#Her male characters are 2d and unlikable they have barely any personality
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
magicandmaybe · 2 years ago
Text
is Gillian Flynn just incapable of writing a single normal character in her books??
6 notes · View notes
winterbites · 5 years ago
Text
(Major JoJo's Bizarre Adventure anime spoiler warning) My review of...
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Stardust Crusaders and Battle in Egypt (I'm counting them as one whole season but as two parts) is, admittedly, my least favorite season of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. 48 episodes long across the two parts, the show is definitely enjoyable but I personally wouldn't watch it again for anything other than a few cool fights. However, once again showing his viewers just how crazy his work can and will get, Akari makes JoJo's Bizarre Adventure even more bizarre starting with this season. For this review, I'm going going to take both parts into consideration. As usual, I'm going to keep my review as neutral as possible even if Stardust Crusaders isn't a top pick for me.
Unlike its predecessors, Stardust Crusaders has no narrator for the majority of the season, only showing up to speak the occassional thoughts of characters or animals. Akari always keeping things fresh, I think this is good for the show; we're no longer in the past so we don't need a narrator to tell us events as they happen in front of us.
First, I'm going to talk about the new element Akari brings into JoJo's Bizarre Adventure with Stardust Crusaders: Stands. An absolutely badass idea, Akari plays with this new element of the show beautifully. Unlike many other shounen manga/anime, the ability to control a Stand isn't solely about who has the biggest dick energy attack, but instead Akari turns the tables and uses the Stands for strategic battles; this way, it doesn't actually matter who's stronger or weaker, but instead who's smarter (which very much counteracts the art style of buff men quite nicely). Due to the Stands and mental/wit battles instead of physical battles the way it usually is in the shounen genre, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure takes a very unique turn for the better and works incredibly well given the context of the series.
Now lemme tell ya about the intros: I LOVE the both of them, and I'll start with Stand Proud from the first part of the season. So much energy, wonderfully timed visuals and the fantastic 3D-looking 2D animation; there is nothing about this intro that I don't like. It's ranked as my second favorite intro in terms of song choice, is tied for my number one in terms of visuals, and is tied for my favorite in terms of sound effects. The beautifully drawn night sky, the small addition of sketched art, the subtle hints of enemy Stands in the background, and the background constantly changing in such drastic ways are such terrifyingly engaging imagery that it makes me cry tears of happiness. Not to mention the hard to see hint of Dio at the end, only people who are active on-lookers or were shown that he's there at all will see him. I also love that, in the beginning of the intro, you see 5 stars, alluding to our 5 main characters, but then a 6th star appears, which alludes to Holly Joestar still sick in Japan. Also, the physics of Jotaro's chain and shadow is absolutely ravishing, it's little effects like that that really get me going, as well as the gradual breaking of glass at the end of the intro. The entire sequence is a masterpiece by my standards, truly a job well done.
Now, as for the second intro, I don't like it as much as the first one but it's still great in its own right. I adore the mixing of vocals, going from hard rock to the softer sounding male and then mixing them both for a wonderful Ora Ora Ora duet. I lean in towards my computer screen each time I watch the intro because the fast moving visuals are so enrapturing, not to mention you can see subtle changes in the faces of the characters and their body stance between the fast-paced frames. There's even one point where the group is lined up and the beat strikes, quickly switching them out for their Stands before swiftly changing to the next image. I also admire the way the credits are so well integrated into the intro, jumping and spiking along with the enthusiastic beat, emphasizing the song without being in the way. And when Dio uses his ZA WARUDO to stop time during the second version of this intro, I go into orgasmic bliss because it's so awesome; you can even see that piss bucket SMIRK while hearing his soft footfalls and I love it. Once again, there is nothing that I don't love about this intro.
Just like with Phantom Blood, there isn't much I can say about the soundtrack as a whole, but is fantastic in that it reflects the current situation and could easily switch up its beat when a battle turned.
