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Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

Ever wondered what would happen if the girl you’re flirting with turned into a chicken nugget? As we learn in the new Netflix absurdist comedy, Chicken Nugget — which is about just that — you’ll need more than Naver to figure out how to change her back. Instead, it’ll take ingenuity, sleuthing, teaming up with your crush’s father, and — most importantly — ensuring the nugget of your affection stays hydrated in her sweet-and-spicy dipping sauce.

Editor’s note: This is an opening review only. For a place to chat about the entire drama, visit the Drama Hangout.
 
EPISODES 1-2

Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

This is the weirdest mess I’ve ever seen. Whether or not you’ll find that endearing enough to endure will depend on your threshold for open-mouthed guffaws and wriggling around on the floor in exaggerated existential pain. That’s not to say there are no funny jokes here — there are. But in the first hour (out of five), I spent as much time lol’ing as I did wanting to skip to the next scene.

Based on a webtoon, our story starts in a comic-book-color world, where GO BAEK-JOONG (Ahn Jae-hong) is a sprightly intern at More Than Machines, a company that centers on (from what I can see) only machines. Aside from Baek-joong, the company has two other employees — the boss, CHOI SUN-MAN (Ryu Seung-ryong), and co-worker KIM HWAN-DONG (Kim Nam-hee).

Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

Right away, the stakes are set. Somewhat nerdy Baek-joong has a crush on the boss’s only daughter, CHOI MIN-AH (Kim Yoo-jung), who has a thing for kind-hearted men — so long as they have a nice face and good body. Cut to a montage of Baek-joong lifting dual fire extinguishers and hefty boxes of paper at the office to get fit before considering plastic surgery for his face.

The next time Min-ah comes to visit, Baek-joong shows off his newly sculpted forearms but she’s not impressed. Still, she’s brought a box of deep-fried chicken nuggets slathered in sauce for them to share, and their adorably awkward lunchtime conversation clues us in to the fact that she’s not totally dismissing him (“You’re on your way to becoming good-looking,” she tells him).

These brief introductory moments between Ahn Jae-hong and Kim Yoo-jung are gold — cute, funny, tender, teasing — and I was shocked to see what a fantastic comedy duo they make. Ahn Jae-hong is a favorite of mine and next to Kim Yoo-jung he’s able to do what he does best: effortlessly shift from comic nerd to sweet-faced potential boyfriend in one simple change of expression. Kim Yoo-jung, too, is full of hilarity as she delivers ridiculous lines with straight-faced cuteness.

Needless to say, I wanted much more of this interaction. But all that goes out the window when Min-ah steps into a newly delivered machine and comes out a faceless chicken nugget, indecipherable from the other nuggets they’re eating for lunch. This is when the antics turn up to high volume and our story becomes a fantastical mystery about how to change Min-ah back into the lovable crush we’ve just met — before she gets eaten by a rando or desiccated to nothing from lack of a marinade.

Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

When Sun-man returns to find Baek-joong cradling a lonely nugget that he’s calling Min-ah, it takes little to convince him that his daughter is indeed a chicken snack. From there, it’s a mad race against time (and logic) as father and intern try to figure out where this mysterious machine was delivered from, who made it, how it works, and why it’s going around turning pretty girls into nuggets when it’s not even plugged in. While the dialogue is consistently funny between our novice buddy detectives, the exaggerated emotion began to test my patience by Episode 2, where it’s ramped up as the investigation continues.

After the setup, the story is structured like a quest where Sun-man and Baek-joong gather clues (is “nuggets of information” too much?) and we follow along as the situations get sillier. They move from trying to identify the person who delivered the machine (a coarse-mouthed courier from a competing chicken restaurant) to learning about the prize-winning scientist who designed it — only to discover that the scientist has gone missing too. And the mystery thickens.

In the interim, Min-ah has gotten mixed up with the other chicken nuggets at the lunch table and neither her father nor her admirer can pick her out of a dakgangjeong lineup. And so, instead of following the thread of the missing mechanical engineer, our unlikely unit detours to look for a chicken tasting prophet that can tell Min-ah from the rest. In the shenanigans that ensue, the box of nuggets is flipped in the air, falls to the ground, and gets co-mingled with even more chicken treats at a nearby table.

Sun-man and Baek-joong crawl around to collect what’s been dropped, just as a little girl takes a chomp out of one of their nuggets. Cue emotional Armageddon.

As our single father and his hapless employee writhe around on the ground screaming like they’re being deep fried in oil, a woman we haven’t yet met calls them back to order by asserting that the bitten nugget is not Min-ah. A sudden calm washes over the scene and it will be up to the next episode to tell us who this woman is and how she knows.

Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

Like I said, it’s weird. But the weirdness could work to its advantage if it was consistently funny. There’s a bit of a problem with pacing here where the gags are drawn out too long and the script relies too much on the absurdity of the situations themselves to keep us rolling. It doesn’t always work. For example, the story of the scientist who developed the machine dragged on, feeling like filler to ensure the particular plot segment could max out the thirty minutes needed for an episode.

Directed and adapted for the screen by filmmaker Lee Byung-heon (of Dream and Twenty fame, among others), pacing is a perpetual grievance I have with his films. He leans on long visual sequences that run out their narrative interest and then rely on compelling camerawork to keep them going. Since Chicken Nugget is a series, I’m seeing shorter, repeated instances of this within the episodes already, which for me adds deserts of time between the really fascinating and funny parts.

Chicken Nugget: Episodes 1-2 (First Impressions)

That being said, there’s a lot to love here in terms of the visuals. The cartoonish cinematography, the symmetrical shots, and the scant set design put us right into the surrealist world of a webtoon, making the context somehow believable, even as we’re asked to suspend our disbelief.

While I won’t be continuing with this one, I am tempted to skip to the end to see how it concludes. I’m invested enough to want to know how they bring Min-ah back — but mostly (assuming they succeed), I want to know if Baek-joong gets the girl. Will life as a chicken nugget make Min-ah all the more body conscious? (I mean, she’s just lived as a deep-fried piece of meat.) Or will she decide that a kind heart and a gumshoe intellect matter more than toned arms when you find yourself in one of life’s sticky-sauce situations?

 
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We always knew it was going to be ridiculous but the stress the hopeful boyfriend and dad go through as the situation goes from bad to worse had me getting stressed alongside them, although it was balanced funny and intriguing. I did wonder why they made so many rookie errors despite being intelligent as the dad is a man who turns problems into solutions with his inventions.
I did continue watching and I don’t regret it but it is not Gaus electronics funny which I think it needed to be to fully pull this type of ridiculous off.

On a side note: the poor child seeing two men so distressed because she had a bite of her long anticipated lunch. She will probably become a vegan.

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I think if you want a drama to compare it to The sound of your heart is probably the closest; there are some laugh out loud moments in between the rest of the story which is clearly from a webtoon. I have only watched a few dramas with this type of humour so there may be better comparisons.

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If I might, comparing Chicken Nugget to a full-length drama that was attempting a real plot is like comparing apples to oranges. Sure they're both round fruit, but biting into an orange thinking it's an apple would be real disappointing. 🤣

This is adapted from a little webcomic written by a a man also known for his earlier work "Killer Farts." I could stop here, if I needed to.

BUT, I will go on. Based on the "plot" of Chicken Nugget, I'm positing that he was around 20 years old when he wrote it and he had in mind the group of friends he had when he was 12-13 as his audience. I still, myself, giggle a great deal at pre-teen humor, you see. And if you do too, and keep this in mind, much of CN is quite funny.

Its "plot" is more of a "theme." It's a ridiculous, campy romp told through a series of what are basically skits, centered around being a boy (the author, not the MLs) who wonders not only what the world expects of you but also what it will offer you as you grow up.

Better comparison for me: remember at the end of the movie Twenty how there's that ridiculous fight scene for no real reason in that restaurant? There's basically an identical one of those in tone and theme in Chicken Nugget.

I really didn't like the way Twenty handled this same theme, but I really enjoyed many of the "skits" in Chicken Nugget because they were more for 12-year-olds than actual 20-year-olds.

If you want, try to make it through episode three, at least, to see if you like any of it. Don't forget to feel free to skip what you're not enjoying and move to the next skit.

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Thank you so much for giving us this amazing background of a drama.

I especially liked this, “It's a ridiculous, campy romp told through a series of what are basically skits, centered around being a boy (the author, not the MLs) who wonders not only what the world expects of you but also what it will offer you as you grow up.“

This provided me with a more nuanced lens through which I’ll continue watching this drama (I’m on episode 3.) I feel like many of us have a hard time identifying with it because many of us (this is not generalization but a simple guess) are women. Appreciate the detail!

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Yeah, and due to @CecilieDK 's IKEA-based sleuthing, I think the Nugget Nerds are coming to realize that you can also consider this show about being a very specific boy, that is, this "main character:" https://www.dramabeans.com/members/CecilieDK/activity/1551658/

I'm coming to believe that the author of this webcomic was sitting in an IKEA, staring at the piece of commercial art Cecilie identified in that post up there, and made a story up, then and there, about what it would mean to be this cartoon guy, named the "main character" in the ad copy.

See, look...that guy is clearly falling in love with a meatball, and the purple clock behind him would soon become the transformation machine we all know and love in our author's pre-teen imagination.

Seriously, the whole webcomic could have plausibly arisen from a single, crazy daydream in IKEA had while looking at this image.

I'm convinced.

