My Lovely Boxer: Episodes 5-6
by DaebakGrits
Our boxer has officially reentered the ring, and her highly anticipated return has everyone — but her — hyped. Instead, the girl behind the golden gloves lacks enthusiasm for the very sport she dominates, which leaves her peers frustrated and contentious — especially when her manager begins manipulating key players to set the stage for our boxer’s predetermined fall from glory.
EPISODES 5-6
Kwon-sook’s comeback has finally arrived, but before she faces Ah-ra in the ring, we’re reminded of her pre-match confession to Tae-young: she’s afraid of boxing. Despite that fear, though, she promises to win the match, and Tae-yong responds with words of encouragement: “Don’t get hit even once. Win all you want today.” And with that in mind, Kwon-sook enters the arena without the theatrical drama that usually precedes boxing matches. Instead, when Kwon-sook ducks under the ropes, it’s with a solemn air of determination as the cameras flash around her.
Ah-ra, however, is the complete opposite. As the only ranked boxer of the two competing fighters, she bounces into the ring with an intro video and hype song blasting to amp up her fanclub’s fervor. Her fighting style is as aggressive and flashy as her social media presence, and she immediately goes on the offensive, landing punches and backing Kwon-sook into a corner.
To the untrained eye, it appears Kwon-sook’s three-year hiatus has caused her to lose her edge, but the reality is that Kwon-sook is holding back. It isn’t until Tae-young yells from the sidelines — repeating his earlier words of encouragement — that Kwon-sook begins swiftly dodging the punches Ah-ra throws at her. A switch has been turned on, and once Kwon-sook decides to fight back, the match ends quickly. She knocks out Ah-ra with a decisive punch to the chin.
As Kwon-sook watches an unconscious Ah-ra be carried out of the ring on a stretcher, it becomes apparent that Kwon-sook is as afraid of throwing punches as she is of receiving them — perhaps even more so. Instead of reveling in her victory, Kwon-sook’s concern for her fallen opponent leads her past the eager reporters, down a flight of steps lined with Ah-ra’s silently hostile fanclub, and to Ah-ra’s locker room, where Ah-ra is far from welcoming.
Ah-ra’s mood stems not from her loss, but from the sting of seemingly being the only one who took their match seriously. Ah-ra trained and adjusted her punching style in anticipation of her fight with Kwon-sook, so she perceives Kwon-sook’s restraint as a snub — a sign that Kwon-sook didn’t view Ah-ra as a worthy opponent. And to add insult to injury, Kwon-sook isn’t even happy that she won.
As much as I sympathize with Kwon-sook and her reasons for wanting to quit boxing, it’s equally understandable why a dedicated athlete like Ah-ra would be frustrated in her moment of defeat. From her perspective, Kwon-sook doesn’t respect boxing or her fellow athletes, who remain passionate about their chosen sport despite the gender pay gap and unpopularity of female boxing. Meanwhile, Kwon-sook seemingly squanders her talent, flitting in and out of the boxing world as it suits her and without any awareness of how it affects her struggling peers.
After taking a verbal dressing down from Ah-ra, Tae-young gives Kwon-sook a free pass to skip the interviews with the press and whisks her away to her favorite doughnut shop. There Kwon-sook feels comfortable enough to open up some more about her complex relationship with boxing.
Kwon-sook, as we already know, is afraid of her strength and the “monster” — her father’s creation — that only comes out in the boxing ring. It’s a fear that grew after she injured her sparring partner in what was supposed to be a harmless practice match. Although she felt guilty for causing her friend’s injury, Kwon-sook continued on with her father’s brutal training, never missing a day of practice because she was afraid her mother would get caught in the crossfire of Chul-yong’s anger. It was only after her mother passed away that Kwon-sook felt free to quit boxing and tried to disappear from the public eye.
With each new flashback, I feel more and more guilty for liking present-day Chul-yong. He caused all of Kwon-sook’s trauma, which makes me want to despise him, but in the present he’s just so darn funny and unintentionally charming. Can I rationalize my affection for him by pointing out that he does appear to be paying for his past sins by giving Kwon-sook the space she desires? Eh, probably not, especially since he’s sneaking behind her back to communicate with Tae-young — but I do think his remorse and love for Kwon-sook are genuine. Maybe with time, she can forgive him.
