Grade: A-
Category
Supernatural rom-com
What it’s about
After she begins
seeing ghosts, Tae Gong Shil’s promising future self-destructs. She can’t hold down a job, have regular
friendships, or even get a good night’s sleep, because the ghosts
find her wherever she goes. But then she meets Joo Joong Won, the
flamboyant president of one of Seoul’s ritziest shopping malls, who
can make her spectral companions disappear with a single touch. Stealing skinship
at every opportunity, Tae Gong Shil starts to feel in control of her
life for the first time since her inexplicable powers appeared.
Desperate to stay by Joong Won’s side, she swears to solve a
mystery that has haunted him for more than a decade.
First impression
In
spite of my enormous backlog of half-watched dramas, I finally broke
down and decided to start this currently airing show written by the
Hong sisters. I’ve been holding off because it’s already being
covered to death on the dramaweb, but I’m being tortured by
fabulous Tumblr gif sets of its ghosts every time I visit my
dashboard. Two of my greatest loves are horror movies and romantic
comedies, so it seems that Master’s
Sun and I were made for
each other. But after last summer’s debacle with the Hong sisters’
drama Big,
I’m a little wary of this show being another flameout. Master’s
Sun is
starting off as a fun Kdrama take on the American movie Ghost—but
then again, Big
started off as a fun take on the American movie Big.
And look where that got us.
Final verdict
I am incredibly
happy to report that Master’s Sun is
no Big.