As for the outros, I love Walk Like an Egyptian and its spirited inspiration, beat and vocals (fantastic job by the Bangles). There's no song quite like Walk Like an Egyptian so it's always a win in my book whenever it's used, especially in such a fitting case. I don't really like the second outro because, unlike every other intro/outro of the series, Last Train Home is a more somber or melancholy song, which doesn't really fit the show in my opinion. It's certainly a nice sounding song, but I'm just not crazy about it.
As for the characters, while I don't like them as much as other characters from other seasons, they certainly aren't bad either; we even get to see character development throughout both parts. Some characters become more mature, more level-headed and smarter with situations, and each person is internally unique as exemplified by their Stand. Some were more likable than others but, in general, the cast was pretty damn cool.
Now that I'm done gushing about all the things I love about this season, I'm gonna gush about the things that made me dislike this season more than the others, and I'm gonna start with the female side character Anne. This girl... did absolutely nothing throughout the show. In her defense, she didn't get in the way of the characters, but she didn't do anything for them either. She was even dropped out of the group halfway through the first part of the season, being inconsequential the whole way through. There was also some kind of weird sexualization going about her too: her age is never stated but she's definitely prepubescent (given the dialogue, she's probably 11 or 12 years old) but she had the body of a teenager and fawned over Jotaro. Once again in her defense, young girls fantasizing about older men (I personally enjoy the company of older men as they tend to be financially stable and more responsible) and having more developed bodies compared to their peers isn't odd at all; instead, it's actually very normal and healthy. However, Jotaro is 17, which is a lot older and, generally, the older the man (or woman) is the weirder it gets.
Speaking of sexualizing little girls, I want to turn attention to the Strength Stand user orangutan, Forever. This literal animal had the hots for Anne, and tried to do stuff to her that I can only describe as attempted rape, so that was a thing. Obviously, that's some fucked up shit that wasn't actually necessary to the story since Jotaro found out about Forever anyway and beat the shit out of him.
Next is, once again, Dio's motives. I love Dio, I really do, but he's just not that much of a well-explained character. His goal is explicitly stated this time around: he wants to rule the world. Fantastic, but WHY does he want to rule it? Who knows, it's never said why.
My next problem is with the villains of the show, they all seemed the same and reused to me. While each Stand (expect for two that did legit the exact same thing of stealing souls and putting them into objects) was unique given the user, whenever they were defeated they did one of two things: they either begged for forgiveness, which would always result in getting the snot beat out of them, or they swore their absolute loyalty to Dio (less of them did this) and died. Some of them would run away, but all of them (save for two Stand Users) never made another appearance, so most of them were just throw away characters.
Finally, my biggest problem is with Iggy, the last party member in our group of main characters who showed up at the beginning of Battle in Egypt. I know Akari wanted to make an animal Stand user to be a part of the cast and I know that Iggy was dragged out to Egypt against his will, but that doesn't make him any less of an infuriating character. For nearly the entire season, I absolutely hated Iggy: he was more useless than Anne as he intentionally turned his head the other way when the group was in trouble and/or DYING, he tried to sell Jotaro out to save his own skin as soon as he was introduced, and he had the absolute worst ambition of any of the characters in that he basically just wanted to be a pimp. After getting fucking up by an avian Stand user that totally should have won the fight (the finishing icicle appeared so much more slowly than all the other volleys, plot armor truly is invincible) and getting his leg dismembered, Iggy finally stepped up to the plate that he probably should have been on to begin with and earned my respect. Seriously, why would you so eagerly make an animal Stand user only to not use him for the entire show and then kill him off when he's barely shown what he can do? It makes no sense and it's so frustrating.
However, Akari truly has magic hands because as soon as Iggy actually started doing something, he immediately became a badass in my book and I cried another river to his death.
Speaking of deaths, just as a side note, why kill Avdol, bring him back, only to kill him again? As I understand it, Akari killed off Avdol the first time around but then realized that if he was going to kill a main character, he should probably make that character more important. But then Avdol died again and his death still felt insignificant. A good opportunity to learn on Akari's part, but I feel like bringing Avdol back to life didn't make much sense either.