Surprisingly, after opening up some more about her relationship with her father, Kwon-sook leads Tae-young to her father’s restaurant, where Chul-yong and Tae-young do their best to pretend they don’t know each other (hah!) while Kwon-sook satisfies her post-boxing match craving for her father’s galbitang. But, of course, after Chul-yong asks Tae-young to meet him in the alley behind the restaurant for a little beatdown session, their secret alliance is exposed. (LOL at Tae-young’s forethought to fashion some makeshift armor.) Kwon-sook is not happy with her father meddling in her new boxing career, and she forbids them from communicating. About that, though…
The next day, Kwon-sook celebrates her recent victory with a camping date with Jae-min, and Chul-yong and Tae-young follow them to their camping spot. I’m not a fan of them going against Kwon-sook’s wishes, but if it weren’t for Tae-young and Chul-yong stalking the young lovebirds like a pair of human Airtags, I’d have fallen asleep during this stretch of the drama.
Please, someone explain to me how Jae-min can be so smarmy and so achingly boring at the same time? Seriously, if Jae-min is going to be a scheming liar, he should have the decency to be charismatic. Instead his good-guy façade is boringly vanilla, and I’m downright resentful of how much screen time he got this week.
While Kwon-sook frets over the possibility of getting her first kiss and bemoans the blandness of her diet, Tae-young’s match-rigging debt collectors are breathing down his neck. Not only does Tae-young owe them interest ASAP, but they’re growing impatient that Kwon-sook’s next boxing match — the money-making match — has not been finalized.
Relax, Bad Guys — give Tae-young time to work his magic. And by “magic,” I of course mean the use of dirty, underhanded tactics to force HAN AH-REUM (Chae Won-bin), the current reigning champ, into a situation where she has no choice but to fight Kwon-sook or forfeit her title — again.
Yeah, this is a particularly sore spot for Ah-reum, who was poised to defend her championship title against Kwon-sook three years ago. But when Kwon-sook dropped off the face of the planet and left Ah-reum without an opponent, Ah-reum lost her championship belt. Now, three years later, after clawing her way to the top again, history is repeating itself thanks to Tae-young’s machinations. The unjustness of the situation leaves Ah-reum very emotional, and Kwon-sook tries to justify her involvement with the knowledge that, this time around, Ah-reum will defeat her and keep her title. Because, well, as we all know, Kwon-sook intends to throw the match.
Although Ah-reum is initially adamant that she will not fight Kwon-sook — even if it means losing her title — she ultimately decides to go forward with the boxing match. There’s a lot for her to gain if she defeats Kwon-sook: not only will she regain her title, but there’s also a chance she could be recruited to box overseas. Ah-reum and Soo-yeon, her agent, fist bump and agree to do their best and advance their careers together. Their determination would be extremely inspiring if, you know, it weren’t for the insider knowledge that their opponents are planning, at that very moment, to hand them their dreams on a silver platter.
Kwon-sook is literally training herself to convincingly pull her punches and lose the match, thus undoing years of programming hardwired by Chul-yong’s intensive coaching. She spends the remainder of her time with the soul-suckingly boring Jae-min, who went so far as to sign up for one of Ho-joong’s beginner’s boxing classes in order to circumvent the restrictions Tae-young has placed on Kwon-sook’s schedule. And it’s after one of Kwon-sook and Jae-min’s private one-on-one boxing matches that Kwon-sook finally gets her first kiss — and Tae-young has the misfortune of witnessing it.
Poor, poor Tae-young. He spent days trying to dry out and fix Kwon-sook’s cell phone, which got soaked after Tae-young playfully pushed Kwon-sook (and her phone) into the ocean, but Jae-min swooped in with a brand new Samsung and got rewarded with a smooch. What did Tae-young receive? Disappointment and a parking lot beating by the match-rigging bad guys who showed up to collect their interest payment.
