2022 Don K-xote K-drama Awards

Hello and welcome to my own little private awards show for my beloved K-dramas! I am absolutely embarrassed by how late in the year I am getting this out into the world, but my K-drama chingus told me I needed to finish it & that they would read it, so here I go!

2022 had SO MANY great shows, including some of the most compelling performances in years (if I had ended up doing a Best Actress list this year, which I decided not to in order to just get this post finished, it would be SO LONG!!!) and this year is clearly a continuation of an era of PEAK K-dramas (I personally think that from 2016 until now, South Korean shows represent some of the best television being created worldwide). It’s great to see Netflix really leading out on K-content, but Disney+, Amazon, Apple TV, and other streaming services have been purchasing & producing some quality shows as well (though shame on Disney+ for not offering many of the shows in the US that are available on their service abroad!! UPDATE: I just learned that many of these shows are being put on Hulu in the US!).

In any case, I share this list with you all in the hope that you might find some shows from the 35 dramas that I watched this year that you might be interested in checking out & hopefully would also enjoy! I also apologize for any shows that I did not like as much as you did (and hopefully you all can recommend some shows that I missed–which may have been because I couldn’t FIND them playing anywhere in the USA, like Big Mouth, The Golden Spoon, or Link: Eat, Love, Kill [a contender for worst K-drama title of all time]!! UPDATE: All of these shows are on Hulu!). Without further ado, I give you…

