As he is a fan favorite, audiences were thrilled to see Michael return to the show. Add zero humour to this equation (in a romantic comedy, no less) and you have yourself a lethal combination to contend with.Since leaving Love On The Spectrum season 2, Michael Thomas has been busy honing his fashion sense and reflecting on his youth. The writing, acting and direction ensure that a nuanced approach is tossed out the window from the word go. Subjects as important as the power differentials between men and women, the sordid nature of patriarchy and casual sexism (to name just some) aren’t handled in a manner befitting them. That being said, the majority of Love to Hate You sinks without a trace. A few dramatic instances towards the end do burst with potential, and for an all-too-brief window, capture the human condition angle the show was perhaps conceived with. Kim Ji-hoon’s role of Do Won-jun is definitely stylised but it merits more attention than the male lead, whose sidekick he’s supposed to be. Played by Kim Sung-ryung, the latter represents the best acting talent on display. Supporting characters such as Do Won-jun (Kang-ho’s handsome and hands-on manager/agent) and Choi Soo-jin (a temperamental actress being represented by Mi-ran’s law firm) are small saving graces through the narrative. If that was their attempt to elicit laughter, they have another thing coming. It is the incredulous and inconsistent nature of the switch that points to a set of confused writers. ![]() She goes from cocksure and cold to absolutely puerile within the same setting. Though Kim Ok-vin has acted better than her counterpart, her character is poorly envisioned. Whether he is on the screen within a screen or on your screen, his inability to emote in any natural way proves to be a problem. ![]() Teo Yoo’s Kang-ho is an expressionless mask through the show. With little to no nuance, it is hard to get behind the performance of either of the leads. The writing is so below average that its characters are unable to tackle the bigger subjects of gender-stereotyping and patriarchy the show deals with. What all of it achieves is a level of crassness you find hard to shake off. Even the scenes involving conversations in male-dominated law firms attempt to fit the comedy tag desperately. The irony of a legal mind beating up bad apples isn’t lost on anybody, trust me. It tries to entertain you in that department with the lawyer-martial artist kicking unsuspecting ass on the street and dishing out her moves at office gatherings. Its story goes on and on and on (long after it should have called time), but not one single moment is worth laughing at. What Love to Hate You lacks in great abundance is a shot of humour. We don’t need the reveal of future episodes to figure that one out, surely. That they have baggage that has made them into their present selves is no secret. So, it’s two sexists belonging to opposite ends of the spectrum who are pitted against one another. In reality, he is rude and judgemental towards all his female co-stars, and is of the firm opinion that all women are scheming manipulators and gold-diggers who use men (partners and husbands) for their own self-interest. What he is on screen (soft, sensuous and adoring) is but a front. As for Kang-ho (Teo Yoo), he is one of Korea’s most beloved young male actors, a romantic leading man with a spotless reputation. In all her experience, she hasn’t met a decent bloke, so to speak. Over time, she has dated these aforementioned men to give them a taste of their own medicine. ![]() When she isn’t at office, she physically picks on male bullies on the street. She has an aversion to men (including her own father) whom she slots into the various categories of patriarchal, sexist and misogynistic. The former plays Mi- ran, a feisty young lawyer who is adept at a multitude of martial arts she has picked up over the years. Kim Ok-vin and Teo Yoo have the dishonourable distinction of headlining the list of badly-written characters. Caricatures abound in this rom-com of opposites attracting.
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