At this point in our drama, I dislike Jae-min so much that I’m starting to ship Tae-young with Kwon-sook even though I feel like their (emotional) age gap is a bit too wide to convince me that they will be anything more than manager and athlete. Kwon-sook, despite her ferocity in the boxing ring and difficult upbringing, is adorably naïve and inexperienced, and her puppy-love romance with the untrustworthy Jae-min only highlights her youthfulness. In comparison, Tae-young is a jaded Millennial — experienced in romance, failed dreams, and bad decision-making.
With or without romance, though, I keep tuning in each week for the rich and layered characters. No one — outside of maybe our scary match-rigging bad guys — is wholly good or evil, which makes them slightly unpredictable as they forge new bonds and face additional conflicts. This week, I even found myself disappointed in Kwon-sook after seeing boxing from Ah-ra and Ah-reum’s perspectives. As Kwon-sook becomes more immersed in a boxing world that doesn’t include her father’s dominating presence, I’m curious to see how she will evolve. Will the passion and spirit of her peers trigger a new appreciation for boxing and cause her to embrace her talent, thus ruining Tae-young’s plans? Or will she continue to chase after a normal life and (*gag*) Jae-min?
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Tags: Ha Seung-ri, Kim Hee-chan, Kim Jin-woo, Kim So-hye, Lee Sang-yub, My Lovely Boxer, Park Ji-hwan
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1 LaurenSophie
September 7, 2023 at 6:12 PM
Once again, I must express my love for this show and my frustration that more people aren't watching. The writing is strong, all the characters are compelling, and the plot often surprises me and goes in directions I wasn't expecting. I think they did a bad job promoting this as a generic sports drama (especially since the sport it's showcasing--women's boxing--is not a very popular one) when it's a slice-of-life, character-driven story with a little romance. My guess is that they didn't want to promote the romance too heavily due to the age gap between both the actors and the protagonists, but in the context of the story, I think it's adding emotional depth and balancing out some of the darker moments.
I agree that Jae-min is boring and ate up too much airtime this week. But also, I appreciate the way he's not the primary love interest here, and yet he and Kwon-sook actually made out on-screen. Am I wrong, or does that never happen in kdramas? That kiss was inevitable after all the time they've spent together and considering how badly Kwon-sook wanted to date and kiss someone, and she deserved to have that moment, even if Jae-min is lame and I have no interest in them ending up together. What I also like about him is that he's not a villain who's just using Kwon-sook for his own selfish ends. Frankly, I don't think he's that clever.
He's using her, sure, but it doesn't strike me as calculated, and I don't think he's completely faking his feelings for her. The problem is that if she wasn't a boxer and, therefore, in a position to give him some vocational purpose and prominence as her agent, I don't think he would have pursued her. In contrast, Tae-young immediately approached her with an agenda, but she's aware of that, even if she doesn't know the particulars. He has been honest in his deception, and there's no doubt at this point that he genuinely cares for her as a person and is sincere in his dealings with her.
I also want to applaud the show for managing to make Kwon-sook's father a somewhat likeable character without dismissing the fact that he was an abusive creep to her and her mother. I appreciated the way scenes of him being cutely overbearing in the present day were juxtaposed to flashbacks showed him acting like a monster. Kwon-sook is right to keep her distance, but it's also true that he does love her and seems aware that he has much to make up for when it comes to their relationship. He was a bad parent, but he's trying to be better. That complexity is very endearing and relatable, and I'm interested to see how things evolve between them because I would be fine with either a reconciliation or a permanent break; both would make sense.
Speaking of gray characters, I was completely shocked that I a) got so into the match between Kwon-sook and Ah-ra and b) I went from wanting Kwon-sook to knock out the extremely irritating Ah-ra to feeling intense pity for Ah-ra when that exact thing happened...
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LaurenSophie
September 7, 2023 at 6:31 PM
Finally, I find the (subtle but building) romance between the leads to be well done so far, and don't feel that Kwon-sook and Tae-young are that far apart emotionally. He obviously has more physical experience than her--she's definitely a virgin with a capital V and he is not--but they seem to be pretty even when it comes to general existential disillusionment. I would also argue, as Ho-joong said, that Tae-young retains the same romantic streak and hopes that we see ruling Kwon-sook's heart and mind right now. He has buried his, but those epilogue scenes show how close those feelings are to surfacing.