  1. My Liberation Notes: This show was written by one of my favorite K-drama writers, Park Hae-young (Another Miss Oh, My Mister), so I was ready to love it, but then when I began watching it, it seemed like a bit of a downer. However, as I kept watching, it evolved into such a penetrating, poignant, and yet also hilarious portrait of human longing, frustration, and loneliness. I’ve liked Kim Ji-wan from shows like Fight for My Way and Lovestruck in the City, but she was a REVELATION here with a stunningly subtle and fierce depiction of a commuting office worker who is feeling an existential crisis and wants to find some kind of freedom from what her life has become, & through her honesty (partly through the “liberation diary club” she starts at her work), she ends up transforming so many people around her. Her mysterious love interest, played by Son Suk-ku (who was so great in the latter half of Be Melodramatic) was incredibly fascinating, in both his inscrutability and his subsequent opening to a possible new way of life & love. The most startling part of my enjoyment of this show came from two actors I have not really liked before: Lee Min-ki, who always seems so robotic in previous roles, but here was full of a wide range of emotions from eruptive anger to epiphanic wonder to profound self-awareness; and Lee El, who usually plays a sexy femme fatale-type, but here was both woundedly self-centered and self-deprecatingly desperate. Actually all of the actors were amazing, the script was poetic and yet still very much a portrait of unexceptional lives, and the cinematography left many images permanently burned into my memory. This is the real deal, folks.
  2. Alchemy of Souls (seasons 1 & 2): This fantasy-romance is NOT my typical sort of show and I have mixed feelings about the past work of the writers, the Hong sisters (i.e. Hotel del Luna, Warm & Cozy), but this show was SO incredibly addictive–I just could not wait for the next episode to come out. Every element of showmaking was at the top of its game, but the acting (from leads to minor roles) was the most outstandingly delightful–I feel like Lee Jae-wook could power a city with his electric charm. I was one of those who was offended that the show dropped actress Jung So-min in the female lead role after we had grown so attached to her brilliantly nuanced performance as Mu-deok for 20 episodes, but then Ko Yoon-jung‘s gentle & wonder-filled performance somehow IMMEDIATELY won me over in the first episode of the second season (I did still wish So-min could have somehow re-appeared, but I think I understand the narrative logic of having another character play Jang Uk’s love). My only complaint is that it felt rushed in the last 3-4 episodes and I wished we’d had more time to see more of the bromances along with the absolutely adorable middle-aged couple portrayed by the gorgeous and feisty Oh Na-ra and the hilarious and wise Yu Jung-san. I just wanted more of everything (perhaps another season may be in the works?)!!
  3. Thirty-nine: You need to know from the outset that this is a tremendously sad drama–it centers on three close female friends who find out that one of them has a terminal disease–but it really ended up being a profoundly moving and also comical account of how they (and their families and lovers) navigated this depressing reality. All three female leads were astonishingly good (Son Ye-jin, of Crash Landing on You fame, is one of my all time favorites), but Hospital Playlist‘s Jeon Mi-do really stole the show here! Please push through even if you have an aversion like I do to sad endings because this show is a joy to behold!
  4. Twenty-five Twenty-One: Up until the last 2-3 episodes, I thought this would FOR SURE be my favorite show of the year. Like the other top shows, it’s perfectly cast with actors who can balance drama, comedy, and the balance of nostalgia and realism. Kim Tae-ri as Na Hee-do showed a range of emotional depth and hilarious exasperation and Nam Joo-hyuk as Baek Ye-jin’s arc went from despair to rediscovery of hope and the astonishment he has at how much he loves Hee-do, which makes these stars the standouts, but, truly, each performer had me enthralled, especially the “sis-mance” between Kim Tae-ri & Bona and the second lead romance between Bona and newcomer Choi Hyun-wook (and his platonic friendship with the brilliant Lee Joo-myoung). The Y2K era was fun to revisit, and I was grateful for the frame story set during COVID (this is one of the few shows to acknowledge that reality), but honestly, it seemed like it was setting us up to be a “healing drama” about how our relationships and community can get us through the toughest of times, but then…the ending did not seem to follow through on that logic. SPOILER: I wasn’t as traumatized by the bittersweet, unhappy ending as my wife was (I knew better than to bring up this show for almost a month!), but I honestly felt like it was not a consistent conclusion given the hard-won lessons that the main characters had learned. I will now think twice before watching a show from writer Kwon Do-Eun (who also wrote the great show Search:WWW).
  5. Our Blues: I had been waiting for this show for a long time–it had been announced prior to 2020 as a show from writer No Hee-kyung named Here with an all-star cast about a group of people who work for an international non-profit organization. For whatever reason, that show never materialized, but the same all-star cast ended up in Our Blues: Lee Byung-hun, Shin Min-a, Han Ji-min, Kim Woo-bins post-cancer comeback (he also happens to by Min-a’s boyfriend IRL!), and the adorable elderly actress Kim Hye-ja & everyone’s favorite eomma, Lee Jung-eun (who is playfully single here!). There were about 5 stories going on simultaneously, all interconnected, and I liked some of them more than others, but all were truly compelling and gripping, ranging from broken-hearted first love stories to parent-child reconciliation to teenage pregnancy (so happy they kept the baby!), including issues of crippling depression, an honest portrait of a sibling relationship where one sister has Down’s Syndrome (and makes some amazing art!) and the other who wants to free herself from caring for her. It’s all set on the island of Jeju, my dream vacation spot (the Asian Hawaii of sorts), so I got to vicariously live there for a time!
  6. Extraordinary Attorney Woo: This show was one of those where everything was put together so perfectly (as in, they hired the TOP talent–it just looked expensively made), you just knew it was going to be a hit. Park Eun-bin is one of the most capably diverse actors in Korea today and here she captures a woman on the autistic spectrum with a deft touch (sometimes it felt like the tics were a bit on the nose, but it still seemed realistic) and it was great to see Kang Tae-oh finally emerge as a romantic lead after many gripping secondary roles. The various cases all kept my interest well and I liked the law firm staff’s banter, but honestly, the main thing that kept this from being higher on my list was just that I didn’t feel like I would ever need to re-watch this show…and that somewhat ineffable quality is something that factors highly in my appreciation of a show.
  7. Love All Play: This was a show that I ended up buying after seeing some clips of it on Reels & YouTube and discovering that even though Disney+ had produced the show, it was not available to stream in the US (c’mon, Mickey!). I’m not a sports fan at all, but I could tell that the aching romance between players on a badminton team played by two of my favorite up-and-coming performers, Park Ju-hyun (outstanding in Extracurricular) & Chae Jong-hyup (Nevertheless‘s “potato boy”) was going to be worth it & I can tell you IT WAS ADORABLE!! My wife and I had a blast watching it together and she’s now re-watching it with my daughter (who just happens to be getting really into badminton!). I loved the team members and the minor story arcs a lot as well. If any local friends want to borrow it, just let me know!
  8. Cheer Up: Okay, so I said I don’t like sports, therefore THIS cheerleading (and it’s different than American cheerleading) show seemed like a very unlikely contender to end up on my top 10 list (and, TBH, the cheerleading parts WERE a bit tiresome & weird to me) and there was a thriller kind of mystery happening in the background which never worked for me, but the story of a poor young woman trying to pay her way through college while discovering new friendships and love just totally grabbed me. The MAIN reason it all worked is that actress Han Ji-hyun just OWNED the screen with her comic skills (amazing facial expressions), unexpected charm, and unstoppable determination–she carried this whole show (though there were many appealing actors on the cast as well). I’d not watched any seasons of The Penthouse, so I thought she was a debut actress, but apparently she was really evil in that show!
  9. Bulgasal: Immortal Souls: This was one of those DARK fantasy shows with a good amount of gore involving supernatural monsters, but the main storyline (SPOILER: ancient enemies fall in love) was gripping and intense. The two leads, Lee Jin-uk (who’s been in many shows, just not many I’ve seen other than Sweet Home) and Kwon Na-ra (who’s ALWAYS amazing, but was so incredible in My Mister & Itaewon Class) have this wonderfully twisted chemistry, as a seemingly innocent woman who’s always been on the run gets taken in by the immortal who she thinks killed her twin sister (and whose younger sister seems to have a “past life” connection to the man as well). I was getting some fun Goblin vibes when these three and a high school student all live together, but for the most part, it is pretty violent and tragic. Happy ending? Kind of!
  10. The Sound of Magic: When I found out this was a kind of musical, I almost didn’t watch it, but I’m so glad I did. Ji Chang-wook is wonderfully engaging as usual and the adorable Hwang In-yeop lights up the screen even as the (sort of) bad guy, but again, a new female lead named Choi Sung-eun carried this whole show with the gravity and longing of her impoverished and difficult journey to believe that she can ever find joy again. When it happens, you will need some tissue. So good!
  11. Summer Strike: This was the show where two introverts fall in love in the countryside (or a town in the country), so there are a lot of silent glances as the two leads slowly open up to one another, but Seol Hyun (whom I’d never seen in a show before but is a 2nd generation K-pop idol apparently) totally had me hooked with her performance as a girl quitting her job in the city to rediscover herself by hanging out in the library all the time–sounds like heaven. I had a bit harder time swallowing Im Si-wan as the male lead (maybe due to his weird haircut?) but a lot of people loved him in this show, so maybe it’s just me. It was giving Little Forest vibes (for those who’ve seen that show).
  12. Dear.M: This was the show whose airing got delayed for about a year because of bullying allegations against the main actress, Park Hye-soo, which turned out to be false (this is one thing that kind of drives me crazy about Korean culture–you think American cancel culture is bad, but we don’t tend to accept stories about people’s middle school behavior as career-ending, especially when it turns out to be false). In the end, I thought it was a great college drama focusing on two sets of roommates who fall in and out of love with each other. The cast includes some wonderful up and coming performances (one of whom is a member of the boy group NCT).
  13. Sh**ting Stars: My daughter & I couldn’t help but think that the first word was a vulgar term (dark humor), but Weightlifting Fairy Lee Sung-kyung definitely shone brightly again in this role as an employee at an acting agency, and her male lead, Kim Young-dae (also a break-out star from The Penthouse). There were some fun side stories with engaging performances, but, like Cheer Up, it had a psychopath storyline that felt unnecessary to me and it did drag a bit. But I still thought it was a great watch!
  14. Love is for Suckers: Choi Si-wan is one of my favorite Korean actors–ever since I first saw him in She Was Pretty, I’ve thought that he has the effortless charm and elegance of a Cary Grant–and Lee Da-hee is someone I absolutely adore and admire from her great work in The Beauty Inside and Search:WWW, so putting them together seems like a recipe for success & this show about long time friends pondering their own romantic potential had many moments of greatness, but the writing was not so great and the amount of time spent on the romance-based reality show-within-the-show was a bit of a slog (though the in-show love interest for Si-wan, played by Lee Ju-yeon, was a gentle and winsome revelation!). I’ll say that I wanted to love this show a lot more than I actually did, but my expectations may simply have simply been too high!
  15. Once upon a Small Town: There was absolutely nothing really wrong with this show–it was a charmer from beginning to end, but it also felt too short and like it didn’t really have any bite to it, but if you are looking for a sweet show about childhood friends being reunited in a rural setting (involving a lot of large animal veterinarian work), then this is for you. I loved the male lead in School 2021 and he is doing a fine job here, but Red Velvet’s Joy is the pure ray of sunshine that lights up this show. (If you’ve never watched Tempted/The Great Seducer, Joy magnificently plays the innocent victim of a revenge-fueled seduction–based on the Dangerous Liaisons storyline–where the playboy ends up falling in love with her: superb!)

SO that’s all I have for 2022. (CORRECTION: I forgot to add my favorite short dramas from the year, including Soundtrack #1 (so great), Alice, the Final Weapon (fascinating but oh so violent), and New Love Playlist (which was kind of a low budget show but was the first show I have seen that tackled life at university during COVID lockdown!).