8 notes · View notes
ladyloveandjustice · 7 years ago
Text
Summer 2017 Anime Overview: Rage of Bahamut: Virgin Soul and The Reflection
My classic anime overview posts are making a comeback! I watched 7 different anime in the Summer 2017, so we’ve got a lot to talk about- so much so that I’ll do a couple anime each post rather than just doing one giant post.
I fully believe in saving the best for last, so we’ll rank and review these anime in order from worst to best. Which means we’ll be starting with the anime I found the weakest out of what I watched this season. Rage of Bahamut: Virgin Soul and The Reflection. Are both of them bad anime? Or are they just not quite as a good as the other fare? Let’s dive in and find out!
Rage of Bahamut: Virgin Soul
Tumblr media
Yep, this was easily the worst anime I watched this season. Not animation-wise, the art was very nice (though not quite as good as its prequel). But story-wise? WOW. It’s been a while since I’ve seen an anime- or a story period- end that badly.
And unlike a lot of people, I didn’t really come into this anime expecting much. Rage of Bahamut: Genesis, the first season, was a beautifully animated but incredibly shallow adventure romp with a messy ending that managed to be both cliche and nonsensical in how it fridged the main female character. It was fun for the most part, but also eyerollingly trope-y and sloppy storytelling wise, with fairly 2D characters. I came into this season expecting much the same. And for the first half-ish of the anime that was what I got. It certainly wasn’t well written, it was sexist, it was cliched, but it worked okay for what it was, which was a silly swords and sorcery story where you could just turn your brain off and enjoy the eye candy. 
There wasn’t much to the characters, but they were pleasant and likable enough. Nina, the lead of the story, was just kinda dragged along by the plot and didn’t have much going on (her main conflict is that when she gets turned on by a dude she turns into a dragon yes i’m serious), but her gung-ho attitude made her fun to watch. There was also an wacky all-lady prison break midway through the show that was kinda awesome.
Tumblr media
 (I should note though, one of the characters is a very fantastical take on Jeanne D’Arc. And she’s portrayed  as someone who sucks at fighting if she doesn’t have the gods on her side because women are weak or whatever I guess! She finds some fulfillment only when a god pulls a Virgin Mary on her and forcibly impregnates her with an angel son. After this, her whole character revolves around her son. I had a lot of problems with that for obvious reasons).
But then. OH BUT THEN. I thought the first season’s denouement and end was messy, but I HADN’T SEEN NOTHIN’. Not only was this ending horrendous, it managed to damage all the characters involved (except for the zombie girl, Rita, who is too cool to be ruined by anything) and even basically damage the first season. If I cared enough to go back and watch that season, this ending would make it a sour experience, basically, just from how thoroughly the plot and characters from that season were mangled by this follow-up. Nothing redeemable was left in its wake.
Basically the whole story was overtaken by one of the most poorly conceived love interests I’ve ever seen. Nina’s beloved, Charioce, was a super sexy dude who had a few tiny flaws, like how he’d, y’know, massacred an entire race and also slaughtered, enslaved and tortured yet ANOTHER race (even putting them in gladiator style death matches for entertainment) and unjustly imprisoned a literal saint of a woman and told her he was only keeping her alive so he could murder her small child in front of her. 
Tumblr media
But you see guys, he danced with Nina a couple times and is super hot and his mom’s dead which is sad so it’s okay that he did a little genocide, tried to kill all Nina’s friends (one of whom was ten) and threw her in jail. I’m serious. That was the shows logic. Turns out the reason for all this was it was some plan to unseal the dragon a character had been sacrificed to seal for the next hundred years in Genesis. (So he effectively rendered her death totally meaningless). He unsealed it just so he could kill it for good . The only explanation we get for his double dose of genocide was that ONE of the races has a superweapon he needed to kill a dragon. Yep, no explanation given as to why he needed to do kill all those beings or enslave them or put them in death matches or personally torment a woman who did nothing to him, but the show sure treated it like it explained everything and meant we were totally supposed to forgive AND feel sorry for this sexy, sexy tyrant.
