Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts

Cheese in the Trap (2016 TV Series)

Friday, June 11, 2021

 A cute, twisted little uni drama! 


Hong Seol: Others might not know, but I know... the truly scary face hidden behind that fake smile.


The Rundown

Behind the name: Based on the Webtoon: 치즈 인 더 트랩 

Country: South Korea, 2016

Genre: Rom-Com

Production: Lee Yoon-Jung

Network: tvN

Director: Lee Yoon-jung

Cast:   Kim Go-Eun (as Hong Seol), Park Hae-Jin (as Yoo Jung), Seo Kang-Joon (as Baek In-Ho), Lee Sung-Kyung (as Baek In-Ha) Nam Joo-Hyuk (as Kwon Eun-Taek), Park Min-Ji (as Jang Bo-ra)

Compare to: Boys Over Flowers

Hate it or Love it?  Enjoy it


Synopsis in a Sentence: A manipulative ‘angel’ makes life a living hell for those around him... undercover, so what happens when you get to be the cheese in his trap?



On Writing: The Plot

Oh, where to start. The writing is quite remarkable for capturing the nuances of complex characters, the double layers behind their motives, and the insecurities that fuel their actions. That’s the first thing. 

The second thing is that… it is sooooo cute! From a female perspective. Both cute and toxic at the same time. But layered and nuanced and at some levels, absolutely astounding! 

Great writing, great plot, not-so-great impact? 

(4/5)




On Acting: The Cast 

A very well cast crew! 

All hail Park Hae-Jin, the handsome heartthrob who is stoic, dangerous and angelic at the same time. We’re really talking about his character. That’s how good he is as an actor. 

Kim Go-Eun is female lead and of course good! She plays the innocent, childlike university girl well, of course, so great work on the acting. As a petition to the writers, can we please get a real, well rounded female lead? Not an emotionally stunted 15-year old masked as a 20-something year old woman? Little rant here, but this character, as portrayed, is so extremely cliche in the Manhwa/K-drama space! 

Seo Kang-Joon is Beak In Ho and quite the hooligan! A job well done as we haven’t quite seen him in this role before. 

Beak In-ha is such a character! And she plays her effortlessly, believably and wonderfully! Fabulous acting from the larger-than-life Lee Sung-Kyung!  

And honourable mention goes to Nam Joo-Hyuk, who plays friend to our female lead along side Park Min-Ji and honourable mentions to the full cast of “college kids” that come together to make this a binge-worthy guilty pleasure! 

A very well cast team! Great characters, glorious portrayals! 

 (4.5/5) 


On Production: The Creativity

The creativity is perhaps mostly on the plot and character side, but production does not let us down. Good work overall, and a great addition to portraying and relaying the story.

(4/5)                                              


On Resolution: The Conclusion

The ending is quite unlike what we’ve seen before. The resolution? Deserved a re-watch, but for the innovation that springs past the expected K-Drama ending, the conclusion deserves some props!  

(4/5)


The Verdict: An absolutely cute, lovey dovey portrayal of a toxic relationship, with a twist of an ending that perhaps redeems the story… a bit...  


Overall Score = 16.5/20







Review: The CEO (2016 Film)

Monday, February 20, 2017
Went to see this one in cinemas in Nigeria and was enthralled by the storyline—top managers from all over around Africa vying for the title of global CEO? Yes!


A story of intrigue, power and all the political/financial struggles of modern day Africa.

The Rundown
Behind the name: The Chief Operating Officer   
Country: Nigeria, 2016
 Genre: Thriller, Drama
Written by: Tunde Babalola
Director: Kunle Afolayan
                  Cast: Wale Ojo (as Kola), Angélique Kidjo (as Dr. Zara Zimmerman),             Hilda Dokubo (as Superintendent Ebenezer), Nico Panagio (as Riikard), Jimmy Jean-Louis (as Jean-Marc), Fatym Layachi (as Yasmin), Peter King Nzioki (as Jomo), Kemi Lala Akindoju (as Lisa)
                  Compare to: Itself
                  Hate it or Love it? Like it

Synopsis in a Sentence: Top managers from all over Africa meet in Lagos, Nigeria to compete for the CEO spot, but will any of them live to take the no.1 spot? 
           

On Writing: The Plot
The story is unique and quite new, at least for Nollywood’s typical fixation on family dramas, so points for that! Also, we get to see continental representation of Africa, including the North! Otherwise the story is relatively disjointed and a bit patchy, and with a few unbelievable bits, but at least points for exploring a new storyline, right? 
(3/5)

On Acting: The Cast
The cast is quite famous and very diverse and that’s by far the highlight; perhaps a wonderful cast would have taken the alright storyline and made it almost great, but quite honestly, the cast was just like the plot—alright; perhaps not because the actors were bad, but because they weren’t cast correctly. For Example, acclaimed actress Hilda Dokubo makes her big come back in this movie, after what seems like 20 years, and she’s cast to play a super-charged, super aggressive inspector; which is not the best choice for her, because the legendary actress we know from the 90s is famed for playing the sweetest, saddest characters, and this role is simply not her, especially after she’s spent so much time away from the big screen. And then there’s Angelique Kidjo, legendary Grammy-award-winning musician, but she is not quite her character here.
But the best actor goes to Peter King Nzioki, who plays the top manager from Kenya. He is absolutely convincing and believable, which is much needed from this picture!
 (3/5)


On Production: The Creativity
Production is the best thing in this movie! The shots are gorgeous and we get to see Lagos in a new light! A far cry from the hustle and bustle and craziness of the city, we see the touristic part of Nigeria’s largest city in the most gorgeous way! And the actors and the plot are saved by the magic that is production. A job well; very well done!
(4/5)                                             