I usually talk a bit of crap about the shows I didn’t like or dropped so you have been saved from those rants (thought Fanletter, Please was just horrid). I will say that I’m sad that I didn’t like a few shows as much as others did (Reborn Rich, Business Proposal, Today’s Webtoon, Little Women, etc.) and there was one show I was SO SAD I didn’t like (Why Her? with my favorite actress Seo Hyun-jin). There were a few REALLY WELL MADE Netflix shows that were just far too dark (Glitch) or sexual (Somebody). There were also some shows I liked but just didn’t quite pull me in (If You Wish Upon Me, May I Help You?) and others that were good but also a bit overplayed (All of Us Are Dead). I also enjoyed watching, but somehow didn’t love Forecasting Love & Weather with the always great Park Min-young and hot guy Song Kang.

2022 had many great shows that will probably be watched again at some point in the future, but I’ve got to get back to catching up with my 2023 K-dramas and working on the novel I’m writing, Don K-xote, which inspired my blog name!

2021 Don K-xote K-drama Awards

Once again, the arrival of the Baeksang Awards has reminded me that the time has come to finally put together the list of my favorite K-dramas, performances, etc. from last year.  I truly JUST finished the last show that I had intended to watch from 2021 (Lost, which I had to buy on DVD to watch!) so I’m finally ready to lavish my praise on the shows & performances that I hope you might give a chance if you’ve not seen them.  

I thought I might begin by sharing a bit of what guides my sense of why I LOVE one show and DETEST or DROP another.  The first & most important quality of a show is that it usually (as in, almost ALWAYS) has to have a compelling romance in it (some exceptions include 2017’s Stranger or Prison Playbook or 2019’s Children of Nobody, all of which had a fascinating cast & script–I even stopped watching 2014’s Misaeng: Incomplete Life, which many see as one of the best workplace dramas ever, because of the lack of a romance).  

The romance can be grueling (2015’s This is My Love or 2018’s Come and Hug Me or Tempted), immoral (2014’s Secret Love Affair), or even semi-platonic (2018’s My Mister), but it is hard for me to truly love a drama that has a tragic end to the romance (exceptions being 2016’s Uncontrollably Fond or 2019’s Mr. Sunshine).  I will seriously NOT finish watching a drama if it’s obviously heading towards tragedy (as the list below will prove).  Something in me needs a happy or at least ambiguous ending (like 2020’s Record of Youth) as I’ve found myself a bit traumatized by spectacularly sad romantic endings like 2018’s The Smile Had Left Your Eyes or 2005’s A Love to Kill.  

So, the perfect formula for my taste in K-dramas = compelling romance + fairly happy ending + great acting, script, and a kind of freshness in some aspect of the storyline (I’m not a huge fan of being able to guess ALL of the twists & turns that are coming, though I do love the usual K-drama tropes popping up in the show, such as a piggy-back ride, shared umbrella, childhood connection, etc.).

This all will, of course, become painfully obvious to you, dear reader, as you review the list of my favorite K-dramas of 2021 below…

NOTE:  I consider a show to be “from” a particular year if at least 50% of the episodes aired in that year, so for example, the Netflix drama Run On aired from Dec. 16, 2020, but finished Feb. 4, 2021, so I consider it a 2021 drama)

1.  True Beauty:  I’ll be honest, I didn’t TOTALLY love the last couple of episodes of this hugely popular high school romance…but the rest of the show was SO instantly iconic and the chemistry between the 3 leads (actually 4 with Park Yoo-na, who I thought was amazing, despite how evil she turned at one point) brought it immediately into my top 20 K-dramas of all time.  Moon Ga-young was hilarious and touching and feisty in all the best ways, Cha Eun-woo was perfectly brooding and clueless and incredibly handsome, but the surprise ingredient was, of course, the star-making performance from Hwang In-youp: that guy (in his 30’s, I believe) has a brilliant future with his sly comedic expressions, ability to pull off a bad boy with a heart of gold intensity, and his capacity to hit all of the notes of a one-sided love without becoming pathetic.  I watched this show 3 times already and won’t be surprised if I come back for more viewings before too long!

2.  Our Beloved Summer:  This show ALMOST bumped True Beauty off of the top spot, with its enemies to lovers to enemies to lovers plot.  There wasn’t really a wrong note in this whole show for me (though I am not a HUGE fan of Roh Jeong-eui’s work as a blonde-haired idol here–I could imagine so many other actresses nailing this part, but she never sold it for me, thought it wasn’t unbearably bad)   

3.  Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha:  It was tragic how the last episodes of this show were tarnished by the tasteless exposure of Kim Seon-ho’s personal relational drama, but it didn’t ruin my enjoyment of this heartwarming “healing” drama set in a seaside village filled with quirky locals and their sad backstories.  A few episodes felt a bit like padding, but I totally bought the leads’ chemistry and enemies-to-lovers development.  Shin Min-a has truly been one of the most spellbinding actresses for such a long period of time (if you’ve never watched the 2005 melodrama-romance A Love to Kill with her and a darkly charismatic performance from Rain, you should check it out…just be prepared for devastating heartbreak).

4.  Lovestruck in the City:  I think this show may not be for everyone, but I watched it three times and aside from the scenes featuring the fake band “Rolling Stars,” it was such an incredible feat of heart-wrenching, but subtly comedic storytelling from beginning to end.  The cast was phenomenal, but Kim Ji-won truly blew me away with her nuanced and touching depiction of a woman in the midst of an identity crisis.  Ji Chang-wook has never been more charming in his longing and hilarious in his exasperation & I loved the weird world of the four long-time friends at the center of the story.  It may not be for you, but it certainly did it for me.

5.  She Would Never Know:  Although Won Jin-ah was amazing in Rain or Shine back in 2017, I found her follow-up Melting Me Softly so terrible that I had a hard time finding the motivation to watch this show starring her alongside the outrageously handsome and charming Rowoon.  But man, this show blew my low expectations out of the water.  I had no idea where the show was going (which is unusual for Kdramas, given the typical beats, tropes, and plotlines) and I even found myself fascinated by  the inner workings of the cosmetic industry.  Top to bottom, the cast nailed it and the writing and direction were flawless.  I’ve learned my lesson not to judge a show based on a past bad experience!  (I ended up having to buy this on DVD, in case any of my local Kdrama chingus ever want to borrow it!)

6.  School 2021:  It amazes me how KBS2’s School franchise seems to immaculately cast young performers who will inevitably become the NEXT BIG THING (and not only in the lead roles–Mr. Queen star Shin Hye-sun was an EXTRA in School 2013, which also launched Lee Jong-suk and Kim Woo-bin into drama stardom).  This iteration of the high school drama is no exception.  Though star Kim Yo-han is a bit “ho-hum” for me, though not terrible, the three other leads are certainly going places with their charisma, stunning looks, and strong acting chops, especially lead Cho Yi-hyun who caught the public’s eye as an adorable intern in Hospital Playlist and went on to offer an arresting performance in the high school zombie drama All of Us Are Dead (which I still watched even though I’m so tired of zombie shows).  This show doesn’t delve too deeply into the mechanics of school corruption and was delightfully unique in focusing on the blue-collar vocational high school experience, which I’d never seen in a drama before!  Such a sweet and appealing experience in the midst of another frustrating year in the real world!

