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Cinderella at 2AM: Episodes 1-2

If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if a K-drama Cinderella went against the trope and accepted the proffered envelope of money from her prince’s disapproving mother, then this is the drama for you. However, just because our leading lady readily accepts the cash, that doesn’t guarantee ending her relationship will be easy.

EPISODES 1-2

Our modern fairy tale begins in media res with a scene that’s as familiar to K-drama veterans as wrist grabs, product placements, and white Trucks of Doom. HA YOON-SEO (Shin Hyun-bin) is seated at a private dining table across from KIM SUN-JOO (Jin Hee-kyung), the elegant — and immensely rich — chairwoman of AL Group, Yoon-seo’s employer. More importantly, though, Chairwoman Kim is the mother of Yoon-seo’s undercover chaebol boyfriend SEO JOO-WON (Moon Sang-min).

Like many disapproving chaebol mommas before her, Sun-joo tells Yoon-seo to break up with her son in exchange for a large sum of money — to be wired to her bank account, of course, because envelopes full of cash are so circa Boys Before Flowers. However, there’s a plot twist to this particular story: instead of rejecting the money like so many Candies and Cinderellas before her, Yoon-seo writes down her bank account information and agrees to break up with Joo-won — but not immediately.

If she breaks up with Joo-won now — abruptly and not too long after accidentally learning of his chaebol status — then he would figure out that his mother instigated their breakup, and if Yoon-seo is going to be the gold-digging girlfriend who takes the money, then she’d rather not drive a wedge between Joo-won and his mother in the process. Instead, Yoon-seo plans to slowly break up with Joo-won over the course of the next two months, hoping she can create enough animosity between them that will make their breakup feel more organic so that he won’t question her motives. Or, even better, maybe she can push him to the point of breaking up with her. In return, Charwoman Kim promises to transfer Joo-won to an overseas division of AL Group after the breakup.

However, Yoon-seo quickly learns that one does not simply break up with one’s boyfriend — especially not when he’s extremely thoughtful and attuned to her personality quirks. Drawing inspiration from the internet, Yoon-seo does her best to Kate Hudson her way through losing a guy in ten days two months, but her juvenile methods of pushing Joo-won away are more baffling than off-putting. She might try to play the role of an indecisive and stubborn girlfriend who can’t decide where she wants to eat, but Joo-won, who knows her extremely well, expertly navigates her false hangryness and takes her to one of her favorite restaurants to fix his malfunctioning girlfriend.

The familiarity of the comfort food and Joo-won’s charming presence cause Yoon-seo to forget her objective, and she easily slips back in sync with Joo-won, making her realize that it will be harder for her to break up with him than she’d previously thought. From the moment she found out he was a chaebol, she pragmatically assumed that a breakup would be inevitable because of the massive gap in their socioeconomic statuses. After all, there’s no such thing as a Cinderella romance in real life — which is why she rationalized that it was better to at least get some money out of Joo-won’s mother while she could — but that doesn’t negate the fact that she cares about Joo-won and doesn’t want to hurt him.

The inner turmoil drives Yoon-seo to drink herself silly, a move she regrets the next day when she realizes she drunk texted a partial break-up message to her work group chat and, according to her call history, had a phone conversation with Joo-won that she can’t remember. Thankfully, the other members of Yoon-seo’s team, BAE JANG-HEE (Lee Kyu-sung) and NOH YE-YOUNG (Kim Gyu-nam) are comically oblivious and misinterpret text, but what about her phone call with Joo-won?

Well, he claims he called her to see if she was all right after seeing the text, but after finding a recording on her phone of her drinking call with Joo-won, Yoon-seo realizes that she’d actually broken up with him. Joo-won tells her he pretended it didn’t happen because he didn’t want it to be real, but now that the secret is out of the bag, Yoon-seo pushes forward with the breakup. Joo-won tries to fight it, revealing that his older brother SEO SHI-WON (Yoon Park) told him that their mother had asked Yoon-seo to break up with him, but even with the whole truth out in the open, Yoon-seo won’t be swayed. She already took the money, and she firmly believes that, one way or another, their different social classes will doom them.

A week passes, and Yoon-seo, who can’t afford to lose focus because of a breakup, throws herself into her job while Jang-hee and Ye-young complain that Joo-won, their hoobae whose chaebol status is still unknown to them, took an unexpected vacation. Presumably, his mother made good on her promise to send him overseas, but it turns out that is very much not the case because, a week after their breakup, Joo-won returns to AL Group as the outed second son of Chairwoman Kim.