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cjoyce17
September 7, 2023 at 6:40 PM
I didn't read the review yet because I am still on ep 4 of My Lovely Boxer but I agree that Jaemin is boring. I didn't liked him at all base on what I watched of him so far. I wish they have chosen a better lead. He's good looking but not charming or attractive imo. Anyway this is the only drama I am watching right now and I still can't catch up. But I am really liking their acting here especially the two leads. I know about the age gap but I still wish there will be more development on the romance. Hopefully I can finish the rest of episodes tonight. I honestly almost didn't watched this drama if not for Sohye who I have watched on Produce 101. This is the first drama I've watched of her tho. As for the guy I have only seen him on Innocent man and he didn't stand out to me in that drama maybe because Song Joongki is in there
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OAsia
September 8, 2023 at 2:09 AM
I don't remember him from "Innocenct Guy" (2012), but I watched this drama a long time ago. I checked that he couldn't have had a big role there because other actors were in the main cast. He had a very good, memorable role in "While You Were Sleeping"(2017). This was a villain role and this character is often mentioned among the best villains. In "Love Affairs in the Afternoon" (2019) he had the main role, but it is a drama about marital infidelity, so many people probably didn't watch it. And he has a good role there. But I remember that it was a popular drama on the Internet. I watched him in "Eve" (2022), where he played one of the main roles, a good character. Looking at his past roles, I understand why he was chosen for this drama. ML's character here is a bit of a mix of characters on the edge, between evil and good.
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cjoyce17
September 8, 2023 at 5:53 PM
Right. It was really a long time ago so you might not remember him and honestly I don't really remember much either, his role there or his scenes but just I know he was there as Moon Chaewon's (FL) bodyguard or driver? I haven't watched those other dramas you mentioned.
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hacja
September 7, 2023 at 9:40 PM
As is very often the case, @laurensophie, I completely agree with you. Especially with the Dad, who is interestingly depicted as both abusive and loving, which I could realistically see as a combination. Not a loveable combination, by any means, but realistic.
I do wonder, though, is Tae-Young really going to be a love interest here? I definitely agree with @daebakgrits, that Jaemin is extraordinarily unlikeable. So I assume (or hope) he will not be there at the end. But even though I'm ALWAYS hoping for a romance, regardless of the genre, I would really prefer that Kwan Sook end the show independent, out of boxing, and maybe with a hint of a new suitor. But we'll see!
Overall I am really liking this show, and, I must confess its a nice break for me from what I consider the unrelenting sequence fantasy/superhero dramas which have dominated this summer and which have been really starting to bother me. I know that fantasy and historical romances are a strength of kdramas, but I continue to prefer the "real life" stories, (usually romances, of course, so maybe not that real life) that take advantage of strong character development.
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LaurenSophie
September 8, 2023 at 6:01 AM
My romance radar may be off, but yes, I do think the story that we're watching is showing Tae-young and Kwon-sook fall in love with each other right now, although they still seem to be unaware of their own feelings. It's subtle, but it's happening, imo. The phone fixing, the "I want to kiss conversation," the flirty arguing the next morning, Kwon-sook obviously feeling pangs of jealousy when Tae-young's ex called him about his mother, and Tae-young clearly being disappointed to walk in on Kwon-sook and Jae-min kissing all showed the progress of their feelings this week.
Now, that doesn't mean they'll necessarily be together at the end, but nevertheless, I think Tae-young is the real love interest here.
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fournier48
September 9, 2023 at 4:15 PM
I would add that those contrasting beach scenes were pretty convincing hints at where the romance should go. One outing was all preplanned, elaborate, and dull (except for the interruptions) and the other was filled with genuine moments of our leads being themselves and playing together.
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DaebakGrits
September 8, 2023 at 7:14 AM
I'm also someone who loves a romance plot and tends to look for a couple to ship in just about every drama I watch. This one just feels different for some reason, even though there are subtle, undeniable signs that a Kwon-sook/Tae-young pairing is possible endgame. The age gap -- mostly from an emotional maturity standpoint -- makes the longevity of such a pairing seem unlikely to me, though.
