Yes I'm still watching Kdramas and have been watching them all along
Just saw Youth of May has landed on Netflix which has been on my watch list since I read about it so started it tonight. I'm interested in the historical event (Gwangju uprising, 1980) so am very excited to watch it.
So, last month I resubbed to Netflix to watch the new season of
The Witcher and to catch up on some other stuff. I also decided to check out some of their Korean fare since there's so much of it and I've heard a lot of good things about some of it. Also, a friend of mine watches a lot of K-dramas and got me interested in them; she's more into romcoms, though, not really my style.
I've since watched:
- Kingdom and Kingdom: Ashin of the North. Loved it, can't wait for more.
- Squid Game. Intense and tough to watch but overall I liked it and want to see where the story goes next. Just in terms of pure entertainment, though, I preferred Alice in Borderland, a Japanese show with a somewhat similar premise.
- The Silent Sea. Meh. Sounded cool and I love astronaut stuff but I wasn't impressed.
- Sweet Home. Again, a cool premise, but the execution was somewhat lacking. I liked most of the characters but the monsters were pretty corny and I thought it kinda fell apart towards the end.
- D.P. I really enjoyed this one. Kind of tough to watch at times, but it's meant to be.
- Hellbound. I generally liked this one. It's not really an action-packed monster horror like you might expect it to be, more of a slow-burn examination of religion and how it can become twisted. I thought the story structure was a bit odd, though; it felt like two seasons told in one.
I've come to notice that all of the shows I've watched so far are actual Netflix co-productions, because most of the other K-dramas I've seen on the platform tend to have more episodes with longer runtimes (often longer than one hour each!) So I'm kind of curious to find out if the shows produced directly by Netflix differ from the Korea-only productions in terms of style and format.
I've watched all of these except Sweet Home which was too creepy for me. I think Hellbound was the most original.
Not sure how much the Netflix shows differ, I guess a lot of the time I'm not paying attention to whether it's Netflix or not lol. I guess they are more intense and less rambly, more concise?
I agree about Silent Sea. Interesting premise, but in the end it was just kinda meh.
I'm interested to see what the Korean production of Money Heist ends up being like. The original invested a lot of time in crafting the story, so I'm not sure it can be fairly compared to, but we'll see. It stars one of the main Squid Game leads.
I don't like watching remakes if the script is the same. I tried a couple times and sometimes it really feels like an American show or whatever and not a Korean one in a way I can't get past. Haven't watched Money Heist but if I did I'd watch the original in Spanish unless it was known to be rewritten. Korea does do heist stuff well though.
I’v been watching a zombie movie called 23
We Are All Dead, on Netflix, Pretty goof as these things go. Outbreak happens ar a high school, trapping the students inside.
Cinrmarography is interesting, but the K-zombies are the real show. It’s wild.
Oh I loved that one! Just a blast, some shocking moments and suirprises (surprisingly lol). Actors were great. Very enjoyable and didn't go on too long.
Anyone watching kdramas anymore?
Me and my 17 year old are on episode 13 of Tomorrow. Pretty fun for a drama about suicide prevention... finally got Mr. LIM'S background...
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I started that but got distracted, do you recommend?
As to my own viewing, I rewatched some favourites such as
Reply 1988 and
Sky Castle. Really enjoyed the rewatches.
Also watched off the top of my head..
A Taxi Driver: This is a movie, based on true events that took place during the Gwangju uprising in 1980. Very good.
The Devil Judge: Set in a slightly dystopian modern day Korea, it's a classic K drama morality tale. Has everything, orphans, fires, the absolute abuse of power over the lowly people and how terrible this is, handsome and morally mysterious lead.. the dystopian element is very well done the way they just sliiiide it in there as an Alt.Korea, but subtley. Great idea for shows, really opens them up the storytelling possibilities without it being actual sci fi.
Alice: Time travel sci fi, entertaining
Hell is Other People: Weird, creepy as fuck psychological thriller that was too creepy for me but I couldn't stop watching it! Very well done, the female lead played the housekeeper in Parasite, she is a great, great actor. Also called Strangers from Hell
Twenty Five, Twenty One
It's Okay to Not Be Okay : I've quit both of these, though I'm about halfway through 25/21.
Hometown Cha Cha Cha : This is one of those adorable, sweet, romantic comedies that I should have not been into but I watched the whole thing and it was like a warm and friendly blanket on a cold night. And quite funny at times.
Miss Granny : Movie. An elderly woman is suddenly young again and goes off into the world to find happiness and redo life. A bit Korean Hallmark at times but also amusing and a simple watch. I started it because it has Na Moon Hee in it who is in my favourite,
Once Again but we don't see her as much as I wanted !
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYktm7nlbXY
The Sound of Your Heart: The ORIGINAL not the hideous reboot! Make sure you watch the first one, Netflix has both. First one stars Lee Kwang Soo. This is a sitcom based on a webtoon about a webtoon creator.. it's very funny, yes it's a classic sitcom but many funny scenarios. The mother is hilarious.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FST7XwqNh3U
All of Us Are Dead: see above, excellent!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IN5TD4VRcSM
The Raincoat Killer, chasing a predator in Korea True story documentary about catching a serial killer. As I recall it was interesting if not particularly well done. This trailer is dubbed, of course I don't recommend watching a dubbed version! Couldn't find a subtitled trailer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeN1w_zr1O0
What Happened to Mr Cha? Movie. Kind of stupid, with moments, but mostly stupid. Googling "top 10 Korean movies netflix" gets you a lot of dross
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7ZP8ywcn8g
Liver or Die: This is an intensely melodramatic family drama full of dysfunction and some very out there characters. I LOVED IT. It's over the top and you want to smack them all half the time but it's also funny and at times touching. Would rewatch. I could see it being a love it or hate it show.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=25kzJu7rkfk
My Name: Gangsters. VENGEANCE. Teenage girl who without any apparent superpowers can beat the crap out of people in search of vengeance. Violently cathartic and entertaining. btw I just disvovered that when the subtitles are in two languages as in this trailer you can MOVE one of them! Just click on it and move it
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOl7iOrD31Q
Beyond Evil: Korea really excels at crime dramas. I never, ever watch crime dramas from english countries, it's a genre I have zero interest in. But I've ended up watching a lot of K ones because they are done so well (Stranger season 1, holy crap). This one I watched until it was about 2/3 through and then I quit because it was just too stressful. It's excellent. I recommend it. I couldn't finish it and gave myself permission to quit because of the stress.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQCOdcBAWtU
Steel Rain: Movie. Absolutely excellent action thriller about North Korea and spies. AND apparently there is a Steel Rain 2 out! Trailer only in Korean.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIogf7UGMUY
So Not Worth It: A comedy set at a Uni focusing on foreign students from Sweden, the US and other places. Very fresh, often interesting, of course at times cliched but the characters are well done. A lot of fun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RiTMZvK-ZsQ
AND THAT'S IT.
Other than probably some non-netflix movies I forgot. I'm dying to watch the one where Baekdusan, the mountain in North Korea that supposedly Kim Jong Un was born on turns into a super volcano and explodes. That was out here for about 5 days and I missed it and have been hanging out to see it ever since. Hoping Netflix gets it someday!
Going back a few pages in this thread..
Here's a pic I took of the pub used in Itaewon Class:
