Giving 2015 a hand [Year in Review, Part 2]
by javabeans
As we’ve mentioned, we here at Dramabeans Central have been changing up our year-end review series, trying out new features and reworking others. It’s been an ongoing process looking for ways to make things fresher and better, and it felt like we were due for an update. Change is scary, but change is good!
Aside from feeling a creative itch to try new things, it occurred to us that with the addition of minion-recappers, eight full-length reviews covering every drama watched by each recapper this year could quickly get repetitive. And very, very long. (I know I wouldn’t want to read that many reviews of the same thing, not even if it were my favorite drama.) We tossed around the idea of streamlining the selections and turning everything into a Top 10 list—but that felt like it would get redundant, especially with our Editors’ Picks coming up. Furthermore, we didn’t want to set ourselves up to leave a whole bunch of dramas out of the discussion—shows that we enjoyed and want to talk about, but which may quite fulfill the criteria for “Best” or “Top” anything.
So what we decided to do was simplify things and set everybody’s review limit to five dramas—yep, a mere, measly five—but give the writer the freedom to pick any five shows, with no best/most/favorite requirement to guide the selection process. With eight writers involved, we’ll have 40 reviews in all, which feels like a pretty robust total, cutting down on redundancies. And rather than directing everyone to choose their list according to the same criteria, we decided to leave that up to each writer—thus, the act of choosing what to write about ought to be almost as meaningful as what eventually gets written. (Almost.)
Under this structure, one writer may choose to highlight all her favorite dramas, while another might opt to write about the ones that sparked the strongest emotional response—maybe joy, maybe boiling anger. Perhaps four bests and one worst, or maybe five worsts. Or possibly an entirely random theme to bring them all together. It’s both entirely freeing and painfully restricting. (You’re welcome, guys!) (Don’t shoot me!)
I have lingering fondness for the structure of past years’ reviews, but that format was a beast (imagine that multiplied eight times over!), and I have high hopes that our format this year will yield great reviews. (And of course, we’re always open to making them better the next time around.) We know some of you may be sad to have the old style gone, but we went into this process with the primary goal of making this a better experience for you guys. We hope it pays off.
That said, naturally our decision was accompanied by angst and regrets as soon as we set out to pick our five dramas and started tearing out our hair. I got multiple pleas to bend our rules, but I put my foot down like a good dramaland dictator. Rules are rules! Even arbitrary ones! Bending them would negate the purpose of instating them in the first place, and why be self-defeating like that?
Why five dramas, you ask? Well, partly because five’s as good a numeral as any. Because five is a nice, compact number that still allows for diversity. Because I said so. Because five is not as limiting as three or four, but not so daunting as twenty. Because you can count five on one hand.
Speaking of hands, I’m giving dramaland one for my year-end review, because I like the image of a hand being just as suited to giving a round of applause as it is forming a clenched fist in aggravation. Maybe you’re wondering what the sound of one hand clapping is. Or maybe you’re thinking the motif should be two hands, not one—but hey, that piano-playing drama wasn’t named Ten Fingers, was it?
On to the reviews!
KILL ME, HEAL ME
I’ve got five fingers and they’re giving you: A thumbs-up on the sticky scale.
I’m not kidding about our collective angst over narrowing our picks down to five, because it made us have to think about our year of drama-watching in a different way. I’d assumed at the outset that I’d just pick the five dramas that left the deepest impression, but what ended up making the cut wasn’t what I’d guessed up front. There were dramas I thought I would love while they were airing, which have since faded from my memory, while many others fell into that in-between pile: entertaining enough to watch, but melding into the same pool of general pleasantness after the fact. Enjoyable, but lacking standouts.
Multiple-personalities drama Kill Me, Heal Me was a surprise in several ways—it was one of the easiest to pick for my list, and when I first started watching, I really didn’t think that’s where it would end up. My first impression of the drama had been rather negative—the drama was full of unlikable chaebol characters, trite in dramaland with their snobbishness and bloodline obsessions; the tone was all over the place, hopping from rom-com to tearjerker to family sitcom in a heartbeat; the acting felt manic, if committed; and the jerky directing gave the drama a disorganized, rushed feel.
The interesting thing is, I didn’t find that those things went away as the drama went on, or transformed into better versions of themselves. By drama’s end, there were just as many unpalatable chaebols running around, the directing was just as disorganized, and boy those tonal shifts could give you emotional whiplash. It’s just that they stopped mattering quite so much, or maybe at all. Somehow, the drama conjured up a magical element—the actors committed, the hero’s trauma pulled at the heartstrings, and the chemistry of the cast was infectious. I watched for the emotional highs, which tided me over all the tedious lows whenever the plot focused on anyone outside the inner circle. There were certainly moments when the plot dragged down the energy levels, but my affection for all the good stuff carried me through, and now months later, those highlights are the only moments that stick with me.
