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Shows early promise and it's good, I just wish it were more
Better than average chemistry (for Korea) and a unique setting almost pulled this show into the realm of something outstanding. Unfortunately, it never quite managed to get away from the pacing and story structure issues endemic to KBL’s limited time frame and scope.
Behind Cut stars hugely charismatic Bum Jun (model & drummer in Kpop band 2Z) and Eom Se Ung (formerly of Kpop group The Man BLK) and is set in the fashion industry. Gi Jin is a designer chasing his dreams who lives with top model Lee Bin. They’re good friends, although Lee Bin would like more. Then Young Woo, a cheerful delivery boy who is a little lost in life, stumbles into their lives.
It’s sweet this idea that a dream can be a person. And Gi Jin is one of those talented sunshine characters hiding pain, so we can see why he inspires devotion in others. The vibe between him and Young Woo is very good and the actors brought a lot more physical affection to the table than is normal from Korea. With a better story and pace this show could have worked itself up to being something special, like To My Star, but a weak love triangle and the old “break ‘em up for a year in the final episode for no good reason” trope (a K-drama specialty) fubbed the landing.
It’s good BL, serviceable, I’m not going to punish it for failing to live up to its own early promise when “slightly too short and faintly unsatisfying” is basically Korea’s BL wheelhouse. If KBL is your thing, this show will work for you. Just don’t expect it to be anything more than that.
Behind Cut stars hugely charismatic Bum Jun (model & drummer in Kpop band 2Z) and Eom Se Ung (formerly of Kpop group The Man BLK) and is set in the fashion industry. Gi Jin is a designer chasing his dreams who lives with top model Lee Bin. They’re good friends, although Lee Bin would like more. Then Young Woo, a cheerful delivery boy who is a little lost in life, stumbles into their lives.
It’s sweet this idea that a dream can be a person. And Gi Jin is one of those talented sunshine characters hiding pain, so we can see why he inspires devotion in others. The vibe between him and Young Woo is very good and the actors brought a lot more physical affection to the table than is normal from Korea. With a better story and pace this show could have worked itself up to being something special, like To My Star, but a weak love triangle and the old “break ‘em up for a year in the final episode for no good reason” trope (a K-drama specialty) fubbed the landing.
It’s good BL, serviceable, I’m not going to punish it for failing to live up to its own early promise when “slightly too short and faintly unsatisfying” is basically Korea’s BL wheelhouse. If KBL is your thing, this show will work for you. Just don’t expect it to be anything more than that.
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