(In the end, the genocide and slavery ends up being a footnote: everyone loves Charioce because he killed a dragon, the demons are being payed low wages instead of being enslaved so everything’s fine now, no justice for those who were slaughtered, no consequences for the oppressors, no reparations made, no word on whether the death camps and many other atrocities even stopped happening, nothing.)
Nina being in love with him damaged her irreparably as a character too, even though she was perfectly okay before that- it was just so infuriating that she could set aside all the people he killed and the fact he’d tormented her friends because he was a smexy dancer. I get what they were going for-a kind of starcrossed Disney ~love isn’t rational~ type thing. And “love isn’t rational” is just the laziest writing copout ever, I’m so sick of it. 
Tumblr media
You can sell a romance where one party has done horrible things and the other one loves them anyway if you have the writing skill. But in order to sell that romance as understandable, you need to make the audience like that character too. The character needs to be actually endearing and interesting in some way.That way when so-and-so is tormented about how she loves him despite the things he’s done, the audience is tormented for the same reason. But there was no reason for Nina to be hopelessly in love with Charioce. Dude had the personality of a wet paper towel- I don’t think he emoted once the entire anime, even when he was on the verge of death. He didn’t offer her any invaluable support or guidance to Nina either. Yet she at one point said she’d choose the ENTIRE WORLD over him if it came down to it. A guy she danced with like twice! 
The worst thing about the Nina/Charioce romance is how a bunch of characters were literally sacrificed for it. One of the main characters of the show got himself killed shielding Charioce from those he had wronged, despite the fact Charioce had done absolutely nothing to warrant such devotion and said character didn’t even have a meaningful relationship with him. It was a comically anticlimatic death too, it was out of nowhere, the other characters barely emoted about it with even his supposed best friend basically shrugging it off. 
Tumblr media
The other person sacrificed solely to add drama to Nina and Charioce’s lurve was Nina’s ten year old friend, who was unceremoniously shanked from behind  after being a major character for most of the season. It was so cruel and pointless, I felt sure a magic resurrection was coming for the kid, but nope- he was killed off solely to cause some drama between the good guys and Charioce because the genocide apparently wasn’t enough to make our heroes mad at him. Nina does finally get mad at him, but only for ten minutes, then she and almost everyone else instantly forgave him upon learning he didn’t TECHNICALLY directly kill this one kid.
 Even though he HAD been trying to kill the kid ALL SEASON and the bounty he put on this kids head was still pretty much the direct cause of his death. But nah,he didn’t like, specifically tell the killer “hey go murder this small child” , he just heavily implied anyone who did it would get a reward from him, so it’s all fine. Even the kid’s grieving mother and father figure eventually forgave Charioce about this for no apparent reason. 
Speaking of pointlessness, the cherry on top of the shit sundae was that the dragon all these characters were sacrificed to kill? The one whose death was supposedly the payoff worth all this genocide and melodrama? It was revealed in the last minute of the story that Charioce DIDN’T EVEN MANAGE TO KILL IT. Rendering the entire mess of a narrative COMPLETELY MOOT.
Tumblr media
Seriously, if you want to see how overfocusing on badly written heterosexual romances can destroy an entire narrative, this series is a prime example. If you want to see an example or writers thinking a male character can be forgiven for any atrocity and win the female lead’s heart as long as he’s stoic and sexy and manly about it, this series will show you. This show demonstrates the worst pitfalls of romance narratives- writers seem to think as long as it’s an attractive man and woman getting together, they don’t have to bother with characterization or logic to sell their connection.
it’s a real shame- poor Nina could have been a compelling lead. There was stuff there that could have been developed into something cool had the writers cared at all- she could turn into a dragon, it was mentioned she was looked down on for not being fully dragon, she came from a rural village and was fairly innocent and didn’t know much about the world, her father died tragically- but rather than explore any of that, it was decided because she was a woman, her entire arc should be about her swooning and crying over Bishie McKillsaLot, never mind anything else.
Rage of Bahamut: Virgin Soul could have been a shallow but entertaining show like its predecessor. In the end though, the only thing entertaining about it by the end was how hard it crashed and burned. 