7.  Nevertheless:  This is the most surprising (to me) inclusion on this list, because the show was much more steamy than I would usually watch, with a lead actress I wasn’t a huge fan of coming into the show (Han So-hee), and an off-putting, manipulative “player” as the lead romantic interest (I’m still on the fence about whether Song Kang is as stunningly attractive as his shows make him out to be), but somehow this story about university art students totally hooked me deeply!  Han So-hee was so vulnerable, showing such complex emotion as she finds herself acting against her own best instincts, and she was almost frumpy in her style here (so different from her breakout role in The World of the Married) that she won me over as a fan of her incredible acting!  Song Kang brought some depth to what I thought was just going to be a one-note seductive scoundrel part, and the “Potato Boy” Chae Jong-hyeop was adorable as the childhood friend with one-sided love, not to mention many other great performances from the rest of the cast.  I think I’m kind of a sucker for dramas set at university (like My ID is Gangnam Beauty, Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok-joo, Heartstrings, etc.), perhaps because I worked at a university for a while and saw so many students go through that transitional time of life, forging their personal identity, relationships, vocation, etc.

8.  You Are My Spring:  After the first episode of this show, which stars my favorite Korean actress, Seo Hyun-jin, I thought that this show would FOR SURE be my favorite show of the year, and for more than half of the series, I still thought that.  It was intriguing, engrossing, worlds-colliding kind of wonderful, with pitch-perfect performances all around, wonderful script, direction, etc.  But something happened to the writing in particular in the last 1/3 of the show that made me almost want to stop watching…it was like suddenly the two leads had ZERO chemistry and it was just cheesy all over the place and had inexplicable explanations thrust onto the storyline that I felt like I was watching an airplane crash in slow motion (I mean, what the heck happened with Hwang Seung-eon’s plot line as the fitness trainer with a crush on the awkward veterinarian?).  But honestly, I still loved everything about that first 2/3 SO MUCH and the two sets of friends surrounding the leads were so endearing that it still made my top 10 and I would say it’s worth watching…just be prepared for the bottom to fall out in the latter episodes!

9.  Lost:  I’m going to describe this show in such a way that you probably won’t want to watch it, but it really was quite remarkable.  It was slow…I mean there was REALLY not much happening for long periods of the show, but it was so deliberate and haunting and achingly sad and poetically scripted, that the pace ultimately didn’t matter to me.  It’s tone kind of reminded me of My Mister, which is my #1 Kdrama of all time, so if you liked that show, you may be open to the beauty and profundity of this drama.  Lead actress Jeon Do-yeon won a best actress award at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival for the film Secret Sunshine, and her performance here is quite intriguing.  Reply 1988’s Ryu Jun-yeol (the one who lost Lee Hye-ri to Park Bo-gum) is brilliantly cool and devastatingly melancholy as a professional escort (male prostitute?) who gets caught up in an older, married woman’s suffering.  It’s a hard watch–so much sadness and loss, but it won’t leave you broken-hearted (there is a surprising number of happy endings that you may not expect!)

10.  D.P.:  Jung Hae-in is really one of the greatest Korean actors of his generation and he shines even in this dark short series about soldiers who go out on a special patrol to track down their fellow draftees who are AWOL from their mandatory military service (which seems like a tragic experience for so many Korean young men).  Koo Kyo-hwan also justifiably won a Baeksang award for his hilarious performance as a military misfit, and the storytelling and cinematography are exceptionally high quality as well.  Not heartwarming or healing, so you’ll need to steel yourself for some difficult scenes, but it remains a powerful and gripping show nonetheless.

11.  Doom at Your Service:  I had a bit of a roller coaster experience with this show–loving the two great leads (Strong Girl Bong-soon brought the smile back to intensely charismatic demi-god Seo In-guk’s eyes), then mildly disliking it, then back in love, then feeling like it was too much of a Goblin wannabe, then impressed with the way it explored end-of-life issues and on and on.  The thing that makes me want to go back and watch it again though is actually the second-leads love triangle:  Shin Do-huyn is one of my favorite under-recognized actresses and Kang Tae-oh is always amazing in his scene-stealing second lead roles, but it was the tender confusion of Lee Soo-hyuk, who I usually cannot stand, that really blew me away. In the end, this show was anything but doomed!

12.  My Name: Since I was a new fanboy of Han So-hee, I thought I’d check out this action-packed crime drama and MAN, she knocked it out of the park again!!  Her performance here clearly should have won her some awards, but the darkly magnetic crime lord played by veteran actor Park Hee-soon was also engrossingly despicable and Ahn Bo-hyun was so lovable here after being so repulsively evil in Itaewon Class.  The plot, writing, filming, and every aspect of this show was so remarkable–money well spent, Netflix!

13.  Mad For Each Other:  Now, I’m not usually a fan of Jung Woo (who played “Trash” in Reply 1994), but he was perfectly cast as a cop on leave with anger issues who falls in love with his psychologically troubled neighbor played wonderfully by Oh Yeon-seo (who was so engaging and hilarious in Love with Flaws).  This was an unexpectedly great watch, with many delightful side characters, including Lee Su-hyun, from brother/sister pop group AKMU, in a small role which allowed her to sing at one point!)

14.  Youth of May:  This show SHOULD be so much higher on this list, as the romance between my boy Lee Do-hyun and Go Min-si was absolutely wonderful in every way possible.  But, to be honest, I never watched the last episode of the show, because I had heard how heart-breaking it was going to be.  Plus I didn’t really get too into the politics, family conflicts, etc. so it was mostly just the romance and 80’s setting for me.

15.  Move to Heaven:  Parts of this show were so profoundly moving to me, while others felt a bit overly melodramatic or sentimental (kind of a Rain Man-type story), but Lee Je-hoon is another one of the greatest current actors working in dramas today.  You really should spend the time checking this short series out. It packs a punch.

16.  The King’s Affection:  I’m not typically a fan of Korean historical dramas (the exceptions being 100 Days My Prince and Mr. Sunshine, as well as to a lesser extent, The Tale of Nokdu and Rookie Historian Goo Hae Ryung), but I found this show to be so delightfully charming with an achingly sincere performance from Park Eun-bin (who was also incredible in Do You Like Brahms?) and the always great Ruwoon.  I admittedly did skip some of the royal court scenes that didn’t have the two leads in it, but I also did enjoy the rest of the cast like Bae Yoon-kyung and Jung Chae-yeon (the other two members of the love quadrangle)!  The other scholars in the royal academy also cracked me up and Nam Yoon-su and Choi Byung-chan were swoony in their secondary lead roles too!