Ji Sung wasn’t the only great thing about Kill Me, Heal Me but he was certainly its most dynamic force, giving each personality warmth and humanity. He made me pull for our tormented hero to find peace while feeling torn that his peace had to come at the expense of his other personalities, all of whom were given room to develop into complex, fully dimensional people in their own right. Based on the drama’s one-line premise about a chaebol with seven personalities, the show could have easily painted the other personas as comic relief or perfunctory plot devices, but instead they each endeared themselves in their own way. I found myself teary-eyed when we had to say goodbye to each one, despite knowing, as they did, that it was for the best.
I was further amazed when I realized at one point that I was thinking of each personality as their own person, rather than seeing Ji Sung as an actor giving multiple charged performances. I was aware he was acting, of course, since he was so very good at it—but the drama had an immersion factor where Se-gi became the tortured, unsung hero-protector, and Yo-na was a teenage girl. She just happened to look like a full-grown man, is all.
I know this drama has a huge and fervent fanbase that may disagree with me calling it tonally sloppy or narratively messy, but I do think most of us can agree that it left us with a magically giddy feeling. And no matter how coldly and logically you may be able to argue points of directorial intent or flawed execution, you can never argue with magic.
YONG-PAL
Five fingers give you: A wag of the (index) finger. Tsk-tsk. You had it all going for you, and then you chucked it out your thirteenth-story window.
Oh, Yong-pal. This drama was very good and then very bad, and it makes this list for both of its extremes.
Past encounters with dramas that take this strong-to-weak trajectory have usually averaged out to a middling overall experience for me, leaving me with a shrug and a “meh,” forgotten soon thereafter. Oddly, though, this drama lingers in my mind as two discrete parts, which I suppose speaks to just how much I loved the first half that I like to remember it as an entity separate from its dull-as-dirt second half. (I still wish we could surgically remove the latter half and leave the addictive first half—okay, first third—unsullied by the rest.)
Because really, those first six or seven episodes were heart-thudding and nail-biting, and had me all aflutter waiting for the next episode, cursing those cliffhangers. Yong-pal took on a bunch of labels that sounded like a hodgepodge of genres—it was a medical-action-romance-thriller-melodrama—and yet, those things all worked for me, and worked together. It’s been a while since I’ve been in a rush to catch the next episode of any drama, but this drama stoked the urge: I distinctly recall recapping a competitor show on Yong-pal’s airdates, a drama I was disappointed to find much less engrossing (Scholar, for the curious), and forcing myself to focus on the recap when I really wanted to sneak away and steal an hour to catch what was going on next door at SBS. I swear I never did it, but I nearly always wanted to.
At least that was true for the first month—before the show decided to veer away from the thrills and suspense and turn into a familiar chaebol revenge story where the underdog heroine became the overdog and started dishing out payback. Which wasn’t a terrible idea, raising those questions of whether revenge was worth it and whether the thing driving her to survive all this while would actually be the thing to destroy her. Had the drama actually had the stones to go down that path fully and commit to the darkness, I think we could have had something quite interesting.
But what often makes dramaland so addictive and entertaining is also what often prevents it from pushing the envelope into daring newer territory—that is to say, K-dramas are great at working our emotions and pushing our buttons, but they’re also scared of being unlikable. So inevitably, stories tame down and settle into routine plot turns, rough edges get smoothed out, and hard characters soften, completely missing the irony where it’s often those jagged corners and dark sides that suck us in in the first place.
I don’t begrudge Yong-pal its high ratings, because I’m just glad that any drama was able to lift dramaland out of its single-digit doldrums and was happy to see that numbers could break 20% in this day and age. (I’d wondered, I really had.) But it doesn’t soften the blow of feeling like the second half sacrificed everything that made the first half great in order to chase those ratings, which seems like it ought to be an Aesopian lesson taught to all drama producers their first day on the job. Don’t spill your milk as you’re counting your chickens, don’t cry wolf, and don’t rescue your damsel in distress in Episode 7 and twiddle your thumbs for eleven more episodes. That’s just sense.
WARM AND COZY
Five fingers give you: One fat middle finger, flipping you the bird.
Dear Hong Sisters,
Please go home and take a nap, and don’t come back to work until you’re rested. If not for Kang So-ra and Yoo Yeon-seok, this drama would have been unbearable… but without them, none of us would have sat through Warm and Cozy and wasted sixteen hours, so maybe it’s all a wash.
You used to be such fun, but now you seem tired. Are you tired? I’m your biggest fan when you’re firing on all cylinders, giving us cheeky, fast, punny comedy. Even when your dramas aren’t perfect (they’re never perfect) they’ve still managed to put a big stupid grin on my face and warm my heart. (See: Delightful Girl Chun-hyang, You’re Beautiful, My Girlfriend Is a Gumiho, Master’s Sun, Best Love.) Sure you might sometimes be sloppy, but you know how to make characters endearing and funny and full of life.
In recent years I’ve downgraded myself to just kind of a fan, except for that one terrible year where I had to pretend not to know you. I’m sorry, but you were really embarrassing then. You bounced back with Master’s Sun and for that I was grateful. Still, I’m concerned that you no longer love to write zippy, infectious comedies. Or is it that you’re no longer able? That’s a sobering thought.
It’s to the credit of the leads that Warm and Cozy was made watchable at all, because damn if Kang So-ra and Yoo Yeon-seok didn’t work to give their characters life. Kang So-ra gave the heroine heart, while Yoo Yeon-seok did his best despite being bogged down by a character with no consistency in internal logic—at least he made his glib slacker character merely marginally annoying rather than shoe-throwingly aggravating. (I still wanted to throw a shoe sometimes. But always at Gun-woo, and never at Yoo Yeon-seok. That deserves props, no?)
But that was totally an actor thing, and not a writer thing at all, so you can’t take credit for that. There’s no rule in dramaland that says you have to write a drama every year. If there is, I’m pretty sure you’re the only writers who got that memo, so really, you’re ahead of the game anyway. You could take time off. You’re quite famous now. I’m sure somebody will still hire you when you’re refreshed. And if you’re never refreshed, that’s okay too—you had a good run. Better to sit things out than creating more Bigs or Warm and Cozys. Maybe it’s a shame to go out on a down note, but let’s not dig that grave any deeper.
I hope you find your mojo again. It was nice when you had it.
Love Cordially,
javabeans
HEALER
I’ve got five fingers and a big rock: Put a ring on it. Or maybe five rings. With Healer, every finger is a ring finger.
Perhaps discussion of Healer requires some added context, because the show was definitely an anomaly—wildly popular in one context, but almost entirely ignored in another. The response here on Dramabeans might skew perception about its performance, so it’s worth noting that despite the frenzy we witnessed here, this show was mostly overlooked in Korea, pulling in ratings that were neither shameful nor remarkable. Just kind of in the middle. Yes, there was an active mania following among Korean viewers, but the mainstream Korean media and audience kind of bypassed the show, to my chagrin. Healer didn’t pick up award buzz, and I expect that it’ll be mostly forgotten at KBS’s end-of-year awards ceremony later this month.
So I found it surprising (though not unwelcome!) when Healer tapped into a fan fervor here at Dramabeans—I’m not even sure that the craze extended to other English-language fan communities, at least not to the level we experienced here—which makes me consider the Healer phenomenon unique to us. I can see how that might give someone the wrong idea that it was a bigger success than it was, when really we were just having a really happy, boisterous party in our corner of the internet.
Which is why, despite being first in line to proclaim the merits of Healer, I still consider the drama to be an underrated and overlooked one. I’m just grateful to have been part of the party that recognized its appeal, and it warms my heart to have had such a fervent, positive community spring up around the drama—the Healer fandom was one of those hyper-cracky experiences that really brings out the best of the live-watch from the fans’ perspective. The fandom made everything more enjoyable and exciting, and I wonder if people who watched the show outside of that specific experience came away with a different feeling.
That isn’t to diminish the stand-alone merits of the drama itself, which were plenty: assured writing, smart pacing, and a romance that knew exactly which of my heartstrings to pluck, when to hold back, and when to deliver all of its squee-inducing, action-driven glory. I could count on the writer to provide us with one major giddiness-provoking development per episode, which was the perfect amount for me—enough to sustain me till the next one, but not so frequently that it felt gratuitous. I loved this couple enough to welcome gratuity, and fine, maybe a few times it dipped its toes into fan-servicey waters, but the drama’s crack factor came in the steady build, the constant narrative push-and-pull.
At the heart, I consider Healer a romance drama, but that doesn’t mean it was only a romance drama. (Not that I would ever be one to throw around the word “romance” disparagingly, as though romance somehow diminishes something’s literary, dramatic, or critical cred. I know that happens, and it drives me absolutely bonkers. Love feeds the soul! It makes the world go ’round!) I loved the layered generational mystery, the soberness of the darker threads that didn’t impinge upon the upbeatness of the storytelling, and the proof that a drama could be exciting, romantic, and feel-good all at once. Two thumbs up, a fist-bump of solidarity, a finger-waggle of excitement—I’d give you all the hand metaphors and then some.
THE PRODUCERS
Pinky finger gives you: A wet willy. Annoying, not that effective, but mostly harmless.
This entry was definitely the hardest to choose—not because I had strong feelings about any of the dramas that I’d considered for this last slot, but quite the opposite. Should I write about a show like Oh My Ghostess, which spurred me to laugh every week but also made me feel like it reneged on its central conflict? Or maybe I’d rather take on lesser-watched shows that might not get mentioned otherwise, like Let’s Eat 2 or Ex-Girlfriend Club, both of which I found very sweet but not strong enough to single out. I could take out my frustrations on Blood for being a vampire show with an interesting promise that was absolutely tanked by abysmal acting, or on Scholar Who Walks the Night for sticking Lee Jun-ki in a boring plot that wasted a lot of time running in nobly idiotic circles. Sassy Go Go and Who Are You—School 2015 and Angry Mom all landed in the same general vicinity on the stickiness scale, all fun and appealing, all flawed, none of them quite breaking ahead of the others.
Ultimately I’ve gone with The Producers, which did at least attempt something different—even if it got scared right away and backpedaled before it could get anywhere. It was perhaps more interesting on a meta level, knowing that it started out with tremendous hype about going with a new genre mixing reality and variety and drama, and putting a variety PD and crew at the helm to give it a dose of verisimilitude… only to get cold feet at first sign that the public wasn’t biting. The Korean audience response was decidedly chilly, and KBS brought in a veteran drama PD to take over, putting a swift end to that experiment.
Admittedly the first couple episodes were a little choppy, but I found it interesting that our response here (girlfriday’s and mine and a portion of the Dramabeans community) was so completely the opposite of Korea’s. I found the mockumentary-variety style refreshing and promising, going for a dry, satirical type of humor that’s already familiar to us with The Office, Modern Family, Christopher Guest and more. It wasn’t perfect, but the format gave the show an interesting energy, with sly cutaways and hidden-camera jokes, and when the new crew took over, all of the raw appeal got flattened out—Producers v.2.0 was smoother and sleeker, but also more familiar. Another love triangle, another workplace, another set of showbiz cameos and jokes.
I can’t say I disliked the drama, because the new Producers did have a wonderful cast and a sense of humor that poked at its own industry, and Kim Soo-hyun turned in an adorable performance as the brainy-but-socially-awkward rookie. I mostly had fun watching the episodes, even if they didn’t move me or stir much of an emotional response. If anything, I credit IU and her character, Cindy, for being the biggest reason I kept coming back to The Producers, even though ostensibly the main love triangle (and storyline) was the one about the three PDs. But Cha Tae-hyun and Gong Hyo-jin, as wonderful as they are as actors, were saddled with characters who just kind of dithered around their feelings, and it was Cindy’s trajectory that had the greatest emotional impact. I rooted for her to reclaim her autonomy, to stand on her own feet, to find herself and her drive and to win all the good things in life, while everyone else… could go on being successful and happy and fulfilled, I guess.
Like I said, it was a tough slot to fill, but how do you measure one meh against a sea of other mehs? Sometimes you just have to make the choice and write, already.
With all that said, I’ll bow out and turn it over to my fellow recappers, who are busily angsting over their respective sets of five and whose reviews you will be able to read very shortly. If you have comments on our new format or suggestions for next year, we welcome those as well. I’ll even take the complaints, preferably with constructive advice… though really, do you wanna be that guy? It’s the holiday season and everything. Don’t be the Scrooge!
RELATED POSTS
- 2015 Year in Review, Part 1: The Bean Count
- 2015 Beanie Awards: Vote for your favorite dramas of the year
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 6: Editors’ Picks
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 5: Santa turns over a new leaf
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 4: And the award goes to… (girlfriday’s review)
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 3: The art of lie detection (HeadsNo2’s review)
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 2: Stocking stuffers for the drama addict (gummimochi’s review)
- 2014 Year in Review, Part 1: Omg is it that time of year already? (javabeans’ review)
- 2014 Beanie Awards: Vote for your favorite dramas of the year
Tags: 1 show to rule them all, featured, Healer, Kill Me Heal Me, The Producers, Warm and Cozy, year in review, year in review 2015, Yong-pal
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51 SonyaK
December 15, 2015 at 5:33 AM
This format is nice and we will have to see the end results after the other recappers post, but I truly don't mind reading eight different long reviews. I find there are recappers who align a bit more closely with my own lists and I enjoy reading the minor dramas they watched which I might have missed. Then there are recappers whose lists do not at all align with mine and I enjoy reading about dramas I may not watch and which were not recapped. So, maybe don't throw out the idea of the long reviews altogether.
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ajewell
December 15, 2015 at 5:43 AM
I agree! I like this format, but part of me fears all the recappers are going to focus on the same dramas, and some of the quieter, more unpopular shows will be left out... but I'm sure they thought about this, so I'm waiting until all the reviews are in to offer suggestions/ officially weigh in. Until then, I'm trying to think positive lol.
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52 pl
December 15, 2015 at 5:49 AM
I watched Healer during it's run without participating in the community. It grabbed me from the first frame & soundtrack note & never let go. I have re-watched it twice. This year I convinced a friend to give kdramas a try. Healer was her fourth & she was crazy about it (and doesn't follow dramabeans or any other recapping). All to say that there are some of us out here who loved it as well, all by its wonderful self :) It will take a very special show to knock it out of my #1 slot.
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53 pandafats
December 15, 2015 at 6:02 AM
This format's pretty fun!
The way you used the fingers is pretty creative and cool ?
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54 Lixie
December 15, 2015 at 6:11 AM
KMHM
>full of unlikable chaebol characters, trite in dramaland with their snobbishness and bloodline obsessions; the tone was all over the place, hopping from rom-com to tearjerker to family sitcom in a heartbeat; the acting felt manic, if committed; and the jerky directing gave the drama a disorganized, rushed feel.
