Drama Review: Itaewon Class

16

Rating

★★★★

Duration

1 Hrs 10 Mins

Episodes

16

Drama Digest

Park Saeroyi’s life has been flipped around after he gets expelled from school for punching a school bully and his dad is killed in an accident. Following his dad’s means, he opens a bar named “DanBam” in Itaewon and, alongside his supervisor and staff, moves towards success and arrives at more noteworthy statures.

The Feel-Good part

A great piece of dramatization. The start was simply great. Assuming you like acting, as I do, where the lead character winds up in a seemingly impossible situation and sets unreasonably treated up to confront his own path again and assume control over issues, then, at that point, you will adore the main portion of the show. The vengeance plot was extremely fulfilling also, with a strong consummation that was well introduced. However, it would have been great on the off chance that they showed how they really figured out how to succeed, as the initial segment of the drama had zeroed in on the battles of them setting off.

One more piece of the show that was very great was the characters. The individuals from the group were extraordinary and the drama didn’t modest off from issues like prejudice and sexual orientation of characters. In this way, it was refreshing to see those components included in the plot. The female leads were great as well. They were tough ladies, one of them lovely, however a disastrous person, and the other youthful, brave, wild, and for most part, agreeable. Certainly, she did some problematic things, however, she was youthful and just obsessed with herself, so it was great to perceive how the others assisted her with the understanding that her disposition wasn’t consistently correct and to grow up. I’ve likewise seen some different watchers not actually preferring her looks. Of course, she isn’t exemplary excellence, yet, for her person, who was cool and intriguing, I think she was simply great.

At last, the OST was strong.

 The Disappointing Factor

The principal issue with the show was the speed. The skipping forward years in the future kept the characters from having any character development and it simply didn’t help the sentiment by any means. Particularly the 14th  episode was just terrible, as it seemed like they were attempting to introduce the current circumstance of the characters in a quick and incensed manner, altering many scenes and simply exclaiming that the male lead now loves the female lead, all of a sudden, however, that’s all there is to it. No clarification was accommodated on their activities, no foundation, and those four years later seemed like they four void years (I mean even the flashbacks that the male lead was encountering were from four years prior to that day, similar to nothing that occurred in those four years).

Another variable that didn’t actually assist with the romantic tale was that the couple didn’t have any chemistry. They didn’t have any strong heart-dashing moment, all things considered. Along these lines, their getting together was simply random and unnecessarily intense.

In-Depth Analysis

Itaewon Class is a show that endeavours to stand apart from the group by proposing an exceptional blend of characters, including a dark kid and a transsexual, rather than a plot dependent on the most normal buzzwords of Korean dramatization: the class battle and the circle of drama. Regardless of the differentiation, all in all, the series figured out how to mix well the ordinary components of K-dramas with imaginative and exceptional parts, offering us an astonishing arrangement of characters, at times maybe a bit unusual, a convincing soundtrack and astounding acting, where Kim Da Min and Park Seo Joon stick out.

Star Power

The actors have shown a great work.

Overall Opinion

In general, it’s not terrible. I’d say assuming you like the characters, I don’t see any motivation not to like it, as it’s essentially the entirety of your generally expected K-drama charge stuff here.