He’s not only been given a promotion that suits his status as a chaebol, but he gives back to his former teammates — now subordinates — by stocking the break rooms with premium snacks and massage chairs. His dramatic return to the company is a major shock for Yoon-seo, and when she reads the notice of his appointment as director, she stumbles, slips out of shoe, and nearly falls down an elegant grand staircase that looks totally incongruous with the office setting. As if the allusions to Cinderella weren’t obvious enough, Joo-won races up the stairs, and after dramatically catching Yoon-seo in his arms, he shifts her to a standing position so he can bend down and slip her shoe back onto her foot.

In addition to being a nod to Cinderella’s glass slipper, Joo-won’s sensational return is a callback to the beginning of his courtship of Yoon-seo a year and a half ago. After a team dinner, Yoon-seo’s shoe had malfunctioned and Joo-won had raced to a nearby stationery store to buy her some cartoonish cloud slippers, and as he’d bent down to place them on her feet there was a hesitancy and awkwardness that — after a year and half of dating — is no longer present.

After putting the slippers on her own feet, Yoon-seo had caught Joo-won staring at her, and he’d confessed that he thought she looked pretty — a thought he’d definitely intended to keep to himself. However, once his admiration for his work noona was out in the open, Joo-won had run with his confession and countered her “I’m not into younger men” with “I don’t like older women either — I like pretty women.” (Omo, that’s pretty smooth.)

In the present, Yoon-seo is confused by Joo-won’s return. After all, his mother promised to send him overseas, but Joo-won is not the type to sit by idly while his mother tries to ruin his relationship. Instead, Joo-won declares that he’s going to chase after her and cling to her — a statement that is, depending on how romantic you find this fictional set-up, either a massive red flag or swoon worthy moment.

Joo-won somehow convinced Chairwoman Kim that she shouldn’t send him abroad — where he’d just waste away drinking and partying all day to numb the pain of his breakup — and instead give him a promotion. This is, of course, a strategic move on Joo-won’s part that serves two purposes. One, he aims to prove to his mother that he can elevate the company and be successful without being married off to another chaebol family, like his brother, for strategic business purposes. Second, he plans to stick by Yoon-seo’s side so that he’s neither “out of sight” nor “out of mind.”

Flustered by his frankness and informal speech — a tactic that, according to his online search, would make him more attractive to an ex-girlfriend — Yoon-seo reminds Joo-won that she took his mother’s money, but Joo-won is unperturbed that she was so easily bribed. He always knew she liked money, given her work habits, and he — much to my delight — points out an obvious loophole in her deal with his mother. Yeon-seo promised Chairwoman Kim that she would end her relationship with Joo-won, but there was no clause in their verbal agreement that stated she couldn’t get back together with him after the breakup. (Hah!)

And so, Joo-won begins pursuing Yoon-seo in ways that are just as juvenile as Yoon-seo’s initial tactics to try and ditch him. He tags along to team dinners and luncheons in order to gaze fondly at Yoon-seo’s adorable eating habits and covertly grab her hand in the candy bowl at the checkout counter. He sends her love messages via the printer at her desk during late night work sessions, and when the elevator doors close on his foot, he tries to leverage the injury to get a pity date.

Although his tactics fail at swaying Yoon-seo, it’s easy to see how the young (previously undercover) chaebol initially wormed his way into her heart the first go around. He’s genuinely sweet and attentive, but as Yoon-seo discovers via a private elevator conversation with Shi-won, Joo-won had also frequently set aside his own preferences to cater to hers, a new insight that doesn’t sit well with her.

After pushing herself to work while having a cold — because normal office workers don’t have the luxury of taking a day off whenever they want — Yoon-seo passes out in the company parking garage and wakes up in a VIP hospital with a very concerned Joo-won at her side. She objects to the extravagance, which is an extension of his affection and concern for her, and causes Joo-won to drop his happy facade. He admits that he’s having a hard time. It’s not easy being rejected over and over.

If it’s so hard, she wonders, why does he keep doing it? Similarly, why did he accompany her to the movies when he hates dark cramped spaces, and why did he eat spicy food if he doesn’t enjoy it? Because, he responds, he wanted to like the things she liked, and gradually her likes and dislikes became his own. Yoon-seo, in return, expresses her disappointment that he never gave her the same opportunity to learn and appreciate his interests, like opera, with him because he prioritized her preferences over his own.

