something about Eric Mun making douchebags likeable and endearing.
Que Sera, Sera was an interesting drama. It tended to show the dark fringe side of someone's character. Even someone as innocent and naive as Eun-soo got darker and more stubborn as the series progressed. It’s something one should expect in a drama about jealousy-fueled emotional abuse, the hard part of love and money. That’s something that’s consistent throughout the series. It can be off putting to some viewers who may have expected more straight-foward romantic melodrama. And sometimes the story does tend to get wishy-washy at times which didn’t help things, but this was a well made - excellently directed - drama headlined by 4 actors who held up their weight to carry the story along. Kang Tae-joo is the main character we follow, eventually turning to Eun-soo as the series progresses, and quite frankly, he’s not a great person. Tae-joo is belligerent, rude and arrogant. He’s not nice to the lovely Eun-soon and messes around with her several times, and he's only really driven by having a nice, money-filled life but he's also someone who learned from his actions, has deep regrets and thoughts and becomes a better person despite his actions saying the opposite. The story of Shin Joon-hyuk is acinating. He is quite clearly the better person over Tae-Joo but due to his insecurity and jealousy towards Eun-soo and Tae-joo’s past relationship, he is just as manipulative and spiteful as the bastard Tae-joo. Cha Hye-rin is an odd duck. She is initially interesting with her unique ways of living her life but she is prolly the weakest out of the four. There isn’t a lot of character depth compared to the others. The acting was strong with Jung Yu-mi standing out to me. She had to portray a seemingly simple character that changes naturally due to her environment. She turns from someone who’s innocent, as Tae-Joo calls her, to someone who’s more knowledgeable about life, responsibility, pessimistic about love and more nihilistic in general. There are a lot of nuances that need to make this work naturally.
The story wasn’t perfect. There are some moments that are awkward and doesn’t really make a ton of sense - like Tae-joo and Eun-soo’s reunion before they spit again - but it's a show with a lot of twist and turns that are compelling, mostly.
The story wasn’t perfect. There are some moments that are awkward and doesn’t really make a ton of sense - like Tae-joo and Eun-soo’s reunion before they spit again - but it's a show with a lot of twist and turns that are compelling, mostly.
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