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Do you think they were trying to tell us something with this shot? Like maybe the ending? |
For
the past two months, I’ve lived in the world of Secret
Love Affair. Now that I’m
reawakening to real life, I feel a little woozy and hungover.
Part of my insane
fixation on this show probably arises from how I watched it:
devouring episodes as they aired in Korea, then suffering through a
never-ending week for the next installments. There’s no doubt that
I would have liked this series even if I marathoned it in one big gulp,
but I definitely wouldn’t have taken the time to savor it in the
same way. And this is a show that deserves—nay, requires—savoring.
If you go into it thinking it’s just another zany Korean drama that
will be a shallow diversion, you’ll be disappointed. It’s
probably possible to watch SLA casually, but any viewer who is
less than fully engaged will miss the best things it has to offer.
From sly narrative foreshadowings and clever thematic connections to
deliciously oblique dialogue, Secret Love Affair isn’t
predigested for our enjoyment. Instead, it’s carefully crafted to
stimulate our minds.
A lot of Kdramas
remind of this weird little segment of book publishing in America.
It’s called “high interest,” and it focuses on titles meant to
motivate kids who are reluctant readers. These books are about
exciting topics, and their language is intentionally simple and
straightforward so shaky readers won’t feel challenged. The point
is to draw readers in and make them realize that books are
incredible, not to force them to fumble through big words and
difficult grammar that they don’t understand. The drama equivalent
of these books are shows that rely more on spectacle than insight.
The Moon that Embraces the Sun is a prime example—it
broadcast every motivation in voiceover lest anyone lose the
plot thread or actually be required to think. I’d also put family
dramas and shows like I Need Romance 3 in this category, as
they’re designed for easy, non-demanding titillation, not
thoughtful viewing.
But there are also
plenty of Korean dramas that aren’t afraid to be intricate and
complex, or to ask that we invest something into understanding them.
They can be difficult and literary, and they don’t dumb-down their
stories for superficial viewers. Shows like Nine, The End of the
World, and even the rom-com Queen In-hyun’s Man fit this
bill. And Secret Love Affair just might be their queen. It
takes incredibly traditional Kdrama tropes—a noona romance,
shocking traffic accidents, back hugs, and corporate intrigue—and
grafts them into the world of a moody, thoughtful indie movie. Like
most Korean dramas, its primary goal is eliciting emotion in its
viewers. But instead of being driven by events, its plot is driven by
its characters and the way they grow and change as they come
together.
Refreshingly
sophisticated and mature, Secret Love Affair isn’t for
everyone. But then again, how could it be, when it was so clearly
created just for me? Indulge me for one final post devoted to the things I loved about SLA, hopefully to be followed by a more balanced review on Thursday.