A fun enjoyable ride with a bunch of unique characters
I am always intrigued and delighted to watch media that represents minorities especially mentally or intelectually challenged individuals. It goes without saying that their representation has been for long on the rare side, and sometimes their depiction felt inaccurate (with excpetions of course), but lately the world and societal norms have shifted in a way that is opening more doors, breaking down more walls and becoming more and more accepting and open-minded to discussing such topics on a deeper level, addressing not only what it means to have mental or intellectual disabilities, but also showing how society can sometimes be ill-equipped to deal with such indiviuals in a way that ensures they are not left out or marginalized, but alas on the contrary in many cases breed inequality against them.
Autism Spectrum in particular is one mental disorder that should definitely be receiving more coverage, and I find that sometimes lighter content media could be the key to spreading a quick and helpful awareness and understanding among the public, because not everyone is ready to read a book or watch a scientific documentary, but who doesn't like to learn about different people in a light and enjoyable story settin, whether it be fictional or inspired by true events.
Saying that Extraordinary Attorney Woo was a fun ride would be an understatement, I nearly binge watched the whole series in under 2 days which might have been a normal achievement for me a couple of years ago, but now as a mother of two it has become quite the impossible feat. The drama uses a one-case-per-episode format, and I loved how there was a wide and varying range of cases, each showing different characters, and at the same time discussing a different topic that concerns the Korean society in an interesting and thought-enducing way. I also appreciated how they accurately depicted what it means to be a lawyer, especially one who works under a big law firm, the agony of being torn between the interests of your client and your conscience, and also sometimes how one can sometimes win and other times lose, but also how sometimes you can win on paper but feel like you lost and vice versa.
As for the characters, the main female lead was simply put the cake, the icing and the cherry. The actress' performance was superb. I might have had some minor grievances with the writing of the character, in that she would at times be extra social awkward, unable to read between the lines, or interpret people's expressions or metaphors, but other instances she would be very normally intuitive and able to infer people's feelings just like a non-autistic person. I know that there is a wide range of autistim (a point that is thankfully discussed in the drama) and that people can grow and mature overtime and experience, but it felt here like she rhe degree of awkwardness was shiting up and down according to the needs of the situation.
The main male lead, I honestly find difficutly referring to him as that. Although he is a main character and the romantic interest of the FL, and I liked the actor a lot and found his performance was great, I thought that the writing was greatly unfair to him. Among all the other members of the Hanbada team that we became acquainted to, he was the one that really needed the most fleshing out, but despite that he somehow felt like a side character that just appeared every now and then to provide a romantic plot line, his character felt too much two-diemntional for a ML, in that we never know anything about HIM, im essence who he is, for me at least there were a lot of questions filling my head concerning him varying from the deep to the simple ( like how he came to share an appartment with att. Knon for instance), and I kept holding out for an episode that would venture into his character background story deeper, but it never came, and these feelings that I couldn't seem to shake off that his depiction was shallow, only made me question what made him develop romantic feelings towards our FL in the first place. I am not saying that there was no chemistry, on the contrary I find both actors delivered a performance that left butterflies in ones stomach, a smile or a tear sometimes, and I totally cared for them and cheered them on, but that was all thanks to the actors and the dialog, but the writing on the other hand focused more on the law aspect of the story with the romance plot sometimes falling to the curbside. Don't get me wrong, I loved the romance here, but I could have been more moved and it could have left a deeper impression on me if there had been more light shed on the male lead, and the couple's journey given more screen time overall.
I've discussed too much in the character and writing aspect, but I will just say that I really loved all the members of the Hanbada team, but above all I especially LOVED attorney Jung, whose presence in any scene simply lighted up my screen. He was the perfect mentor to our rookies, he was competent, honest, tolerant, kind, humble, but above all humanely flawed in such a way he was one of the most believable and endearing characters in the whole series.
The direction was overall great, with nice camera work, but I sometimes hated the transition between the scenes, especially shifting from a personal situation to a courtroom setting, sometimes it just felt too sudden and sharp to the point I was surprised and distracted. I am not here referring to the instances where attorney Woo's autistic tendencies drove her to take a sudden and extreme shift in her thoughts which happened constantly, that was believable and necessary for an accurate depiction of an autistic person, I am rather talking about scene editing, or maybe it is a problem with the screenplay i honestly dunno because I don't have enough knowledge about these things, but it just felt like I was reading a comic book with a character mid-sentence, only to turn the page and find the next frame showing a whole different situation.
The music, nothing major stuck to my head but overall it suited the feel of the story and the atmosphere of the drama.
Rewatch value, this one's high, maybe not immediately but I think that later on, there a lot of scenes and interactions that could be enjoyable to experience once more, and maybe rewatching such a drama might help one ponder and reflect more about certain topics.