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@attiton I wonder if you are right re the IKEA links as the logo and the uniform are yellow and blue. He just switched the items by making the trousers yellow and the top blue. I kept thinking it reminded me of a uniform I had seen somewhere.

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@reply1988 In the ad that @ceciliedk found, the uniform is exactly the same on the cartoon guy.

https://i.imgur.com/PGEGh2q.png

No switching even necessary! Yellow Pants is dressed like this IKEA character.

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I may have been his personal shopper.

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Oh my mistake I thought @ceciliedk had made that advert herself adding in the character 🤣

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@ceciliedk may have...who's to say!? This whole show is for fun.

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The three Debras and to some extend Miracle Workers (HBO).

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I am here talking about what can be compared with Chicken Nugget's in terms of humour.
Those, and actually "A Town Called Panic".
They all have this kind of absurd, in a way clipped, fantasy humour.
Actually, I don't see the resemblance with Mr. Bean at all. I haven't seen Home Videos ever, but as I hear they are mostly about people, especially toddlers, falling over and getting hurt, and though that happens here (for grown-ups), I don't think it's the same.

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I have only watched Ep 1 and it didn’t draw me in. I will definitely continue to see if the humor works for me. I wish the show spent a little bit time on the ‘flirting’ before the nugget turn. AJH is lovely from what I saw so far.
At 30 min each, episodes are short and should be easy to finish.

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AJH is lovely all the way through and Ryu Seung-ryong is a hilarious physical comic, as is Kim Yoo-jung when she shows up later in the drama to fulfill a pre-teen boy's greatest fantasy. Pre-teen...PRE-teen.

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Started episode 2. The epsodes are only 30 minutes but they feel so long.

Parts of episode 1 are funny. But it's not the kind that sticks with you. The ML reminds me of Lee Tae Sun (who I find endearingly funny).
However, the performances so far are earnest. I mean, to emote looking at a chicken nugget can't be easy.

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No, no, @dramaddictally, I'm afraid you have your watching plan all wrong!

Take from this here Nugget Nerd, as that is (I guess) what I've become, having watched the whole show twice since it's release three days ago...and having re-watched many of the funniest scenes more times that, both in their sub-titled and dubbed glory. Srsly folks try the dub if your English is better than your Korean. It amplifies the absurdity and the camp.

OK, back to my post. Don't skip to the end as there's no real plot to skip to the end to see! This series is about the vignettes in and of themselves (like @ally-le noted on my Fan Wall, a lot like Monty Python). You could see that too @dramaddictally when you noted that some of them went on too long for you.

So, instead of skipping to the end, just FF-skip through the vignette-scenes that aren't making you laugh and move on to the next...that one might be hilarious to you, and believe you me, you'll still understand the "plot."

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I didn’t like Monty Python so I must have missed a lot of the humour in this. I have only watched a couple of minutes of a dubbed K drama by mistake years ago and it won’t ever happen intentionally. I am glad the drama worked well for you and that you binged it twice. We all benefit from a good laugh.

Re your response to my comment above for the background re the webtoon and the writer thanks that really helps. I didn't watch Twenty as I assumed it would not work for me as it would be like LTNS too coarse for me.

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Yes, Twenty is stupid "course" and I don't recommend it to anyone. LTNS is "courser" but not done stupidly--I still wouldn't recommend it to you. The middle was better than the beginning or the end.

Chicken Nugget isn't course, really, at all, except for the language--but even the cursing is sort of done sweetly and without mean intent.

I'm not trying to convince you to watch--I'm just filling in some details here for Future Beanies!!

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My kids are Monty Python fans and I’m trying to convince them that this is worth watching for them. They won’t take me up on it though because their “not cool” mom likes it. 😂

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I liked it too! I'm wondering what you thought of the ending and what's gonna happen next.

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Oooh, that's a good question...probably should go over on the Beanie Hangout because it's not about episodes 1-2. I'm going to give this some serious thought today and respond to you over there, OK?

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Absolutely, you can just tag me! Thanks

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Did Dramaland have to turn Kim Yoo-Jung into a NUGGET to let her star in a GOOD drama?! And ONLY couple of minutes of a good drama she’s actually in?! 🤦‍♀️

This drama is actually surprisingly good, much, much better than I (as well as many other people) expected it to be with such an asinine premise. The thing is the humor leans toward over-the-top exaggerated slap-stick, and if you were a fan of Mr Bean or America’s Funniest Home Video, this type of humor will fit you amazingly well. My friend who routinely sends me unfunny (according to me) spaghetti-in-face “funny” reels, simply adores this drama while me… a bit restrained.

But honestly I can’t ignore that this is a very good drama. It moves fast, it elicits a few laughs from me here and there, it has heart and warmth at its core, and I can’t wait to see what happens in subsequent episodes. I encourage people to give it a try.

