Friday, June 8, 2012

Wild Romance Review ( No Spoilers)


Broadcast Period: January 4, 2012 to February 23, 2012
Screenwriter: Park Yeon Sun (also wrote White Christmas in 2011 and Four Gold Chasers in 2007)
Starring Lee Dong Woo and Lee Si Young


I started watching this only because I needed something to fill the time in between new episodes of Rooftop Prince, but after the first few deceivingly humorous episodes, I was hooked and decided to watch all the way to the end. Well, the fun ended and soon it became apparent that this was more of a mystery drama than anything else.


THE FACTS:
Dong Woo as Park Moo Yul. Moo Yul is a successful professional baseball player for the Red Dreamers. He doesn’t have many friends and trusts very few people. Being a celebrity Moo Yul is used to hate mail but one day he receives a picture of himself, with his eyes scratched out. Strange “accidents” being happening around him and it’s decided that he needs a body guard.
Lee Si Young as Yoo Eun Jae. Eun Jae is a young woman who works for a small personal security company. She lives with her father and brother and they are all huge Blue Seagull fans. Of course, this means that they hate the Red Dreamers, especially Moo Yul, the star player. After getting caught on camera harassing Moo Yul, Eun Jae has to take the body guard position to save her job and smother the rumors.

THE REVIEW:
Moo Yul is rich, handsome, and knows that he is the best player on his team. He doesn’t have many people in his life that he can trust except his long time friends Jin Dong Soo(played by Oh Man Suk) and his wife Oh Soo Young (Played by Hwang Sun Hee).
Now, the story itself wasn’t bad, but since this show was touted as a romantic comedy, I was really disappointed when the mystery and misunderstandings smothered those two aspects.

At first there were some really great slap-stick moments that had me giggling at my computer. Moo Yul and Eun Jae competitive and that led to an ill-fitting red dress and jog that turned into a marathon, but that was all in the first few episodes.

The Stalker was actually the best character of the drama. Smart, inventive and unpredictable. This wasn’t your average stalking and that, I think, is what really kept me watching. The Stalker didn’t go directly at Moo Yul but came up with other ways to try and force him to either quit or be force out of the professional baseball league. The way that The Stalker went about harassing Moo Yul was really entertaining, I never really knew what was going to happen next. Even with the subpar romance, I was pleased that Yeon Sun wrote this invisible character so well.

I was going along with the show, praising it for it originality and fresh ideas when Yeon Sun-sshi ruined it by using a cliché plot device. Moo Yul’s ex-girlfriend, Kang Jong –Hee (played but SNSD’s Jessica) pops up out of the blue. I couldn’t stop myself from rolling my eyes when she appeared on screen. I have to admit that I didn’t do any recon on this show before I started watching. I just knew that Lee Dong Woo was starring and that was enough for me to give the show a chance ^.^

The leads, of course, fall in love like any other rom-com, but there was a lack of butterfly moments and toothache inducing speeches between Dong Woo and Si Young. The writers seemed to forget about developing their romance in favor of keeping us interested in what ploy the stalker was going to use next. I could understand why they ended up liking each other but all the same, my heart didn’t understand what my mind did. Maybe the chemistry was off, because shows with much thinner story lines, left me feeling more satisfied at the end than Wild Romance. It could be that Dong Woo and Si Young didn’t kiss until the last episode AND it was awkward or, maybe it was because I stubbornly wanted to see what I was expecting from this drama.

Okay, enough with the bad. There were plenty of things done well within the show. The first was that Si Young portrays a trained body guard, and in the instances where she did fight, the writers didn’t have Dong Woo come running to her rescue because she could take care of herself. So, hooray for girl power! The second is the show pushed some boundaries with the interaction between Dong Woo and Si Young that made me believe the ‘Wild’ part of the title. Lastly, something could be said in favor of a drama that's not syrupy sweet, I just won't be the one to say it.

There were two secondary couples to this show which was new as well. The first was already married and the second was, in KDrama fashion, brought together through their interaction and concern for the main couple. The second couple was cutely inept at relationships, especially with the opposite sex. They provided the cute moments when the times got tough for Dong Woo and Si Young. Their nerdy attempts at love and the emotional manipulations of the stalker made this show worth watching after episode 6 or so. Those things are what made me keep watching even when the funny was gone and the romance was sparse.
Some of the devices used were cliché such as an old lover showing up to show our leads what they really mean to each other, but overall the show was done rather well. I would recommend watching this just for the envelope pushing alone. As long as you don’t mind some Romance Lite this was an enjoyable show.

Out of five hearts I give this show a solid 3. I won't watch it again, but it was good for what is was.

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