Then again, maybe I'm just projecting too much of myself onto the situation because, as someone close to Tae-young in age who spends a good deal of time with college students in their early twenties, I would not be able to view someone so young -- especially with Kwon-sook's level of naïveté -- as a serious romantic partner.
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hacja
September 8, 2023 at 9:18 AM
@laurensophie you could be right. Maybe because I was hoping it would not be an aspect of the show, I was thinking those things you mention could be out of a kind of paternal interest and not romantic.
I have always been more tolerant than others here on Dramabeans of unusually large age gaps in fictional romantic relationships, in part because two of the happiest real life marriages I know are ones where the woman is 12 years older than the man, and then (what would be nearly the case here) one where the man is 20 years older than the woman. But the key point with these real life marriages is that in both cases, the younger partner was in their early 30s when dating and marrying occurred. So these real life examples are based on mature love ignoring the age gap rather than youthful infatuation exploited by the older person.
The youthfulness of the character here is not just an age thing, its also based on outlook and naivete. There's a reason she is calling him "ahjussi" and its not just to tease him.
Since I have exactly the same work experience as @daebakgrits, I also cannot see how realistically the ML could be seriously romantically interested in someone who is essentially a youthful protege. There could be an emotional attraction and a type of love, sure, but it would never really develop into a full romance. (Needless to say, I am not counting here the innumerable real life examples of sexual harassment and exploitation of young women by older male mentors--rather talking about the type of romantic relationship that is the kdrama ideal.)
This show would be a lot more emotionally complex if the romantic attraction is slightly there but never acknowledged, and at the end they both are happy with other partners. I still am hoping the ML and his former girlfriend might get together at the end.
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LaurenSophie
September 8, 2023 at 10:19 AM
I understand what you're saying. I'm also someone whose job makes it so I'm around a lot of college-age individuals, and although we should note that Kwon-sook is probably supposed to be slightly older than that (I put her at around 23 while I'm guessing Tae-young is around 30; I know the actors are further apart than that, but I don't think the characters are), even when I was in my late 20s, I felt this huge gap between myself and them. There was no way I could imagine dating any of them because, as you said, the maturity and life experience gap was just too glaring.
My take on Kwon-sook and Tae-young's relationship is different, in that I don't see them as far apart emotionally as you and @hacja do. It's true that Kwon-sook is preoccupied right now with things like kissing, while Tae-young is dealing with much weightier issues like protecting himself and his mother from violent gangsters. And he definitely has more life experience in general. But Kwon-sook spent most of her earlier life dealing with heavy things, and so her concentration on comparably "immature" concerns now seems more about a concerted effort on her part to move on from the unhappiness of her past rather than a sign of her overall emotional growth or level of naïveté.
But again, I get where you guys are coming from--if the romance doesn't work for you, it doesn't work and I respect that. It may very well be the case that Tae-young and Kwon-sook acknowledge their mutual attraction in some way but then ultimately decide they're just not in the same place in life right now for a relationship. But I see the potential there for them to be compatible despite the gaps between them.
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OAsia
September 8, 2023 at 1:54 AM
"I agree that Jae-min is boring and ate up too much airtime this week. But also, I appreciate the way he's not the primary love interest here, and yet he and Kwon-sook actually made out on-screen. Am I wrong , or does that never happen in kdramas? "
This happens not so rarely in dramas. There are even dramas where FLs have love scenes with more than one man. For example, "Discovery of Romance" is this type of drama. FL is cheating on her current boyfriend with her ex-boyfriend. There are also more innocent dramas where FL kisses more than one man, FL kisses 2ML and ML in "Don't dare to dream".
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LaurenSophie
September 8, 2023 at 6:01 AM
Thanks--I've never seen either one of those dramas.
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fournier48
September 9, 2023 at 4:18 PM
I'd say it happens, but it is still fairly rare. When I do see a non-OTP couple share a physical moment, I always doubt who the leads are.