The revelation that he put forth so much effort to date her softens Yoon-seo’s resolve slightly, and she decides that they should try just as hard to break up. So she offers to eat with him 27 times — the number of meals she owes him — and during that time they should try to gradually wean themselves off one another. Joon-won agrees to the arrangement, but only because he intends to use it as an opportunity to prove that they should remain together.

It becomes very apparent that Yoon-seo’s plan is going to backfire spectacularly in her face with each passing meal. After a year and a half of dating, she and Joo-won are naturally comfortable and playful with each other, and the familiarity makes it easy for Yoon-seo to forget the intended purpose of the 27 meals. Even Chairman Kim, who has someone stalking the couple and taking photos to monitor the status of their relationship, is concerned with the loving way Yoon-seo looks at Joo-won.

However, despite what Chairman Kim may see in the photos, the breakup is weighing heavily on both Yoon-seo and Joo-won’s minds — a fact that becomes very apparent after Joo-won goads Yoon-seo into drinking with him. He indulges in too much somaek and drunkenly asks Yoon-seo, “Do you not like me anymore?” Against her better judgment, Yoon-seo allows her heart to answer him truthfully, “I still like you,” and in response, Joo-won leans in for a kiss.

Joo-won is such a sweetheart who truly loves her. Maybe he’s a bit naive in thinking his love and perseverance can conquer all the obstacles in his and Yoon-seo’s way, but I think he balances out Yoon-seo’s pragmatic approach to life and relationships. I also adore the fact that he doesn’t hold it against Yoon-seo that she accepted his mother’s money — it’s just icing on the cake. Seriously, his little quip about her getting a BOGO deal (money + love) if she dates him was fantastic, and it cemented my love for his character.

Actually, most of the characters in Cinderella at 2AM are pretty fantastic and have already revealed themselves to be multifaceted. Shi-won, for example, may walk around his house in his boxers and boast about all the freedoms he has in his arranged (and presumably loveless) marriage, but the personification of his robot vacuum hints at loneliness. Even Chairwoman Kim, whose own marriage was arranged, is reservedly affectionate to her sons, and her curiosity in Yoon-seo could be the start of her coming around to approving of Joo-won’s chosen partner.

And speaking of Yoon-seo, I really like that she’s a more mature version of the classic K-drama Cinderella who rarely seems to have her shit together because she’s either still in high school or being constantly dumped on by the universe. Contrastingly, even though Yoon-seo didn’t need the money — because her hard work earned her a successful career with enough money to support herself and her high-school-aged brother — she, unlike her counterparts, was the one to take it. And while this decision was made pragmatically (or pessimistic depending on how you look at it) with the belief that the relationship would inevitably end due to dramatic differences in the bank account balances, one has to wonder, give her troubled childhood, how much of her decision was influenced by a her desire to be liked by her future in-laws.

I was initially drawn to Cinderella at 2AM because of its promised subversion of the Separation Bribe trope, but the novelty of the initial setup also had me doubtful that the drama could sustain the story beyond the first couple of episodes. Obviously, it’s still too soon to predict the trajectory or success of this drama, but if it maintains its current balance of romance and comedy while using character development to drive the plot, then I think Cinderella at 2AM has the potential to surprise us all.

 
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I couldn't get into this one, the biggest sin a drama can commit is to be boring, even terrible dramas can be fun for hate watching purposes but this was just.... bland

I dont know how its possible to have a cast of attractive and fairly talented actors and still have everything be so vanilla and forgettable.

Ill give it 2 more episodes, who know...

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I wanted to like this but I couldn’t. The premise is great with a lot of potential, but neither of the leads worked for me. Their chemistry felt bland.

If someone gives me a Yoon Park edit, I will watch that!!

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Seconding Yoon Park edit.

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I was expecting this drama to just be a kind of “filler” watch for me to pass the time because neither of the leads are favs of mine but the whole thing was so adorable that now I’m excited to see where it goes. Thanks for the great recap, I agree that the characters had more depth than I was expecting and so did their happy relationship. The details about him catering to her and not sharing his own preferences is such a real/normal relationship issue in dating that makes an otherwise fantastical story relatable.

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I'm with you on the unexpected depth--or just the unexpected themes, like "What happens when you find out your boyfriend has been pretending to like what you like this whole time, but you're not dating anymore...but you also don't hate him? Is that OK? Would you have tried to like what he likes if he asked/let you?"

