Renseignements

  • Dernière connexion: Il y a 15 heures
  • Genre: Femme
  • Lieu: Alabama
  • Contribution Points: 0 LV0
  • Anniversaire: November 30
  • Rôles:
  • Date d'inscription: mai 31, 2012

never2muchcoffee

Alabama

never2muchcoffee

Alabama
I  Do, I Do korean drama review
Complété
I Do, I Do
8 personnes ont trouvé cette critique utile
by never2muchcoffee
juil. 20, 2012
16 épisodes vus sur 16
Complété
Globalement 8.0
Histoire 9.0
Jeu d'acteur/Casting 9.0
Musique 8.0
Degrés de Re-visionnage 8.0
This drama sucked me in because of the focus on Hwang Ji An's struggle as she deals with finding herself pregnant after a one-night-stand. A good thing, actually, cause the romance doesn't really kick in until the second half of the drama. But once it did, Kim Sun Ah and Lee Jang Woo nearly caught my screen on fire more than once :) Like I said, it was the pregnancy plot that interested me first. I'm a single mom, so I can relate to Ji An's struggles - telling her parents, telling the father, wondering about the future, etc. I thought Kim Sun Ah was very convincing as her character dealt with all this and more. The promos for the drama (before it aired) made it seem as though the age difference between Ji An and Tae Kang would be a big issue - thankfully, it wasn't. It's not that it wasn't mentioned or noticed at all, but it wasn't handled in the same way all the other older-women-younger-men dramas seem to. Almost every other one with this setup has the older woman resisting or refusing the relationship strictly because of the age gap. With Ji An, it was more because Tae Kang had no real motivation in life - which she contributed to his age but was really because he simply had not found something to be motivated about. Once he starts to prove himself, she sees him differently and the age gap is pretty much ignored. This was a refreshing change of pace. One last note: on a scale of one to ten, the kissing scenes get a 15!!!!
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