Perfect description of why it felt boring for me, even liking the main actors I couldn't get into the story after the first eps, the flashbacks were too much, the personalities were too simple and underdeveloped, the romance didn't make much sense, the company story was waste of time and the brother was creepy.
Healer I loved the first half so much but it lost steam after that and the story had a rather weak ending though the OTP was always great and one of the best for me. Great cast, good songs, adorable romance and decent action, I get why lots of people love it completely. :)
Yong-Pal I think it would have been dropped if not for Joo Won but it wasn't so terrible it was just more of the same. I don't think they got too scared for that matter, she did stay committed to her revenge and paid the price, it was the romance that really didn't work and so story had no logic because his actions were not as easy to understand.
Warm & Cozy It wasn't a good show but I liked it. It was maybe hard to understand the main character so if people think he is a jerk it really becomes easy to hate the show since it has nothing of any interest besides their relationship.
Producers I had already forgotten about it, wasn't good enough or bad enough to be remembered in the year end list but I liked it at the time though only after it became more of a random romcom. The testimonials were funny but the long scenes of the realities being produced were completely boring, like the writers had watched The Office but didn't understand the humor and thought it was ok to just get one inside joke after another.
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55 Tacprio
December 15, 2015 at 7:03 AM
My top 5 kdrama of 2015:
Kill me heal me
My beautiful bride - oh, I do wish there will be some thoughts of this drama on this site, as I admire your views so much here
Heard It Through the Grapevine - again this show doesnt seem to be attracting any attention around here, rather sad
I remember you
Assembly - another unrecognised gem
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kalel
December 15, 2015 at 10:21 AM
I agree. Especially MBB and Assembly had very few "beanies" swept off their feet. Grapevine had a larger audience who was very enthusiastic and was talking about it in OTs (if I'm not mistaken)...
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56 wonhwa
December 15, 2015 at 7:23 AM
I totally agree that Yongpal is a case of drama setting up an interesting premise and then suddenly running away from everything that made it compelling. The first six episodes were so much fun because the characters were allowed to complicated, effective and ruthless rather than "nice". To suddenly kill or send off many of the most interesting characters and abandon the central plot conceit to focus on an unbelievable gooey romance felt much more criminal than any unlicensed surgery.
I also agree on Kill Me, Heal Me. It was messy and all over the map, and the evil relatives were never especially interesting, but when the acting and writing worked, they really worked. It's a show that earned its moments and for all the sloppiness of some aspects, there were some very carefully constructed payoffs in both the script and the performances. And, although it's hard to call it a comedy it had some of the funniest scenes in it of any show I've watched this year. I know it's not everyone's cup of tea, but I really like this particular writer's ability to create complicated characters and to combine off-the-wall humor with very serious themes.
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57 eerinmide
December 15, 2015 at 7:49 AM
FAVE DRAMA: Healer and KMHM (only for Yoo-na), Ex girlfriend club(Damn you Kaudience for not noticing this gem) and Sassy GoGo (because a good bromance is my weakpoint)
FAVE OST: Healer and Sassy GoGo (damn! that whistle song) and Ex girlfriend club
BIGGEST LET DOWN: Oh my God, SO MANY! Yong Pal (nothing good ever lasts in kdramaland -__-), the time i loved you (tears guys! real tears over this waste of time) Warm and Cozy (WHY??? WHY???), Dday (*sigh* CAN NOBODY DO MEDICAL DRAMA RIGHT?? *eyeballs that other medical drama from that previous year that must NOT be remembered, I cant go down that road again) High Society (you had EVERYTHING going for you. Then you singlehandedly threw it down the drain. BOOOOO!) School 2015 (how can you go from d perfection of school 2013 (i already mentioned that bromance is my weakpoint) to this mess! Ugh. My heart) and this might surprise everyone but.. I was Pretty (WHY CANT WE HAVE A SISTERHOOD CAN CHOOSES ITSELF OVER MEN! Why must men always come between friendship, I dont understand. My bestfriend and I liked the same guy when I was 16 and we both gave him up for each other. It wasnt even a discussion, we just did it, UGH!)
CUTEST DRAMA: Sassy GoGo, Healer (hey! It was mega cute, you hear me?) and Imaginary cat (Here you go Yoo Seung Ho, my heart and brain on a platter. Do with it as you wish)
FAVE CHARACTER: Lee Won Geun in Sassy GoGo, (I am sorry, a kland guy who flirts openly? you own everything in me), Ji Chang wook in Healer(because im a faithful fan girl) and Kim tae hee in Yong Pal(I actually loved the crocodile. A female character who dishes out her own punishment without leaving it up to fate? yes please. She just did not belong with Yong Pal or in the story) and the Fox and Lion in Exgirlfriend club (Oh Rara, you are my spirit animal and Lion, youre my inner child.)