Notes on the other 2021 shows I completed:

Hellbound:  Really well made, with an unusual plot/script and great acting, especially from Yoo Ah-in, but, ultimately, it was just too nihilistic for me to deeply enjoy.

Hospital Playlist 2:  This was my #1 show last year, and while I did enjoy getting to follow the stories of the 5 close doctor friends, it just lacked a certain magical something this time around.

Inspector Koo:  I was LOVING this show for about the first half of the series (in fact, I called Netflix customer service one morning to complain when a new episode was not yet available), with really incredible performances from the main leads all the way down to minor parts, a killer soundtrack from shoegaze band TRPP, and an engaging cat-and-mouse storyline, but man, did the wheels ever come off of this train.  I finished it out of a sense of completion only, but it never redeemed itself in my mind. Truly a tragedy, as it could have been so great.

Jirisan:  I came in with high expectations, but was ultimately bored with most of this show, even though the scenery and cinematography were extraordinary.  Pretty much all of its faults lie with the writer…

Live On:  This was a fun short high school show to watch for the emerging young actors in it, but it was pretty insubstantial in the end…I found the shameful secret at the center of the drama rather ridiculous.

Mr. Queen:  I won’t lie: I didn’t even end up watching all of the episodes of this show, even though I liked much of what was happening.  It was funny to have Shin Hye-sun so deftly portray the man-in-a-woman’s-body, but it also felt like this cut the legs out of my enjoyment of the romantic tension between the royal couple. I did laugh a lot though.

Run On:  I wanted to like this show, being a fan of the main leads, but the writing was just awful. I just couldn’t get into any of it…

Scripting Your DestinyThis short series is actually worth a watch–Jeon So-nee is an actress you need to keep your eyes on–but it just kind of flew by so quickly and ultimately felt a bit insubstantial!  

Squid Game:  I watched the whole series the day that it dropped & I thought it had a great cast, wonderful cinematography, set & costume design, etc. but…no romance, bleak offing of endearing characters, and the truly horrible English-speaking actors just kept me from digging it as much as so many did.

Sweet Home:  I thought this was fun in a comic book way & had a stellar cast.  It was just a bit too light on the romantic threads and a bit too heavy on the gruesomeness to keep me super engaged.

Taxi Driver:  I think that this was probably the funniest show I watched this year.  Like I said, Lee Je-hoon is amazing.  But it was just too dark & unrealistic to grab my affection…

Vincenzo:  This is the show that my K-drama chingus will probably not forgive me for not liking as much as they did, but for some reason, I was never quite sold on this drama.  Jeon Yeo-been was a hilarious revelation after her mournful performance in Be Melodramatic, but the over-the-top violence and one-dimensional characters left me cold.  I feel so bummed that I didn’t get into it!

Some shorter dramas that were enjoyable at the time, but which didn’t stand out in my memory too much: Growing Season, Her Bucket List, Love & Wish, Pumpkin Time, Replay, Your Playlist

2021 DRAMAS THAT I DROPPED:

Beyond Evil:  The writing, acting, and directing were all pretty strong in this show…it just got too freaking DARK for me to handle!  Sometimes I can endure these serial killer storylines, but something about this show was just too disturbing and bleak. 

Happiness:  I wanted to love this show so much for the two leads and their “friends to lovers” storyline, but I am just way too tired of intense zombie violence to sit through the whole thing.  I can tolerate LESS realistic horror like Sweet Home much more than this kind of angsty suspenseful horror.

Melancholia:  I also really wanted to love THIS show too because of breakout star Lee Do-hyun, but I’ve usually dropped shows that get too much into high school politics/parents (see SKY Castle and Black Dog) and this was no exception.  Also, Im Soo-jung just seemed a WEE bit too old to be the object of Do-hyun’s romantic obsession in my book–the math just didn’t add up for me.

BEST LEAD ACTOR:

  • Ji Chang-wook (Lovestruck in the City)
  • Kim Seon-ho (Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha)
  • Jung Hae-in (D.P.)
  • Rowoon (The King’s Affection; She Would Never Know)
  • Ryu Jun-yeol (Lost)

BEST LEAD ACTRESS:

  • Han So-hee (My Name; Nevertheless)
  • Kim Ji-won (Lovestruck in the City)
  • Moon Ga-young (True Beauty)
  • Park Eun-bin (The King’s Affection)
  • Shin Min-a (Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:

  • Hwang In-youp (True Beauty)
  • Koo Kyo-hwan (D.P.)
  • Lee Soo-hyuk (Doom at Your Service)
  • Park Hee-soon (My Name)
  • Yoo Ah-in (Hellbound)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:

  • Kim Hye-jun (Inspector Koo)
  • Lee Joo-bin (She Would Never Know)
  • Oh Hyun-kyung (You Are My Spring)
  • Park Jin-joo (Our Beloved Summer)
  • Shin Do-huyn (Doom at Your Service)

BEST NEW ACTOR/ACTRESS:

  • Cho Yi-hyun (Hospital Playlist 2; School 2021):  Adorable beyond all measure
  • Choo Young-woo (School 2021): Such a great screen presence, like a Korean James Dean
  • Kwon Eun-bin (At a Distance, Spring is Green):  This girl had tons of charismatic intensity, but was very underutilized in this show (and, sadly, her other scheduled 2021 drama Dear.M got postponed due to bullying allegations against lead actress, Park Hye-su)

BEST COUPLES:

  • Cha Eun-woo/Hwang In-youp & Moon Ga-young (True Beauty)
  • Choi Woo-sik & Kim Da-mi (Our Beloved Summer)
  • Ji Chang-wook & Kim Ji-won (Lovestruck in the City)
  • Kim Seung-ho  & Shin Min-a (Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha)
  • Lee Do-hyun & Go Min-si (Youth of May)
  • Park Eun-bin &  Ruwoon (The King’s Affection)

2020 Don K-xote K-drama Awards

SOOO. It’s May, 2021. Just like last year, it feels a bit late in the game to post my “Best K-dramas” list for 2020. I put off the making of the list in January because I wanted to finish some shows I had not yet gotten to watch (two of which I had to purchase on DVD: “World of the Married” and “18 Again”), but then I honestly just kept putting it off because…2020 was, you know, rather exhausting.