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This would normally on my must watch list, but neither actor is engaging enough to keep me tuning in.

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That's how I feel about this, the premise is awesome but I don't think I'd like the leads

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Thanks for the recap, Daebakgrits!

I watched these first episodes and I some of my random thoughts were:

_ Everybody is in this show just because they have to earn their daily bread. And I can't blame them.

_ If 75% is bad but there are sparkles of something slightly intelligent, should I keep watching it?

_ Yoon Park was quite funny and I'm intrigued by his relationship with his mysterious wife.

_ The OST is much better than the script.

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I will admit to spending approximately two hours wondering when I was going to get to see Sojin. Those fleeting moments and the few pictures were not enough!!!

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I was wondering the same. She was taking too long to appear.
I hope she adds some fun to this show.

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The first two episodes weren't remarkable, but okay.

I find refreshing is how good the relationship between the two brothers is.
The main reason I'll keep watching for now is that I want to see how the older brother finds happiness.

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The main issue with this drama is for me Shin Hyun-Bin doesn't have screen presence and Moon Sang-Min is too young for this role.

The story would have worked better with better actors.

I'm curious about the story of the old brother and I wonder if he already loves his wife or if he will fall in love with her.

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He's supposed to be young, though...that's why he's making these somewhat dubious relationship choices.

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His character is 29 years old, Moon Sang-Min is 24 years old. His acting doesn't make for the 5 years difference.

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I was actually surprised by how much I liked it - it's like a marshmallow, sweet, vanilla and fluffy and I don't think it wants to be more.
The couple is very cute together, I'm interested in how Mr. "I just wear shorts at home" will find love and the OST is fun.
Very disappointed regarding absence of 2PM jokes.

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The 2PM jokes got all used up in Bitter Sweet Hell earlier this year. The batteries haven't yet recharged 😂

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RIGHT?? I need a rewatch to write down the jokes!

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It should be 2AM jokes... not 2PM...

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Unfortunately the only 2AM jokes I know are directly related to 2PM 😅

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They should use I Did Wrong as OST :p

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When I saw 2PM I was confused too. Maybe it's because most people don't know 2AM...? 🤔

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Ha. I had no idea 2AM were still active. Go figure. Very sorry.

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Dear Future Beanies,

This drama is airing live on the weekends against something like 10,000,000 other dramas, both rom-coms and not. Many of those other dramas may indeed be "better" than this one, certainly some of them are more divisive.

I really quite liked these first two episodes, even while preferring some of the other shows on air. I can't help but wonder that this drama might end up being far, far better than many of the rom-coms that aired this YEAR while being a little buried here in the Dramabeans comments by the shows on right now.

From the first scene, I could tell that I'm in this to watch Chairwoman Kim fall in love with our FL, because if she does, we will too.

All best wishes,

Seon-ha

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Absolutely agree that this may very well be a little gem once we look back on the drama year that was, especially considering that much bigger higher profile dramas are bordering on the edge of being lumps of coal. Time will tell...

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@daebakGrits thank you for your thoughtful recap as ever! Show so far is everything I need and want it to be, am feeling very fond of all our peeps and loving how gentle our two lovelies are being with each other despite their current circumstances. Hope the good start made will continue over the coming weeks and I am looking forward to see how and if our FL's pragmatism melds with our ML's sunny optimism .

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Wow, are there a lot of light romances out right now, and all have just enough interest to make me stick with them except DNA lover, which got off to a rough start and proved to be one pseudo scientist too many for me.

I thought at first this premise was going to be a send up of rom-com tropes, ala Dreaming of a Freeking Fairytale, but it proved to be something equally appealing, a more "realistic" consideration of the actual difficulty that wealth differences make in a relationship.

What makes me actually take this premise seriously, is that oddly, I am familiar with someone comfortably middle class like myself who is good friends with an enormously wealthy woman, and while you would think it would be enjoyable to know someone who thought nothing of giving you incredibly lavish gifts, or have you driven to dinner by your friend's personal driver, it in fact does generate discomfort and misunderstandings. There is indeed a personal and not just a social issue with enormous disparities in wealth and I can really see how it could prove an impediment in a romantic relationship.