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58 Primarilyalurker
December 15, 2015 at 8:07 AM
Thank you so much for your recaps Javabeans! I stumbled across my first Kdrama at the end of April and have gone through 27 dramas in the past 8 mos. I've considered quitting my job so that I can watch dramas all day, everyday. But then I would be homeless and have no reliable place or means to indulge my drama addiction. So alas, my job has become a necessary evil:). Around the same time, I acquired my Kdrama addiction, I stumbled across dramabeans. It is now mandatory for me to watch the drama and then read the DB recaps at work the next day or even during commercial breaks. I can't tell you how any times I've gone to work on an hours sleep. Oh My Venus and Bubblegum are the only dramas that I've watch while it's being broadcast - How do people do this? It's nerve racking! Never has a week gone by so slowly! I missed the Healer bandwagon, but I have gone through 10 episodes since Sunday night based on your 2015 Beanie Awards recommendation and I love it! I guess what I'm trying to say is that discovering Kdramas,Dramabeans and my fellow beanies have been the highlight of the year 2015 for me. I look forward to spending 2016 with you all as an active participant and not just a lurker:). Thanks Again.
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sumee
December 15, 2015 at 8:48 AM
Welcome to the kdrama madness...
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Primarilyalurker
December 17, 2015 at 2:39 PM
Thank you Sumee☺️.
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59 Daniel
December 15, 2015 at 8:12 AM
What are you saying?!
Everybody loves Healer! ;)
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60 BA
December 15, 2015 at 9:27 AM
THANK YOU THANK YOU JAVABEANS. I shall give you ?? as I agree with all 5 that you picked. KMHM and Healer were the best of all 2015 along with Miesang.
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61 Dakchigo
December 15, 2015 at 9:58 AM
I liked the old style better. Five is just too few, and I'm pretty sure each one of the recappers will just review "Healer."
what I liked about the old format is that it tackles the dramas that are not as often discussed in Dramabeans as the others (to cite a few: Blood, Heard It Through the Grapevine, Masked Prosecutor, Maids, Awl). I also did not tire of reading every writer's various take on these dramas.
Sigh. I guess I'll never know what you guys think of "Heard It Through the Grapevine."
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62 Millionstars
December 15, 2015 at 10:39 AM
Another year gone! Time files man! Thanks everyone here on dramabeans for making 2015 another fun year <3
And it's so good to see all the familiar names here from healer page :D
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63 Abbie
December 15, 2015 at 11:15 AM
It amazes me how many dramas there were this year, and how few I watched, not because I didn't like them, But because I kind of experienced a drama-burn out this year....and because I was without internet for the past four months. Now that I (kind of) have it back, I've been catching up on some dramas. But of the five listed here, the only one I watched was The Producers, and I didn't even finish it. I followed it for the first few weeks then dropped it. IU was my main reason for watching it, but even she couldn't get me to stick around for long.
I've heard a lot of great things about Healer which has piqued my interest so I may give that a look. The rest I'm steering clear of.
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64 helloghost
December 15, 2015 at 12:38 PM
It still bothers me that I'm always a day late to the party. #eastcoastprobs
I am liking this new format, Javabeans! I've always loved reading reviews and perspective of dramas that are completely out of my radar, just because sometimes impulse-watching could turn out to be the best experience ever ;) I think that's the case with me and Healer, which I have never heard of even from my Korean friends. For the first time ever, I started watching a drama solely because of its little Viki thumbnail successfully seduced me after continuous attempts. So thank you Viki for your excellent determination.
Despite the mixed reviews and quite literally the writing itself, my drama of the year still goes to Yong-pal.
Yong-pal for me defines wonderful mess is all about, or the ultimate guilty pleasure if you can only choose one. It's like saying I love the drama just because. Perhaps it's the way the drama affected me, chaotic yet heart-fluttering, or perhaps it's just Joo-won's performance and irresistible charm, even so I had a blast with every episodes even if it means wanting to kill crocodile Han Yeo Jin every time.
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helloghost
December 15, 2015 at 12:56 PM
Producer is very refreshing and was my laughter-machine of this year. Two words: inside jokes.. I like everything about it but the development of the story. The arcs felt very premature except Cindy's. She was also a highlight for me in the drama. But even all the great actors are being piled up in the same place, the writing is still pivotal no? I'm up for another season though, had a hunch that Park Ji-Eun is still hiding her secret weapon on this.
I've watched the first couple of episodes of Kill Me Heal Me and Warm and Cozy. For now, KMHM appealed to me more since I've been working on a DID-inspired script since years ago and kinda stuck with it.
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65 Nikilann
December 15, 2015 at 1:55 PM
I just wanted to say something about Healer : don't worry you're not alone. It made our blog community in France as crazy as it made Dramabeans' community haha.
Healer just made people crazy. Because it was healer. And I met with korean girls in France and they had seen it and liked it. So hope is not lost ^^
Also, wonderful end of the year recap. But it just made me realize I have to write mine. And as I haven't make a 5 drama rule... I still have 29 to write about. Holy shit.
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66 Aigoooo
December 15, 2015 at 2:48 PM
Out of all the dramas I have watched this year, I'd give props to Heart to Heart the most. It was a little show that mostly went unnoticed amidst the Healer/Kill Me Heal Me hoopla. Some of the best acting done by a female lead this year came from Choi Kang Hee who I had never been impressed with before. She showed a lot range playing Cha Hong Do and as a pretend grandma. The drama itself had some of the best romantic scenes I have seen this year and probably has the best OST.