HOWEVER, with the results of the Baeksang Awards having just been published (here’s a write up in Forbes about the winners from one of my favorite Western K-drama journalists), I realized that I should, no MUST put my own opinion out into the K-dramasphere. So without further ado, here is my list of the best shows, actors/actresses, etc. of 2020. There were SO MANY great shows this year that I’m not limiting my list to ONLY the Top 10, but we’ll start there:

  1. Hospital Playlist: I watched the first episode and thought it wasn’t for me—I’m not really into hospital shows; my friend Becky told me to give it another chance & here it is at #1.  The cast is impeccable, down to the smallest roles, but especially the 5 leads with Jeon Mi-do in a star-making performance.  The dialogue, plot, direction, and the music were all top notch and wonderful.  Can’t wait for season 2!  The director & writer of the Reply series strikes gold again
  2. It’s Okay to Not Be Okay: I thought it was going to be a bit too gothic & cartoonish—but it turned into a profoundly moving & unexpected plunge into human longing & loss.  All three leads were extraordinary, but Oh Jung-se KNOCKED it out of the ballpark as Sang-tae!! The mental hospital cast & patients were outstanding as well, plus the twist actually fooled me! Beautiful storytelling and incredible visuals
  3. Into the Ring / Memorials: This was a most unexpected delight.  I HATE politics, so I thought I’d despise this show, but Nana was a REVELATION in the lead role as a complainer who runs for city council—she had hilarious comedic ability, poignant depth, and great romantic chemistry with Park Sung-hoon.  Great performances the entire cast (especially Nana’s two friends and her parents) & such an unusual cinematography & direction—like a Kdrama version of Wes Anderson!
  4. Find Me in Your Memory: I think that I may love this show more than anyone else I know, perhaps because of Mun Ka-young’s incredible presence, but I also adored Kim Seul-gi’s performance as her protective sister just as much, along with all of the HBN News crew, a tragic love backstory, and truly chilling villains stalking our Ka-young!
  5. More Than Friends: To me, this was kind of this year’s Be Melodramatic—3 female friends and their romantic & family relationships, with sharp dialogue, an unusual central love story, and wonderful performances all around from a gorgeous cast
  6. (I’ll Go to You) When the Weather Is Fine: This show was definitely COMFORT FOOD in a difficult year, but my wife and I were so eager for each new episode of this quiet romance set in a country town; the side characters were hilarious and endearing as well.  A must watch!
  7. Itaewon Class: Park Seo-joon gave a commanding performance in his lead role as a bar owner in pursuit of revenge—though his haircut was a bit hard to get used to—and overall the show was incredibly well made!  However, while it was innovative in the direction the love triangle took, I didn’t ever connect with the direction the last third of the drama took and I never bought the OTP (sorry, I’m a Kwon Nara fan!)
  8. When My Love Blooms: I’ll be honest, there were times when this 1980’s/contemporary romantic melodrama dragged a bit and the plot was a bit much to be believed, but the four leads were so deeply compelling and the against-all-odds love story was so gripping that it covered a multitude of K-dramatic sins
  9. 18 Again: I wasn’t expecting much from a remake of a Zach Efron film, but the actors, PD, and writer pulled off a delightful and poignant exploration of a shotgun marriage gone sour, with both spouses wondering what life would have been like without the other, ending in an ultimately uplifting message in the same vein as one of my all-time favorites, Familiar Wife
  10. The Good Detective: This was SO BINGE-WORTHY!  Intriguing noir-ish crime world with subtly hilarious dialogue; top notch acting, script, and resolution; score was a bit weak and just not enough romance!
  11. Start-up: After the first episode, I thought this was going to be my favorite drama of the year, but with each subsequent episode, I found I liked it just a little bit less—a deadly case of second lead syndrome, perhaps.  Still, it was obviously made by an extremely talented PD, writer, and cast
  12. How to Buy a Friend: At only 8 episodes, this high school suspense drama may feel out of its league, but I really fell for the relationships in this show, along with great vivid cinematography, a break-out performance from Lee Sin-young, Shin Seung-ho, & Kim So-hye, with some intense character arcs, and even a little poetry to boot!
  13. Do You Like Brahms?: The first half of this was so precious—especially Park Eun-bin’s earnestly lovable violinist, as well as Park Ji-hyun’s presumptuous, fallen violin genius.  The music was splendid, but the male leads were all a bit underwhelming and the plot began to drag in the latter half, though it resolved well by the end
  14. My Unfamiliar Family: This drama about a dysfunctional family had a very unusual plot—I was never sure where things were going to turn next.  The cast was solid, loved the always charming Kim Ji-seok (Children of the 20th Century) in particular, but it was also a bit too heavy at times.
  15. Extracurricular: This high school show was similar in some ways to How to Buy a Friend, though distinct enough to merit a place on the list with such a great cast—especially long-time drama star Choi Min-Soo as a bodyguard for teenage prostitutes—which is one of the not so great aspects of the show—along with Kim Dong-hee, Jung Da-bin, and the sociopathic Park Ju-hyun—so different from her role in A Piece of Your Mind—all giving engaging performances.  It was unsettling in so many ways, but I couldn’t stop watching

Notes on the others shows I completed:

  • A Piece of Your Mind (I loved the two leads & the direction/ cinematography/ score, but there was a serious lack of inertia that kept it from living up to its unique premise)
  • Backstreet Rookie (again, I loved the two leads & their families—but not much beyond that.  Also, it was seriously gross at times with the Jamaican wannabe who wrote erotic manhwa)
  • The Game: Towards Zero (enjoyed watching it for the most part, but it felt pretty average)
  • The King: Eternal Monarch (loved some of it, other parts felt REALLY contrived)
  • Meow: The Secret Boy (part of me enjoyed the cuteness; part of me felt really creepy for rooting for a girl to fall in love with a cat who turned into a human)
  • My Holo Love (cute but too fluffy; again, kind of weird rooting for a girl to fall in love with an AI hologram)
  • Record of Youth (the Parks were wonderful and beautiful, even while the show collapsed around them)
  • SF8 (some interesting Black Mirror-like stories)
  • The School Nurse Files (this was one of the WEIRDEST dramas I’ve ever seen, but I was digging it for a while, then I kind of stopped caring near the end)
  • Train (loved the tragic story, but it just lost steam and my interest)
  • Was It Love? (enjoyed till the end, but not great enough to make the top shows)
  • XX (too short and the sound was really weird, but enjoyable!)