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You know @bomibeans, while I agree with you in general about this show, that it is better than the premise indicates, I have to disagree with you about its humor--or I should more correctly say, its humor that appeals to me.

Everyone's sense of humor is different, but I absolutely detest America's funniest home video. I've seen one or two of the videos--never a whole show--and now you would have to pay me a considerable sum of money before I'd watch it again. I don't find Mr. Bean funny either. For both the humor is not clever or subtle at all--its "man gets hit in the groin while trying to carry a fragile object" funny--"roar with laughter as you watch him stagger in pain and try to stay upright to not break the vase, only to then have the vase break when he gently puts it down" (this was actually one of the "funniest" home videos that I saw.)

The funniest parts of this show for me, and what makes it worth watching--although it is VERY uneven-- are the parts that involve less physical humor and cruel Three Stooges like slapstick, and more treating totally absurd situations as if they are conventional drama scenes. Tender brushing of moistening barbecue sauce on the chicken nugget you love as if it was ointment, for example. That's certainly a silly way to send up a trope, but its not cruel, embarrassing or cringey like America's funniest home video.

But again, I am well aware that what I find funny is different from most!

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Oh I’m only going by what my friend likes since she adores this show. My sense of humor is more “cerebral”, so to speak. I’m just trying not to discount the “merits” of the humor based on my likes and dislikes, but rather trying to understand better the other points of view. My friend just so happened to be an easy point of reference. But I definitely see your point of view.

(In defense of Mr Bean, the gamut of characters and the absurdity of the situations and ridiculous solutions he presents are saying a lot more things about human nature than it might have us believe on surface, and I definitely see it even if I dislike such a humor, generally speaking. Certainly, in my book, Mr Bean is a LOT more “intelligent” than, say, Friends.)

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I don’t get Mr Bean so using that as a comparison really helps explain the hit and miss element of some of the humour for me. I was also thinking of the female lead having it sweet as she got to wrap up her parts quickly and could then be doing other more involved roles more quickly. I hope she gets a full drama I can watch soon, I loved her in the film 20th Century girl. I won’t be watching My demon.

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“the female lead having it sweet”

“Mortgage pay drama.”

I. Am. Still. Laughing. 😂 “Mortgage pay drama” should be a genre in itself, in Hollywood also.

Unlike LJW though, KYJ (for once) got lucky with her mortgage pay drama.

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🤣I am loving how everyone is jumping on the mortgage payment dramas phrase as it means no need to criticise choices any more as we can all relate as we all have bills to pay.

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It was fine, thankfully they had the good sense to make the episodes half an hour or shorter. That is the only reason I finished it. I chuckled some, LOL'ed 3x exactly. So it wasn't particularly funny, there were moments that were just stupid, and the rest was fine. If it had been longer, I would have dropped it

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Absurdism is all the rage. The movie 'Poor Things' won four Oscars. I think the mission statement for the series is in that scene where Baek-joong is dancing awkwardly down the street and the schoolgirl on her phone says she can't look away. That's the premise of the series. The funniest episode of what I watched so far is episode 3. Aburdist humor at its most absurd.

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After finishing this drama in two sittings over the weekend, it is a quick watch with just 24-31 minutes per episode and the last episode had like 10 minutes of end credits. The meta references in this show were enough tot keep me watching and the dialogue is ridiculous, but delivered sincerely. It’s hard not to root from the “father”-“son” duo as zany as they are and the side characters also make this worth watching. The “Be Melodramatic” and “My Demon” call backs were great and I’m always impressed by Kim Tae Hoon who does a bang up job here too. And the “bad guys” aren’t so bad at all. The amount of just plain fun in this show is hard to be mad at. And at its core is a message about being yourself and not changing for others. That’s a great lesson for anyone.

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I liked it, but I would have liked more closure for the ending. It was surprisingly poignant and deep. It was also pretty hilarious and silly. Ahn Jae-hong is awesome, and this made me want to give Be Melodramatic another shot (I watched ep 1 and never continued).

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The humor is a hit and a miss for me too. It's put together well, and I love that episodes are short. The second one, though sillier than the first one, is better. I haven't had the time to catch more so let's see.
I would have liked a little more character building.
A scene that was touchung - Dad going to buy sanitary napkin for his teen. That brought a lump because it reminded me of my Dad. Well done.

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If you like limited episodes under a half hour each hunt down last year's 'One Day Off', still one of my favorite dramas of the past five years. This series? Not so much but its inoffensive entertainment, and a pleasant reunion of old 'Melo Is My Nature' cast members.

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The Be Melo overlap was outrageous!! It's also a My Demon reunion. 😁

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I have LOVED the humor from Be Melodramatic and this feels so much like it and I laughed quite a lot at the witty & ridiculousness jokes quite a lot

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