The Reflection
Tumblr media
The Reflection isn’t quite as bad as it’s reputation in the anime community right now suggests. Which is not to say it’s a good show. It’s not good. But it’s definitely far from the worst anime I’ve see and has a few interesting aspects.
This show is a collaboration between an anime studio and Stan Lee, (who I guess really likes being involved in anime- he’s done this before with Heroman) and it follows a group of superheroes. The basic premise is that three years ago, a strange light and smoke hit people around the world. Some were killed, some gained superpowers. Those who gained powers were called ‘The Reflected”. The world hates and fears them, in true Marvel style. Now a villain named Wraith is kidnapping people for mysterious reasons. 
The Reflection is a messy show, which is apparent just from the animation. The colors are very flat and the lines are very thick, which seems to be an attempt to capture the classic comic book feel. But the thing is, old comics chose to have a bright color palette, or at least a highly contrasting one, for good reason. if you do that kind of style with a dark color palette, it ends up looking very muddy. Unfortunately, that’s what The Reflection chose to do. This was especially egregious in the last episode, where having the darkly colored characters against a dark sky made it very hard to tell what was happening.  On top of that, the animation was very limited in general.
Tumblr media
There’s also a lot a standard superhero stories here that are not given a fresh spin- we have the angsty product of a lab experiment, the shallow, show-offhero who learns superheroing is SRS BUSINESS after his loved ones are killed due to his negligence and most disappointingly, a main villain whose only motivation is that he wants to plunge the world into a vague, generic sort of darkness.
Some stuff is just straight up not explained, which made the finale confusing- we see a flashback that is supposed to make us forgive a character for his actions, but it’s so incoherent and quick it reveals nothing. Nor is the villain really explored in a way that makes sense (save for an extremely on the nose message about “darkness”, which was repeated so often in the episode I got sick of hearing it), his actions are unclear and the whole thing is just generally clunky. It seems like they chose not to explain a lot of stuff (and end on a cliffhanger) in hopes of getting a sequel, but you can leave mysteries and openings for a possible season 2 without being opaque and hard to follow. In fact, a final episode like The Reflection’s is way more likely to turn fans off than leave them wanting more.
Tumblr media
However, The Reflection does have a few interesting ideas and good moments. One of the main heroes, Lisa, has a wheelchair that transforms into a giant robot, which is rad as hell and should be included in every superhero narrative from now on. Her personality is also endearing- she’s a determined, fiery, geeky girl who loves comics. Her whole storyline where her father is all protective of her due to her disability and she tells him doesn’t consider her condition tragic and proves she’s actually the one who can protect him is fairly heavy handed , but it’s a very positive narrative, and I’m especially glad to see it in an anime after being burned HARD by the ableism in Yuki Yuna is a Hero. She’s sadly sidelined after her introductory episode (it’s especially strange that her comic book fandom never comes up again), but still remains a good character.
There’s also a character who was blind, except he can see the silhouettes of people who have superpowers and thus pick out when when people are superpowered that way- that’s another good concept and I liked that his wife was the physically strong and imposing one of their partnership, though she didn’t get as much characterization as I’d like (in fact, she pretty much had none outside her relationship with her husband). The episodes revolving around Lisa and this pair were definitely the strongest of the series.
Tumblr media
The lead of the story, Eleanor, also had a lot of potential. She had the heart of a hero, but she was desperate for validation and because of that desperation she ended up having an identity crisis where she developed an alternate personality. If her psychology had been explored more, that could have been a really interesting concept- but it wasn’t really explored at all beyond generic “this personality is the darkness within me” so it ended up being more on-the-nose and boring than anything. Still, I appreciated Eleanor’s scrappiness and in the hands of a more competent show, she could have been really great. 
The other characters were duds though, unfortunately- the villains were generic and kinda just there. The hero X-On drove a lot of the plot, yet we learned pretty much nothing about him and he had no personality other than being kind of a dick. The magical girl squad was a fun touch and I loved seeing them kick ass and save the day, but they didn’t have distinct personalities from each other or much thematic significance to the story.