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67 t13ndoank
December 15, 2015 at 3:37 PM
Excuse me guys...
Do not just talk about Healer, m'kay? I know that the mention of Healer will always stimulate that giddy feeling of ours, but surely some other shows also have done the same effects, no? I know that we always want to squeee again at the sight of Healer at the rooftop, or Healer and Young shin kissing, or the cuddly bed scenes, but surely some other dramas also have had similar scenes and made us squeal too, haven't they? I know that we can discuss the Healer's infamous handporn for pages, I know that we can sing Eternal Love together together like a choir, I know..... wait, wait! Why am I the one who keep mentioning Healer??
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68 Jam
December 15, 2015 at 3:48 PM
I absolutely love the new format!! It's creative and fun to read. For this year, my fave dramas are:
1. Oh My Ghostess
2. Reply 1988 (I sincerely hope it ends well)
3. Twenty Again
Lol, all tvN dramas - not a surprise.
On the other hand, can't believe it's already the end of 2015....T_T
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69 Sam Sergio
December 15, 2015 at 5:56 PM
Love the new format; it is pure genius, especially the middle finger spot. you will need to flip the bird more often.
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70 graey
December 15, 2015 at 7:55 PM
Sad to see the old style gone. But whatever makes you guys happy(and less tired ofc) makes me(us) happy. :) :)
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71 Heart
December 15, 2015 at 11:00 PM
Was hoping heart to heart and i remember you would feature in the list. I loved healer for its fast, edgy action and great chemistry between d leads. I never liked jcw before healer happened.
I loved heart to heart in equal measure too. Yes, d plot kinda became convoluted towards d end and the noble idiocy trope reared its ugly head at some point but never for too long. Hong do's journey was touching...from extreme social phobia to being d source of comfort and healing for d people whose tragedy is mired in her own...no over the top theatrics or dramatics here but just so poignant.
I Remember you was a humane and intelligent thriller. Need i say more.
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72 dramalover95
December 16, 2015 at 5:02 AM
I appreciate the thoughts behind this new format of reviewing dramas, but, will the combined review of dramabeans' very own 'best drama, best leading actress etc' remain (not the voting one)? I hope it remains as it serves as a very important criteria for me when i shortlist dramas to watch!
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73 pastmidnite
December 16, 2015 at 7:20 AM
So I guess I'm late for the party :-(
But better late than never!
I read girlfriday's review first after reading her tweet, no Healer there (although of course she mentioned it), so my guess was it must be here in javabeans' review and I was right :-D
I love the new format! Five is perfect! But so is ten, or twenty! LOL Basically I would love any format you ladies give us, as long as you keep Dramabeans alive, and I have all the DB crew and beanies to thank for that. Here's to the end of a wonderful year of kdramas and the start of hopefully a more wonderful one ahead!
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74 Grey
December 16, 2015 at 7:21 AM
I love love love healer its an amazing drama from start to end i really loved city hunter but healer is really a very good actor actually he was amazing..
Kill me heal me was good drama the actor is a fantastic actor he was beyond amazing its like no one could have done it but him i jus felt the drama at end became less interesting where as healer was awsome every episode..
The common thing is they both have an annoying song ;)
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75 Jooni Noona
December 16, 2015 at 7:56 AM
Wow, javabeans' letter to the Hong Sisters was the saddest write-up I have ever read here in Dramabeans. ?
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76 namedx
December 16, 2015 at 1:13 PM
Thank you so much for this year end review, Javabeans - it was so much fun to read!! Loving the new format, too. It works, and I don't feel so overwhelmed by the number of dramas reviewed.
Healer would definitely be my pick of the crop - that drama made me go all out: join a fanbase, partake in an international fan project, and splurge out on the director's cut edition of the drama itself!! So much mania, so much enclosed hype, but so totally worth it. It may not have garnered such a huge following in Korea, but I reckon the international hype more than made up for it, especially since it was picked up by the cast and crew; writer Song Ji Na herself left a sincere note of thanks to all international fans, and recognised how much Healer was loved and appreciated, how cool is that!!
Look forward to all the other reviews!
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mary of bethany
December 22, 2015 at 6:58 PM
just one thing:
loved your works of adoration at Moru Moru Blog.
continue spreading "Healing luv" for Healerya.
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77 Jen
December 16, 2015 at 7:45 PM
Hi Javabeans!! And thanks for the first year-in review 2015!
Thanks for putting KMHM your first drama here coz this drama has been a real emotional ride... I cry when Cha DoHyun or Shin Se Gi cries, I grin when Yona rack havok in Ori-On/Ori-Jin's life, I sob (and still do) when I had to say goodbye to Perry Park, I get melancholy when Yosub goes with his final poem, and I just simply am a wreck whenever I see the hero suffers and the horror the kids experienced when they were young. This drama has got to be the stand-out for me in 2015.