Overall, I would definitely recommend this drama. It is hard to be confident about how accurate the depiction of a person with disability was achieved, especially when it comes to autism which is a whole wide spectrum, but I can say that I personally felt it was believable and overall accurate.
Autism Spectrum in particular is one mental disorder that should definitely be receiving more coverage, and I find that sometimes lighter content media could be the key to spreading a quick and helpful awareness and understanding among the public, because not everyone is ready to read a book or watch a scientific documentary, but who doesn't like to learn about different people in a light and enjoyable story settin, whether it be fictional or inspired by true events.
Saying that Extraordinary Attorney Woo was a fun ride would be an understatement, I nearly binge watched the whole series in under 2 days which might have been a normal achievement for me a couple of years ago, but now as a mother of two it has become quite the impossible feat. The drama uses a one-case-per-episode format, and I loved how there was a wide and varying range of cases, each showing different characters, and at the same time discussing a different topic that concerns the Korean society in an interesting and thought-enducing way. I also appreciated how they accurately depicted what it means to be a lawyer, especially one who works under a big law firm, the agony of being torn between the interests of your client and your conscience, and also sometimes how one can sometimes win and other times lose, but also how sometimes you can win on paper but feel like you lost and vice versa.
As for the characters, the main female lead was simply put the cake, the icing and the cherry. The actress' performance was superb. I might have had some minor grievances with the writing of the character, in that she would at times be extra social awkward, unable to read between the lines, or interpret people's expressions or metaphors, but other instances she would be very normally intuitive and able to infer people's feelings just like a non-autistic person. I know that there is a wide range of autistim (a point that is thankfully discussed in the drama) and that people can grow and mature overtime and experience, but it felt here like she rhe degree of awkwardness was shiting up and down according to the needs of the situation.
The main male lead, I honestly find difficutly referring to him as that. Although he is a main character and the romantic interest of the FL, and I liked the actor a lot and found his performance was great, I thought that the writing was greatly unfair to him. Among all the other members of the Hanbada team that we became acquainted to, he was the one that really needed the most fleshing out, but despite that he somehow felt like a side character that just appeared every now and then to provide a romantic plot line, his character felt too much two-diemntional for a ML, in that we never know anything about HIM, im essence who he is, for me at least there were a lot of questions filling my head concerning him varying from the deep to the simple ( like how he came to share an appartment with att. Knon for instance), and I kept holding out for an episode that would venture into his character background story deeper, but it never came, and these feelings that I couldn't seem to shake off that his depiction was shallow, only made me question what made him develop romantic feelings towards our FL in the first place. I am not saying that there was no chemistry, on the contrary I find both actors delivered a performance that left butterflies in ones stomach, a smile or a tear sometimes, and I totally cared for them and cheered them on, but that was all thanks to the actors and the dialog, but the writing on the other hand focused more on the law aspect of the story with the romance plot sometimes falling to the curbside. Don't get me wrong, I loved the romance here, but I could have been more moved and it could have left a deeper impression on me if there had been more light shed on the male lead, and the couple's journey given more screen time overall.
I've discussed too much in the character and writing aspect, but I will just say that I really loved all the members of the Hanbada team, but above all I especially LOVED attorney Jung, whose presence in any scene simply lighted up my screen. He was the perfect mentor to our rookies, he was competent, honest, tolerant, kind, humble, but above all humanely flawed in such a way he was one of the most believable and endearing characters in the whole series.
The direction was overall great, with nice camera work, but I sometimes hated the transition between the scenes, especially shifting from a personal situation to a courtroom setting, sometimes it just felt too sudden and sharp to the point I was surprised and distracted. I am not here referring to the instances where attorney Woo's autistic tendencies drove her to take a sudden and extreme shift in her thoughts which happened constantly, that was believable and necessary for an accurate depiction of an autistic person, I am rather talking about scene editing, or maybe it is a problem with the screenplay i honestly dunno because I don't have enough knowledge about these things, but it just felt like I was reading a comic book with a character mid-sentence, only to turn the page and find the next frame showing a whole different situation.
The music, nothing major stuck to my head but overall it suited the feel of the story and the atmosphere of the drama.
Rewatch value, this one's high, maybe not immediately but I think that later on, there a lot of scenes and interactions that could be enjoyable to experience once more, and maybe rewatching such a drama might help one ponder and reflect more about certain topics.
Overall, I would definitely recommend this drama. It is hard to be confident about how accurate the depiction of a person with disability was achieved, especially when it comes to autism which is a whole wide spectrum, but I can say that I personally felt it was believable and overall accurate.
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