Basically, there’s nothing offensive or repellent about The Reflection. I have to give it points for trying something different stylistically from the usual anime fare. It’s a show that could have been good if it had been executed a little better and given more room to breathe. However, it wasn’t, so it ended up being a very clunky, forgettable anime.
85 notes · View notes
thedramafilesblog-blog · 7 years ago
Text
Appearing before the Dramacourt: My Golden Life, Bad Thief  Good Thief  & Man Who Sets The Table
***Note: If this is your first time browsing the Drama Files, please read The Rules on how our Email Style Quick Reviews work.***
Dear Reader,
I am writing this quick review for the following weekend family dramas: My Golden Life, Bad Thief  Good Thief and Man Who Sets The Table. I am recommending these dramas for the following reasons:
(1) The plots are (horrifyingly) awesome. Not unlike most makjang dramas, the plots of these three shows are predictable, sometimes sloppily written, and even a bit disjointed but at the same time they are awesomely crazy and draw drama-hungry viewers in.
a) My Golden Life – This drama is a switched at birth plot line. Shin Hye Sun’s character Seo Ji An goes from rags to riches over night. The whole drama is about Seo Ji An’s journey of discovering who she is. I’m just not totally ecstatic about Park Shi Hoo playing the male lead.
b) Bad Thief Good Thief – This one is a switched at ‘childhood’ drama but for very complex political reasons. The main character Jang Dol Mok played by Ji Hyun Woo gets switched or taken in by his father’s friend when his father gets murdered by some seriously evil people and grows up not knowing this truth. I didn’t really care to deal with this political plot line so I skipped most of it. It is almost done airing and is great if you’re into lots of melodrama and constant crying. The drama also spans several years so there is a lot of off-screen plot development. Personally, I’m just in it for Seohyun and Ji Hyun Woo’s childhood sweethearts love line.
c) Man Who Sets The Table –  This is about two contrasting families: one where the dad is super controlling and the other a blended family which is very accepting and warm. I particularly liked how this drama handled issues of sexuality (unlike some other dramas recently *cough* Age of Youth 2 *cough*) and blended families.
Extremely supportive siblings!
(2) The characters are not all totally 2D. Okay well take this with a grain of salt please because they are after all weekend makjang dramas and so most of the characters are 2D.
a) My Golden Life – As far as character development goes, I think this drama is the best of the three. Shin Hye Sun does an amazing job as the poor job seeker Seo Ji An finding out that she is actually the daughter of a chaebol family. The rest of the characters are a bit meghh: the mom is too whiny, the dad is too whiny, the older brother is too perfect, the “twin” sister is too much of the standard loopy sister, the male lead tries too hard to be funny, and the 2nd lead (Lee Tae Hwan) is basically playing the same character from his previous weekender. I did really like the younger brother character played by Shin Hyun Soo though because he seemed a bit more nuanced and well written.
The whole gang
Thoughtful maknae
Dem rich chaebol parents
b) Bad Thief Good Thief  – Uhh….All the characters are pretty much straight outta ye olde makjang. There’s nothing really special about any of them that stand out. Again. I re-iterate that I am only watching this for the childhood sweetheart love line.
These two are just super cute!
c) Man Who Sets The Table – The only characters that I am totally invested in here are Sooyoung’s character Lee Ru Ri’s brother’s wife and mother in law. OMG these two are an absolute hoot as the wife who is starved of her husband’s affections played by Seo Hyo Rim and the crass mother in law with no filter played by Kim Soo Mi! I’m telling you now that I started watching this drama as an experiment because I was bored on the weekend and I stayed for these two. I also really liked the male lead’s (On Joo Wan) half brother character played by Song Kang who is going through gender identity issues and the supportive step-sister played by cutie Kim Ji Young. I’m interested to see how his choice of gender identity will play out.
Actual representation of what I think a Mother-in-Law with no filter looks like
Love-starved wifey 
RedRosette J Aside: Here’s some more shots of the cray mother in law because she is da actual bomb!