Healer was such a romantic and broken hero. JCW's acting proved again that he is a young force to be reckoned with in Kdamaland. This drama has elevated his popularity especially overseas including the China. Although the last few episodes fell flat for me, the overall experience with Healer was one of a kind, including the fan-base here in DB.
Didn't watch Warm and Cozy, mainly because I'm not a fan of both the leads.....
Young Pal is WTF drama for me this year, and I know many here are Joo Won's fans who stuck with this drama coz of him. For me, who is not a Joo Won fan, I watched this initially for the premise announced before the drama aired but half way through, I gave up coz of how ridiculous its become. Total waste of my time.
Producer is just..... normal. It doesn't give me the KYAAA I need for a romcom, it doesn't impress me with out-of-the-world acting, it doesn't tell me a story that I would remember. To me, this could have been acted by any other good actors but if you consider the VERY popular KSH inside + the other veteran leads in here, you wonder HUH? THAT'S IT? The exepctations was too high and the drama didn't deliver, to me at least.
Looking forward to the other reviews coming up! Already read and commented at GF's review.
Thank you DB!
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78 novakarlin
December 16, 2015 at 8:24 PM
I am really really still loving HEALER to the moon and back.. those hillarious days with HEALER FANDOM and our dorky-endless-squueeeling was unforgettable. Trust me it's beyond words :). Thanks for your recap JB. It was the first time in this year for me dying~~ waiting MONDAY for coming faster every week ^^.
16 episodes of Healer (including: Ji Chang Wook, all casts, storyline, even it OST!) with dramabeans, JB, and all of my lovely HEALER-squad was my very own slice of happines in 2015 for sure ♥
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79 Lilium
December 17, 2015 at 1:40 AM
I guess I liked Healer primarily for its conspiracy storyline although that did get a bit messy. It took a while to get going for me and the romance while okay didn't send me to giddy heights of fan-girl squeeing. Perhaps Healer felt derivative for someone like me who grew up on Lois and Clark. What I did love was the dynamic between the three main characters. That I thought was quite unique.
Oddly or perhaps not so much, I enjoyed Yong Pal a lot more. Despite its flaws, I loved the leads and I liked the idea of a ruthless female lead with a soft spot for her man. Where the show went wrong, I thought was turning YP into a goody goody and then leaving the woman he loved (because he found his conscience apparently) instead of joining her in the swamp which from his history would have been the more likely thing for him to do.
Missing M Noir was probably for me the most consistently good show that I saw this year.
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Lilium
December 17, 2015 at 1:42 AM
Gah... Missing Noir M.
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80 TrinPie
December 17, 2015 at 9:56 AM
I watched Healer without the Dramabeans community and I become obsessed all on my own. I couldn't stop watching, it had everything perfect in the show. Perfect writing(everything that I wanted to have happen, happened) perfect writing, directing, editing, etc.. I then suggested it to my brother and Mom (both who don't come to Dramabeans) and they also became obsessed.
So I think the show is just GOOD and Me, my mom and brother all consider it our favorite drama.
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81 Changwook is my Healer
December 21, 2015 at 11:12 AM
Ahhh Healer.... What a good time on internet. I actually not interested in kdrama anymore but accidentally watch the series on my TV. It got me excited and keep wanting for more. That's when I started become JCW's fan. He is a very talented actor. Glad that I found him.
Like what written above. I admire the writer's work the most. It was a very good ride with smooth pace & good surprises. The main couple made me so lonely by watching them cuddling each other out... Not that I complain. So yeah. JiChangwook...I love you...haha
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82 berries
December 30, 2015 at 3:31 AM
healer and kill me heal me are the 2 most memorable ones this year!
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83 May
December 31, 2015 at 11:43 AM
The drama I'll remember this year will most definitely be KMHM.
2015 = Kill me Heal Me and Jisung's outstanding performance.
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84 Mrs Denny Lee
February 18, 2016 at 7:55 PM
Kill me Heal me: magical. Even with its flaws. Truly because I am not kdrama savvy to critique intelligently, I thought the beginning part in America was laughable (stereotypes) and the scene with Perry and HJE on the motorcycle and the buildings exploding was straight out of the 80's tv show but the story already had me and that made it great to me. Side note: If I remember correctly I think HJM already started which I was excited about but the story wasn't that great.
Healer: magical in the beginning but I was committed and continued to watch to the end
Warm and Cozy: Not magical but kept watching hoping it would be like other Hong Sister shows. Liked the older couple story more. Disappointed.
Healer: magical
Producers: Thought it was going to be like The Office but maybe that humor doesn't translate. I tried to continue but it was painful even with a great cast.
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85 Manpreet Kaur Sidhu
April 7, 2016 at 12:44 AM
Thanks for the entersting insight
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Manpreet Kaur Sidhu
April 7, 2016 at 12:45 AM
*interesting
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86 Dongsaeng
April 27, 2017 at 1:16 PM
It's just one word guys....HEALER!!!?
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