2020 DRAMAS THAT I DROPPED / DISAPPOINTMENTS:

  • 365: Repeat the Year (maybe I should give it another chance?)
  • Alice (liked the actors, but lost interest in story)
  • Chip In (too over the top)
  • Do Do Sol Sol La La Sol (couldn’t stand Go Ara in this role)
  • Eccentric! Chef Moon (liked the actors, but got bored)
  • Lie After Lie (too melodramatic)
  • Mystic Pop-up Bar (felt like a Hotel del Luna wannabe)
  • Please Don’t Date Him (bored)
  • Private Lives (didn’t like the characters)
  • Search (couldn’t get in to the mystery or military setting; NOTE: I never finished DOTS)
  • Sweet Munchies (got bored, but maybe I could try again…leads seemed good)
  • Tale of the Nine Tailed (felt like a Goblin wannabe; sorry to my friends who loved it)
  • Team Bulldog: Off-Duty Investigation (couldn’t get into the plot)
  • When I Was Most Beautiful (didn’t like the leads)
  • The World of the Married (so well made, but I just found that I didn’t really care about any of the characters)

DRAMAS THAT I RANKED AS BEING FROM 2019: Black Dog, Chocolate, and Crash Landing on You

BEST LEAD ACTOR

  • Kim Dong-wook (Find Me in Your Memory)
  • Jang Sung-jo (The Good Detective)
  • Kim Soo-hyun (It’s Okay to Not Be Okay)
  • Park Se-joon (Itaewon Class)
  • Seo Kang-Joon ((I’ll Go to You) When the Weather is Fine)
  • Son Hyun-Joo (The Good Detective)

BEST LEAD ACTRESS

  • Jeon Mi-do (Hospital Playlist)
  • Mun Ka-young (Find Me in Your Memory)
  • Nana (Into the Ring / Memorials)
  • Park Eun-bin (Do You Like Brahms?)
  • Seo Yea-ji (It’s Okay to Not Be Okay)
  • Shin Ye-eun (More Than Friends)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

  • Choi Min-Soo (Extracurricular)
  • Lee Jae-Wook ((I’ll Go to You) When the Weather is Fine)
  • Oh Jung-se (It’s Okay to Not Be Okay, The Good Detective)
  • Woo Do-hwan (The King: Eternal Monarch)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

  • Ahn Eun-Jin (Hospital Playlist, More Than Friends)
  • Kim Seul-gi (Find Me in Your Memory)
  • Lee Elijah (The Good Detective)
  • Moon Jeong-Hee ((I’ll Go to You) When the Weather is Fine)

BEST NEW ACTOR/ACTRESS

  • Kim Hwan-Hee ((I’ll Go to You) When the Weather is Fine)—not really “new” as an actress but in more of a main part
  • Lee Do-hyun (18 Again)—again, he’s been in shows before, but this is his first lead role in a regular drama
  • Park Ju-hyun (A Piece of Your Mind, Extracurricular)—these roles could not have been more different, but she nailed both with nuanced performances

BEST COUPLES

  • Kim Dong-wook & Mun Ka-young (Find Me in Your Memory)
  • Kim Soo-hyun & Seo Yea-ji (It’s Okay to Not Be Okay)
  • Park Min-Young & Seo Kang-Joon ((I’ll Go to You) When the Weather is Fine)

K-drama Crossword

Among other things, I am a fan of K-dramas (obviously) and crossword puzzles. However, I had never found a crossword with a K-drama theme, so I decided to make one myself! And I thought I would share it here for anyone who wanted to do it!!

A few caveats:

  • There are far too many two- and three-letter answers in this puzzle, for which I readily apologize. I’m new to making crosswords, so I did my best.
  • Although the far majority of clues relate to K-dramas, K-pop, or Korean culture, some of the clues are just random–there is no way I could have made every answer themed to K-dramas. So my apologies if some of them are obscure.
  • I used Wikipedia as the source for Korean names, which may often be romanized (i.e. representing the Korean language in the Latin script) in different ways, where, for instance, the last name that some romanize as Go could also be spelled Ko.
  • You can download a PDF of the puzzle (sized to Tabloid / 11×17) HERE. The answers to the crossword can be found HERE.

2019 Don K-xote K-drama Awards

It’s a bit embarrassing to publish one’s list of favorite Kdrama shows & performers in April of the next calendar year, but I had been trying to finish watching a few dramas that I’d never gotten to last year before putting this list together & I’m glad I did. I know that my list is completely subjective to my particular taste, so I wouldn’t assume anyone else would share the preferences that I’ve listed below, but, to me, these shows and the people who played the parts in them would, at the very least, be worth your time to check out. I hope you enjoy watching some of them at least!

[I also acknowledge that I missed a number of shows that I probably should have made time to watch, including The Fiery Priest, Leverage, Liver or Die, Miss Lee, SKY Castle, Touch Your Heart, and Vagabond. Hope to catch up sometime…]

Best Lead Actors (listed alphabetically)

  • Hyun Bin (Crash Landing on You)
  • Jang Dong-yoon (The Tale of Nokdu)
  • Jang Ki-yong (Search: WWW)
  • Jung Hae-in (One Spring Night)
  • Nam Joo-hyuk (Dazzling/The Light in Your Eyes)

Best Lead Actresses (listed alphabetically)

  • Chun Woo-hee (Be Melodramatic/Melo is My Nature)
  • Kim So-hyun (The Tale of Nokdu, Love Alarm)
  • Lee Na-young (Romance is a Bonus Book)
  • Oh Yeon-seo (Love with Flaws)
  • Son Ye-jin (Crash Landing on You)

Honorable Mentions:  IU (Hotel del Luna); Park Min-young (Her Private Life); Shin Se-kyung (Rookie Historian Goo Hae-Ryung)

Best Supporting Actors (listed alphabetically)

  • Gong Myung (Be Melodramatic/Melo is My Nature)
  • Kang Tae-oh (My First First Love, The Tale of Nokdu)
  • Lee Jae-wook (Search: WWW)
  • Son Ho-jun (Dazzling/The Light in Your Eyes)
  • Son Hyun-joo (Justice)

Best Supporting Actresses (listed alphabetically)

  • Jeon Hye-jin (Search: WWW)
  • Jeon Yeo-been (Be Melodramatic/Melo is My Nature)
  • Lee Da-hee (Search: WWW)
  • Lee Joo-bin (Be Melodramatic/Melo is My Nature)
  • Lee Sun-bin (The Great Show)

Best New Actor/Actress (listed alphabetically)

  • Kang Mi-na (Hotel Del Luna)
  • Ong Seong-wu (At Eighteen)
  • Shin Ye-eun (He is Psychometric)

Best Couples

  • Crash Landing on You (Hyun Bin & Son Ye-jin)
  • He is Psychometric (Jinyoung & Shin Ye-eun)
  • Romance is a Bonus Book (Lee Na-young & Lee Jong-suk)
  • Rookie Historian Goo Hae-Ryung (Shin Se-kyung & Cha Eun-woo)
  • Search: WWW (Lee Da-hee & Lee Jae-wook)

Biggest Disappointments

  • Dazzling—Honestly, I wanted to like this show so much and the individual acting was very good.  The first few episodes totally had me. But then it just turned into a confusing and frustrating mess in terms of the plot and writing that couldn’t be saved by outstanding acting
  • Abyss—The two leads (Park Bo-young and Ahn Hyo-seop) are adorable together, but the plot felt so alternately loopy and heavy-handed…and frequently just too HEAVY, that I had to drop it, though it was amazing to see ageless beauty Kim Sa-rang pop up in a cameo, effortlessly playing a college student even though she’s in her 40’s
  • Melting Me Softly—Again, I really like these lead actors, but it was just too silly and over-the-top that I couldn’t continue watching

K-dramas To Watch in 2020

I wanted my first post on this blog to be about my favorite K-dramas, actors, actresses, etc. from 2019, but I’m still finishing watching a few shows (cough Crash Landing on You cough), so I’m not quite ready to publish that list yet.