(3) The love-lines are totally predictable – As with any makjang drama, the love-lines are totally predictable and if you’ve seen a few, you can see the plot holes coming from a mile away.
a) My Golden Life – TBH, I’m not sold on this love line. To be fair, it has only been 6 episodes so far, but whatever interaction the two characters have had have shown zero romantic chemistry. Nor has there been chemistry between Seo Ji An and the second lead. At this point, I’m not invested in the love lines at all and I don’t care even if they scrap them completely. I’m just in it for Seo Ji An’s personal growth and to watch her navigate the boundaries of a rich/poor, dual social existence.
Nope. Don’t care.
b) Bad Thief Good Thief  – Again. Just in it for the childhood sweethearts. Don’t really care about the other love lines which barely exist anyway.
c) Man Who Sets The Table – I don’t care at all about Sooyoung and On Joo Wan’s love line. They seem to have little chemistry and every interaction feels like forced awkward comedy. I also absolutely detest the best friend character played by Lee Se Young. Yes. We get it. You were on SNL Korea, so can you stop making everything so slapstick? But I do care about the Sooyoung’s brother character played by Park Jin Woo learning to love his adorably childish wife. What can I say? I’m rooting for the two most extreme opposite characters to actually fall in love. So cute.
Sorry but this feels so forced
The only thing that makes this work is the sunset
Ugh. No. 
Dude. She’s really cute. Just fall in love with her already.
(4) They have some seriously Makjang moments. Arguably the entire plot is a makjang drama, but there have been some special moments in these dramas that took makjang to another level!
a) My Golden Life – For me, the most makjang moment was when the birth mom confronted the adoptive mom about stealing her baby and it was like this whole dramatic situation with the adoptive mom screaming and the birth mom yelling and things got pretty makjang.
A Tale of Two Moms
b) Bad Thief Good Thief  – This ENTIRE drama is makjang. Seriously. There hasn’t been a single moment that hasn’t been makjang. From birth fathers being murdered to adoptive fathers being framed for crimes and sent to prison, to brothers losing touch, to secret rich grandmothers, to psychotic second female leads, to discovering that the birth mother is alive and carrying out her own revenge plan to OMG the list is endless….
I think she has crazy eyes
c) Man Who Sets The Table – There were really two instances where stuff got really makjang. The first was when Tae Yang’s (On Joo Wan) stepfather’s psycho mom showed up (after having killed her oldest son) and asked him to be a part of her family like nothing was wrong and to ditch his existing wife and kids. WTF. The second makjang moment was when Ru Ri’s (Sooyoung) married brother discovered that his ex-girlfriend may or may not have had his baby and has now abandoned said child on his proverbial doorstep! *GASP*
When your psycho Mom threatens your family
Who’s kid is this anyway?
(5) The OSTs…..are OSTs.  For all of them, the OSTs are pretty much average OSTs…nothing special. Nothing really stands out to me.
(6) The cinematography is….nice.  Again, there’s not much that you can expect from a weekend family drama. Man Who Sets The Table did have some episodes set in Guam though, so that was nice, but other than that….its just really obvious drama sets and streets. Nothing fabulous.
(7) The dramas are of no intellectual value. Perhaps this is what drew me to watch these dramas. I wanted to turn my brain off and watch some fun stuff for the heck of it. If you’re in it to watch some serious shit about something, these dramas aren’t for you. With the exception of Man Who Sets The Table which seems to be a commentary on families and social perception, but even that is reaching and you have to actually pay real attention for that.
While it may seem like I am criticizing the above dramas, the critique is actually positive because it is the very fact that they are standard family dramas that makes you want to watch them. At the end of the dramas you just know that there is going to be warm and fuzzy feels all around.
So, if you are feeling up to following a 50 episode weekend drama,  based on the above reasons I recommend these dramas to you! Enjoy!
RedRosette J.
  Re: Weekend Family Dramas (My Golden Life, Bad Thief Good Thief & Man Who Sets The Table) Appearing before the Dramacourt: My Golden Life, Bad Thief  Good Thief  & Man Who Sets The Table…
0 notes