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Lalla32
September 10, 2023 at 10:10 AM
I gree that it very rarely happens. We have plenty of triangles in dramas and particularly when the main lead is female, if she thinks she is in love with the second lead, she never ever ever ever kisses him. Something always happens to prevent that so that her first kiss happens with the ML. I find it very frustrating because it comes straight from patriarchy. She has to be pure for the ML.
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Isa is always time travelling
September 28, 2023 at 5:07 PM
Love Alarm, My unfamiliar family, My first first love, The best hit... are other examples that come to my mind.
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Mrs Buckwheat
September 8, 2023 at 5:05 AM
LaurenSophie-I don’t think I’m really all that interested in boxing but would you still recommend the show?
I’m finding Destined with You a bit ho hum. It feels repetitive, I don’t find it romantic when the male lead professes his love for the FL while he already has a girlfriend and it’s hard to watch when minor characters out act the lead.
I haven’t come across the actors in this show before, are they good here?
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LaurenSophie
September 8, 2023 at 6:03 AM
I don't care for boxing either, and I love this show.
I've seen the actor playing the ML before, but I can't remember in what. I've never seen the FL before this show. But yes, they're both very good and have chemistry.
Beyond that, this is just a well written, entertaining, emotionally satisfying show that's neither too dark nor too light. I will warn you that the first episode isn't great, but if you can get past that, it picks up quickly.
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Mrs Buckwheat
September 8, 2023 at 6:29 AM
Ok, thank you, I will give it a go. 😊
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Lalla32
September 10, 2023 at 10:12 AM
Absolutely agree. Give it a try. It just is a good, well written show.
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2 Lord Cobol (Kdramas, like water, flow downhill)
September 7, 2023 at 6:23 PM
I don't much like the gangster angle and I wish they had done something else to motivate Tae-young to try so hard to recruit her -- like maybe having him smell a big payday for himself if he could pull it off.
But if we must have gangsters, can we at least see them get beaten up by the girl half their size?
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LaurenSophie
September 7, 2023 at 6:33 PM
I'm not a fan of the gangster angle, either, but I do appreciate that the writers tried to make his motivations more nuanced than simple greed or ambition. And I thought for sure Kwon-sook was going to run out and save Tae-young from that beat-down, but based on the previews, it seems she won't even know about it until Soo-yeon tells her.
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3 miso
September 7, 2023 at 6:27 PM
Jae-min is painfully boring and I find myself zoning out every time he's on screen. Everybody else on other hand is really quite interesting. I agree about the internal conflict in liking Chul-yong when we see him being so horribly abusive in the past. The show is good at doing this. It doesn't excuse Kwon-sook from the troubles she's caused her peers, esp. Ah-reum, and it doesn't excuse Tae-young from making choices his athletes may not always agree with. No one is a saint here and that in itself is refreshing.
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4 I ♥️ bad dramas
September 7, 2023 at 9:05 PM
The look on Tae-young's face when Kwon-sook won the match, something changed in him in that moment. He truly saw her skill for the first time.
Ha, whenever Jae-min appears on the screen i can't wait for him to get off it. On the other hand, I can't get enough of Kwon-sook and Tae-young interactions. They generally have such lopsided conversations, leaving the other party speechless, which I find quite funny. And then they have their quieter moments too.
I like Chul-yong for the making the effort to atone for his obsessive training. I hope to see him and Kwon-sook have a quiet and heartfelt talk about his mistakes.
I'm loving the actresses who play Ah-ra and Ah-reum. I hope this isn't the last we see of Ah-ra.
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5 Kurama
September 7, 2023 at 10:34 PM
I know nothing about boxing but the lack of structure is terrible. They are waiting for the girls to organize everything (money, opponent, tv, etc) and to fight.
It's interesting to see the different point of view of the girls. They're all right but they don't have a word to say... KS had to run away.
I think it's good that KS is "dating" boring boy, boxing didn't took that from her. And she will see how TY is different and they already share a lot.