On Resolution: The Conclusion
So much to say here but let’s get straight to the point—the resolution is quite a fail. Mostly for the premise of the conclusion, it’s incomplete and unconvincing, and haphazard resolution. Don’t believe it? Watch and see—even if just for that.
(2/5)

The Verdict: A good watch; novel storyline and outlook to African actors, but overall, average
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Overall Score = 12/20
Watch the Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm0pmb0CXxg




Review: Age of Youth (2016 TV Series)

Sunday, December 11, 2016
Saw this one a bit after seeing Ode to Joy, and I wanted a light-hearted girly TV fix. After it was done, it was anything but “light.”Dare I say it was my fave South Korean series of 2016? Yes, I dare say so! It’s SO well done, it’s ridiculous!


The truth is rarely pure and never simple.

The Rundown
Behind the name: The perfect name for the coming of age of young women
Country: South Korea, 2016
Genre: Drama, Comedy, Coming of Age
Network: JTBC
Director: Lee Tae-Gon
Writer: Park Yeon-Sun
Cast: Han Ye-Ri (as Yoon Jin-Myung), Hwa Young (as Kang Yi-Na), Han Seung-Yeon (as (Jung Ye-Eun), Park Eun-Bin (as Song Ji-Won), and Park Hye-Soo (as Yoo Eun-Jae)
                  Compare to: Ode to Joy
                  Hate it or Love it?  Love it! Very Much!


Synopsis in a Sentence: Five girls’ lives cross paths in a “shared house” and they all get into one another’s business—two of them are murderers (maybe three), the other’s an insecure girlfriend in an abusive relationship and another’s forever alone—can they help fix one one another’s issues?  
           
On Writing: The Plot
The plot is everything! It’s so good, it’s exceptional! It’s layered and complex and multi dimensional and intriguing and fun, and like I said, everything!
Love, love, love the story of these five, very different young ladies. The characters are relatable, and most of all, their stories are real! In every episode there were scenes so real and relatable.
The plot’s also deep, as it deals with too-real-for-TV drama, and very relevant social issues, including abuse, death, young prostitution (even male prostitution), sex and family secrets, while managing to maintain a didactic outlook without the preachy righteousness of any specific moral leanings, all with a comedic twist. Very, very excellently done! 
And a thousand cheers to the writer, Park Yun-Sun, this is absolutely one of the best TV stories I’ve seen in my life! The writing is excellent and deep and playful and complex and light-hearted and true-to-life all at the same time. It’s unlike anything seen on South Korean TV in the last decade. Gorgeous, gorgeous work! 
 (4.75/5)


On Acting: The Cast
The cast is beautiful and we just can’t quite get enough of the characters’ quirks and cuteness!
We are first introduced to Park Hye-Soo, as Yoo Eun-Jae in the series and she’s so apprehensive and shy and modest that we can all relate to her at least once in our lives. We watch “The Shy One” become stronger, grow and even blow up a few times in the series, and she’s a great actress for portraying all these emotions so well. There is also much, much more to her character than meets the eye, but you’ll have to watch the series to discover that!
Next, we meet Han Seung-Yeon, who plays Jung Ye-Eun, the “Boyfriend-Obsessed,” almost-has-it-all girl with an adorable boyfriend, but we are almost immediately introduced to her insecurities, masking itself under meanness and feigned kindness. Han actually comes from the girl group, Kara, and it’s a delight to watch her here as she’s absolutely convincing!
Kang Yi-Na, “The Hot One,” is Park Eun-Bin in real life and we love the way she portrayed her fearlessly confident, smoking hot, loose, reckless, irresponsible and kind character. Park makes the typically hated role completely relatable and she’s a star for making that possible!
Arguably the coolest, Han Ye-Ri defines Yoon Jin-Myung’s character in the series, who is “The Tough One.” Han is to hard-shell, icy cold, and yet so relatable it’s amazing. She highlights the enduring spirit of her character that we’re inspired not to give up on life! A fabulous, fabulous job!
Finally, we get to know Hwa Young through Song Ji-Won’s character in the series. Hwa is “The Awkward Loner,” and Hwa is her in this series. We can totally relate to the her friendzonability, but her character soon proves to be the binding agent to this deep friendship, and Hwa does more than well through Ji-Won’s character
An overall great cast! Can’t wait to see this promising group of actresses in other series! Manse!
 (4.5/5)


On Production: The Creativity
Production is—dare I say—the star of the series. The entire story, despite its fabulously talented cast and its excellent plot, could have easily been a flop with rubbish production. But with editing, transitions, music, shots et al, this one is pure gold!
The opening shots are gorgeously, artfully, perfectly done; I’ve really never seen anything like it, especially in South Korean cinema! The opening themes are a production of thematic videos beautifully edited together to set the tone for the start of each episode. Production really is artful and absolutely gorgeous!
Transitions are so beautiful and meaningful and… oh gosh, I could gush forever, but honestly, exceptional work on the creative front!
(4.75/5)                                             

On Resolution: The Conclusion
The saddest thing is that the series ends only after 12 episodes! What a travesty! A production like this should go on for at least 20, or 24 if possible. But we know not all TV stations can afford the budget, so we are at least glad we get to see a production like Age of Youth at all. Great job everyone! And the ending is just as good too!
(4.5/5)

The Verdict: An absolute must watch! Even for you, guys!  

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Overall Score = 18.5/20


WATCH Age of Youth: https://www.viki.com/tv/32334c-age-of-youth?locale=en