The part of the premise I didn't like is once again we have the Mom at least initially not really that concerned about her sons' happiness, ala another story that in some respects rang true for me, Serendipity's Embrace. I am hoping she will in the end prove to be sympathetic, as @daebakgrits suggests, which would be refreshing.

As far as the show itself Moon Sang-min, who I saw in Wedding Impossible, is not one of those actors with a great deal of range. But since this role does not require him so far to do much but gaze adoringly at the FL, and he is good looking, I don't mind him here. I like the actress playing the FL, and as is often the case, she is a more relatable character to me than any of the others. As far as the "chemistry" it seems okay to me, unlike a couple of the other shows going on right now, in which the interchanges are really contrived and forced, based on mid 30 year olds acting like teenagers--but I know many DB viewers like that, so, as someone who last studied chemistry 50 years ago, I will leave the judgment of that to others.

I do appreciate that so far none of the male characters are traumatized or anguished, and I also appreciate that so far we haven't had any flashbacks to high school, with just the brother (?) I think that who it is, having to don a high school uniform as an actor in his mid-20s.

One thing encouraging about this one is that its only 10 episodes, and unless there's a dramatic turn for the worse (always possible) I can stick with it for that amount of time! (although probably 8 would be even better in this case!)

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Tbh, I enjoyed the first episode of this drama more than another show next door. However, the drama lost me with the second episode.

I liked how we had an official couple. It's so rare to see this trope these days.
I like it more than the pre-dating journey in most shows. I like to see the couple be freely cute and I like watching them face their problems together.

I was ready to see the FL fall in love all over again during the 2 months she was going to try to break up with her boyfriend.
And I wanted to see how would he react to all her crazy antics. I was wondering if he would find out the truth in the middle of everything and how was he going to handle it.

I thought it was going to be a fun ride. But then, episode 1 ending/episode 2 happened.

If an ex taking a position of power over the FL to harass her in her home/workplace is a new trend I'm not here for it.

It was very uncomfortable to see him become her boss and explicitly telling her that he was going to stalk the heck out of her in her workplace. Watching it in action made it worse. And then, that scene in the elevator with the hyung telling her "it's better if you give up, he won't change his mind. He always gets what he wants" didn't help AT ALL.

Wtv, it is what it is. Sadly, this one isn't for me.

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@enriquequierecagar Let me just put out a different interpretation on this episode.
Since the whole theme of the first episode was the FL's dismay and ultimate rejection of her love because of the disparity in wealth and power, the show is not going to, in the second episode, endorse the use of wealth and power via sexual harassment of subordinates as a way to win a woman's heart.

In fact, most of that episode showed how uncomfortable his pursuit using his power was making the FL, despite the fact that she loved him, having fallen in love prior to learning his company position. Only when she heard that he was deeply influenced by her, as an equal, did she once again warm to him.

I could always be wrong, since kdrama romance writers are somewhat unpredictable but I am fairly confident, if this ends happily, is going to end up with him somehow illustrating that he's willing to do more than use his power and position to harass her into submission, since again, that was the whole way the drama began, with the Mother doing the same to the FL to get her to end the relationship.

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I don't expect that much from the writers of this land.

When the hyung gave her the "advice" about "giving up", during the elevator scene he also said "but that's his charm" and the FL agreed and smiled. I don't think we were supposed to take the situation that seriously, since the show definitely didn't.

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Yes, I also do wonder how the writer is going to avoid showing relentless sexual harassment! They have certainly entered dangerous territory here.

I love the chaebol mother - because I really like this actress. she will be ok in the end.

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I enjoyed these two episodes for just what they were. (Although I feel like I should feel guilty about the underlying consent issue?) I wasn't bored, and I liked the OTP's dynamic and playfulness. Yoon Park needs his own drama, of course.

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Excellent recap. This drama reminds me so much of Business Proposal. From the style to even the scenes, like the nosy ahjumma at the restaurant, it feels like scenes were almost lifted from BP.

I've seen those cloud slides before, but I can't remember where.

I wonder who this show is marketed towards. It seems like the main actors in this drama have few stans among the beanies. However, given the story, it should be directed toward young men. The show could be renamed, A how to on dating a noona in Seoul. lol.