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6 geminirat
September 7, 2023 at 10:54 PM
Thank you, @daebakgrits, for the weecap! I've just recently finished binge-watching episodes 1 thru 6 and I'm enjoying the interaction between 'Sook-ah' and 'Ahjussi!' Kwon-sook is slowly learning the real Tae-young thru stories from Ho-joong and (yes, despite the age gap) I'm shipping Kwon-sook and Tae-young!
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7 jerrykuvira
September 8, 2023 at 12:13 AM
This episodes are quite solid.
I especially liked Ah-ra's verbal dressing at Kwon-seok, not for the dressing part of it, but for the perspective it pointed out. We also see that someway, the same perspective costed champion Ah-reum her championship. And now to see it repeat itself 3 years later, it's like they're all back to square one.
Chul-yung is a delight that I'm finding it hard to reconcile his current state with training-dad mode. Way unlike Jae-min who was introduced sweet but he's now showing himself to be the hand of destruction itself and very much unlikeable.
I'd like to see Kwon-seok get into the competition proper, after losing her fight with Ah-reum.
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8 OAsia
September 8, 2023 at 1:44 AM
I like that we learn about FL's relationship with her first boyfriend from the beginning of the drama. Usually, FL's exes are shown in flashback dramas when these characters come back into the FLS's life to mess with them. Here we have the story from the beginning and we will see its end. In the case of ML's previous love, this is impossible, because his relationship ended years ago and we will probably see flashbacks. 2FL will probably also try to get back to ML at some point, because it is clear that this feeling is not a thing of the past for her, since she maintains contact with his mother and is still in contact with ML on various occasions. At the same time, we see the development of feelings between FL and ML from the beginning when they met. We see how they are getting closer to each other (we have typical drama moments such as the scene with an umbrella, etc.) and even if they decide to be together, or even if there is only a suggestion that they will be together, at the very end of the drama, it will be a well-written, credible story of theirs feelings.
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9 Mrs Buckwheat
September 9, 2023 at 7:53 AM
Ok, I’m now up to episode 6 and the show has cast its spell on me.
The casting is excellent, the actors are portraying the nuanced characters that are neither good or bad with great intelligence.
I really enjoying the ost as well.
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Lalla32
September 10, 2023 at 10:15 AM
YAY! :D
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10 Lalla32
September 10, 2023 at 10:25 AM
I see I'm probably the only one... but I'm very against the father and the way the show tries to make him look cute. He was a monster with his daughter. He was beating her and her mother. She grew in fear of his actions and now is scared of the thing she is very good at beacuse of him.
I hope she won't forgive him for his actions. I'm okay with her coming to terms with him... but he was horrible and abusive. I hated seeing Tae-young going along with his stupid plans. I condone it just because Tae Young is a grey character so that most of his actions are just selfish and opportunistic right now. Hope we won't see much of the father in future episodes. I don't care if he understood his mistakes and has changed.
Apart from this, I'm simply loving everything! <3 It's good to finally have a well written show on my screen.
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Mrs Buckwheat
September 11, 2023 at 5:04 PM
No, I also don't like that they try and make the father look cute.
There is nothing cute about abuse and the fact that he got away with doing it to both a child and his wife is appalling.
It reminds me of Helena Dochic, the young tennis star who was continually abused by her father and coach.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/tennis/2017/11/15/former-tennis-star-jelena-dokic-details-horrific-abuse-new-book/867374001/
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Lalla32
September 12, 2023 at 12:48 AM
While watching the drama I thought of Agassi. I didn't know Dokich story. It's terrible.
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Isa is always time travelling
September 28, 2023 at 5:14 PM
I think the same about FL's father. I can't like him, no matter how much the show is trying to convince us that he is different now.
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11 Isa is always time travelling
September 28, 2023 at 5:29 PM
I have just finished the sixth episode. I'm hooked to this drama despiste getting bored in many moments and wanting to FF the secondary characters sequences (but I don't do it).
I guess I'm hooked because I'm enjoying ML and FL interactions. They were too cute playing in the beach! It seemed the actors had a lot of fun.
I even like FL and his "boyfriend"'s scenes!
He is totally bland and uninteresting (probably another actor would have been a better option) but I don't dislike him as much as other beanies.
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