However, I have put together a list of shows I am looking forward to watching in 2020 and some of them are about to begin airing, so I thought that this post would be outdated if I didn’t put it up soon.  SO HERE IT IS!!  Hope they turn out to be as good as I am imagining they will be!

  • The King: Eternal Monarch (spring 2020):  This is the drama I am looking forward to the most, as it comes from Kim Eun-sook, the brilliant writer of Secret Garden, The Heirs, Goblin, and Mr. Sunshine, and stars Kim Go-eun (the outstanding actress who starred in Goblin), Lee Min-ho (The Heirs, Legend of the Blue Sea) and Woo Do-hwan (Tempted, My Country)The_King-_Monarch_of_Eternity
  • A Piece of Your Mind (February 10):  Speaking of Goblin, the director of that show will helm this romantic drama with handsome star Jung Hae-in (Something in the Rain, One Spring Night) paired with cute & spunky actress Chae Soo-bin (Where Stars Land, I’m Not a Robot)Half_of_a_Half
  • Itaewon Class (starts February 8):  I’m mainly looking forward to this show because of the hilarious Park Seo Joon (favorite shows with him include Fight for My Way, Midnight Runners-film, Kill Me Heal Me, The Beauty Inside-film, What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim, and She Was Pretty), though I also really liked co-star Nara in My Mister and Suspicious Partner.  The plot has something to do with high school bullying, class struggles, and restaurant workItaewon_Class.jpg
  • The Most Beautiful Moment in Life (or When My Love Blooms) (airing in April):  About a couple who fell in love when they were younger and were involved in the student rights movement, but were later separated, who then come back into one another’s lives and rekindle their love.  The older couple are played by Yoo Ji-tae (fangirls will remember him as the reporter from Healer along with many other shows, though I always remember him as the tragic villain of the film Oldboy) and Lee Bo-young (I Can Hear Your Voice, Mother)—the younger versions of their characters are Jinyoung (outstanding in He Is Psychometric) and Jeon So-nee (who had a star-making minor role in Encounter)The_Most_Beautiful_Moment_in_Life.jpg
  • Mystic Pop-up Bar (airing May 20, 2020):  Fans of Hwang Jung Eum from her past work (she was hilarious in She Was Pretty and Heal Me Kill Me, along with her poignant role in Secret Love opposite Ji Sung) will be glad to see she’s back in a drama with the nephew from Goblin, Yook Sung Jae, about a nighttime snack & drinks tent set up on the roof of a building where people work through personal issuesSsanggab_Cart_Bar
  • I’ll Go to You When the Weather is Nice (February): If you love Park Min-young (Her Private Life, What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim) in a romantic drama like I do, this story of a Seoul resident who moves back home to her country village (which sounds like the beautiful film Little Forest) should be on your watch list.  Co-starring Seo Kang-joon (whom I only know from his great second-lead role in the television version of Cheese in the Trap) and Lee Jae-wook who was incredible as the makjang (trashy soap-opera) actor in Search:WWW and also co-starred in Extraordinary YouIf_the_Weather_Is_Good,_I'll_Find_You
  • Here (no release date):  With an all-star cast, including one of the most famous Korean actors, Lee Byung Hun (Mr. Sunshine), along with top actresses Han Ji Min (Familiar Wife, Dazzling, One Spring Night), Shin Min Ah (who starred in the 2003 film A Bittersweet Life with Lee Byung Hun, along with many K-dramas including Arang & the Magistrate, Oh My Venus, and Tomorrow with You), and Nam Joo Hyuk (who was wonderful in Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok-joo and Dazzling), this drama tells the story of an international NGO, though not much else has been revealedHere
  • Meow: the Secret Boy (April 2020):  Based on a webtoon, this drama will star the charming idol/actor L (Angel’s Last Mission: Love, Miss Hammurabi) with new breakout star Shin Ye-eun of He is Psychometric.  This is a fantasy where a Ye-eun’s character finds a cat who can transform into a human manWelcome.jpg
  • Love Alarm, season 2 (no release date):  It’s kind of frustrating that Netflix is trying to break up the usual 16-20 episode length of a typical Kdrama into multiple “seasons” (like they did with My First First Love)—but this is just the next 8 episodes of what ended up being a pretty charming little high school & beyond story thanks to the always great Kim So Hyun, as she’s caught between not-quite-as handsome-as-they-make-him-out-to-be Song Kang (a so-so second lead in The Liar and His Lover) and his kind-hearted friend Jung Ga Ram (whose mother is played by the adorable Shim Yi-Young…mom crush!!)Love_Alarm_Season_2
  • The School Nurse Files (starts June 30, Netflix):  A six-episode quirky fantasy/horror about a school nurse who does exorcisms—I’m mainly excited about this because Nam Joo Hyuk was so hilarious in Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok-joo, but it also stars Jung Yu-mi (who’s been in many films & dramas, including Discovery of Love and Live)Nurse_Teacher_An_Eun-Young.jpg
  • Team Bulldog: Off-duty Investigation (latter half of 2020):  This show stars well-known comic actor Cha Tae-hyun (My Sassy Girl-film, Along with the Gods: The Two Worlds-film, and K-drama The Producers) and the great up-and-coming actress Lee Sun-bin (The Great Show, Sketch) as a intense detective and crime show PD who team up to solve cases together that the police have given up onTeam Bulldog Further_Investigation
  • Record of Youth (May 2020):  A drama set in the modeling industry starring Park So-dam (hot off of her scene-stealing role as “Jessica” in the film Parasite) and Park Bo-gum (whom I mainly know from his great work in Reply 1988).  The writer of the show, Ha Myung-hee, also scripted the wonderfully-written drama Temperature of Love/Degree of Love with Seo Hyun-jin and Yang Se-jongYouth_Record

Fans of Park Shin-hye (the loveable star of Pinocchio, The Heirs, Heartstrings, and Memories of the Alhambra) will be glad to know she will star in TWO shows in 2020:  Sisyphus: The Myth and Psycho But It’s Okay (with Kim Soo-hyun of My Love from the Star).

WHICH ONE OF THESE K-DRAMAS ARE YOU MOST LOOKING FORWARD TO IN 2020??

(all photos from AsianWiki.com)