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When Joo-won (Moon Sang-min) got out of the car and entered the building now as a Director (with his posse) I definitely got BUSINESS PROPOSAL (2022) vibes.
Some CINDERELLA AT 2AM vs BUSINESS PROPOSAL height comparisons:
CA2AM Moon Sang-min: 6’ 3”
CA2AM Shin Hyun-been: 5’ 6”
BP Ahn Hyo-seop: 6’ 2”
BP Kim Se-jeong: 5’ 5”
The height difference between the leads is quite similar. When Joo-won made that bow of apology Yoon-seo had to step backwards.
(O/T. One actor that has successfully acted in roles older than his real age: Lee Jae-wook. Height: 6’ 2”.)

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I don't think it's off topic--I think they're trying to do that here too! The FL is younger than the actress playing her and the ML is older than the actor playing him.

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I know that this show had as slow a start to me as to others here, but I am sticking with it.

I am a sucker for stories about reluctant Cinderellas- and this one has a Cinderella who is reluctant one rational and pragmatic grounds. That may be why their relationship situation has seemed so bland: There is good reason for it. She is trying to make her head rule over her heart and this simply doesn't have the same warm and fuzzy feeling we get in other such tales- because she is right about this.

Is our ML's decision to cling to her a red flag or swoon-worthy? Look to the circumstances. Before he was exposed as Chaebol our FL had already said she wanted to marry him. What has happened is that the situation has changed for reasons that have nothing to do with either of them as a human being - it is all about societal biases and stereotypes, which are driving his mom as much as anything. He has simply chosen to fight for the love which already existed. This is indeed manly and swoon worthy.

He has the courage to do something about it and he has good reason to want to: Why would anyone want to repeat what has happened to his Hyung? That would be crazy. He is no stalker but rather a man who is taking responsibility for his future happiness.

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OK, the initial premise--that she takes the money!--is great. But then what? Then we have a weak script and good actors working hard to save it, I think? I didn't recognize Shin Hyun-bin's face but my first reaction was, "OMG, it's the woman with the beautiful voice--what was that show?" like the middle-aged mom I am. I googled and realized she was in Hospital Playlist. I just love the way she speaks slowly and uses the lower register of her voice. Moon Sang-min is 24 and she is 38, but they don't really look like they are 14 years apart. They look like the age difference is an effect not of the actor's actual ages but of their characters' personalities: he is always going to be a puppy and she is always going to be the worried noona.

Yoon Park seems to be having fun as the older brother, hanging around his apartment in his underwear.

Anyway, I find these actors pretty cute. Watching was painless and I wasn't forced to fast forward through second-hand embarrassment, so I'll probably watch again next week.

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I wonder if it would have been better to build up the relationship for a few episodes prior to her taking the money, so there's time to get invested in them as a couple, and then the rest of the series is the fallout and them getting back together.

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I think the idea was to emphasize the difference between this show and other Cinderella stories. I suspect most of this story is going to be flashbacks anyway, because their present life is very pleasant, but they both have dark pasts.

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My predictions for the future. Either ML's father or his sister in law will turn out to be a bad guy and try to steal the company. FL will save the day and ML's mother will realize that being part of a powerful chaebol family is not the best partner to marry off your children and that it is preferable to have someone who loves them rather than being rich. Hopefully no white trucks or serial killer is involved. Fingers crossed.

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I looked up Shin Hyun-bin's filmography, and was surprised to find I'd already watched her in Tell Me That You Love Me. A versatile, experienced actress who disappears into her roles. I was undecided after the first episode, but now I'm in.

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Kind of strange but CINDERELLA AT 2AM was not on my radar at all until it became evident that QUEEN WOO would not be available on a legal stream in the US. That left me with only live watching LOVE NEXT DOOR (Netflix) and recently starting the long range project with series one of TALES OF THE TANG DYNASTY (iQIYI). I read @daebakgrits episodes 1-2 recap which I almost never read before watching an episode. The recap was quite positive and then scanning the comments I saw both @attiton and @hacjas imprimatur so I decided to take the plunge into this modern romantic fairy tale. Through the first two episodes both leads have handled their roles nicely. I enjoyed both episodes. My first Yoon Park drama was back in 2018 in RADIO ROMANCE but this (so far) smallish role in CA2AM may become my favorite Yoon Park performance. He is so enjoyable in a good guy role. The relationship between the two brothers in CA2AM is the total reverse of what we saw recently in THE AUDITORS. Nice to see in kdramaland two brothers who care for each other. The last time I saw that was in my only other Moon Sang-min drama the wonderful sageuk UNDER THE QUEEN’S UMBRELLA (2022) where unbelievably there was no backstabbing and all 5 brothers loved and supported each other.

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