Dramaworld
- Série de TV
- 2016–2021
- 15 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhat would YOU do if you fell into your favorite K-drama?What would YOU do if you fell into your favorite K-drama?What would YOU do if you fell into your favorite K-drama?
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25 May 2016. This international television series collaboration between China, South Korea, and the USA is an unique formula for peace in the world and drama/comedy entertainment of a new kind. This fantasy light drama has all the trappings of an American Soap Opera and the sparkling cultural fusion of Asian-American trappings that make this mini-television series a brilliant extended piece of fun, consternation, and fairy-tale that is delightful. Shot in short 15 minute episode segments, the total two and a half hour story arch brings story characters to life as Liv Hewson finds herself literally in another world.
Delirious (1991), Soap Dish (1991), Last Action Hero (1993), and Nurse Betty, offer some resemblance to a fictional world, but Dramaworld creates an almost magical alternative universe that might be more attuned to a more fantastical Cinderella version of the sci fi television series Fringe (2008-2013). This enjoyable fantasy series has all the promise of a huge hit internationally.
Delirious (1991), Soap Dish (1991), Last Action Hero (1993), and Nurse Betty, offer some resemblance to a fictional world, but Dramaworld creates an almost magical alternative universe that might be more attuned to a more fantastical Cinderella version of the sci fi television series Fringe (2008-2013). This enjoyable fantasy series has all the promise of a huge hit internationally.
10cherold
Season 1 (10 stars): Claire, a huge fan of Korean dramas (I had no idea that was a thing, but apparently it is), is magically transported into her favorite Korean soap opera, where she is told that she has a new job; fixing the conventional dramatic path that has somehow gone off target. She is supposed to work from behind the scenes, creating situations for the leads to fall in love as they're supposed to, but things don't go quite the way they're supposed to.
Dramaworld is quite funny, although as the show digs deeper into its silly story the humor sometimes gets toned down in favor of plot or drama. But the story is intriguing, the drama has a light touch, and the comedy manages to both mock Korean conventions while making me eager to watch one of these shows for myself.
Liv Hewson, who plays Claire, is perfectly cast as the red-headed American nerd inexplicably accepted by the Korean principles. She manages to be both dorky and plain enough to seem like someone who would obsessively watch a TV show while being cute and quirky enough to be believable as someone who simply cannot avoid becoming a part of the story she is supposed to influence from the edges.
The series reminds me a lot of Lost in Austen, in which a Jane Austen fan is transported into one of her novels. If you like one of these, I highly recommend watching the other.
I highly recommend binge watching this; episodes are short and end on cliffhangers, so it's frustrating to just watch one. I wound up waiting a month so I could watch the last 4 episodes together.
Beautifully done from beginning to end. I just love this show so much.
Season 2 (8 stars): Wow, that was a long wait!
Season 2 continues the story. The episodes are longer, the plotlines are crazier, the mythology is messier, and there's a goddamn cliffhanger which will never be resolved because the series was cancelled. So I'm pretty aggravated about that.
This second season is still tremendously fun and involving. It's funny and the plot is chockful of twists.
This time around, Joon knows more about his world and Seth has a new scheme clearly patterned after incel culture. And Claire is in a love triangle.
But a lot of this isn't really consistent with dramaworld as we know it. For example, Joon's character in this isn't his previous character, nor the character of his current drama. It's more the character of a perplexed actor who finds Dramaworld peculiar. Which makes no sense. Nor does it make sense that you can derail all the secondary characters.
It's as though at some point the writers thought, hey, is Dramaworld actually some sort of purgatory or metaphorical torment? Which is absolutely not the attitude that made me fall in love with the show.
I binged the second season in one day. At first this was because it was so much fun, but towards the end it was more because I was invested in learning how all this craziness would be resolved. And then ... it wasn't! Instead, we got a really dark cliffhanger. And since I discovered this at 1 a.m. When I was very, very tired, I was very angry. Had I known I would have spaced out my viewing over a few days.
Maybe the writers, depressed by the increase of authoritarianism throughout the world, the rise of incel trolls, and the pandemic, wanted to somehow pack all of that darkness into a cute comedy. I wish they hadn't done that.
Anyway, after I finished with the series I googled the show and found that it had been cancelled. So now all I have is a very unsatisfactory last episode and no idea how they were planning to dig themselves out of that very deep hole.
Don't get me wrong, Season 2 is still good overall. It's just not as perfect as Season 1.
Dramaworld is quite funny, although as the show digs deeper into its silly story the humor sometimes gets toned down in favor of plot or drama. But the story is intriguing, the drama has a light touch, and the comedy manages to both mock Korean conventions while making me eager to watch one of these shows for myself.
Liv Hewson, who plays Claire, is perfectly cast as the red-headed American nerd inexplicably accepted by the Korean principles. She manages to be both dorky and plain enough to seem like someone who would obsessively watch a TV show while being cute and quirky enough to be believable as someone who simply cannot avoid becoming a part of the story she is supposed to influence from the edges.
The series reminds me a lot of Lost in Austen, in which a Jane Austen fan is transported into one of her novels. If you like one of these, I highly recommend watching the other.
I highly recommend binge watching this; episodes are short and end on cliffhangers, so it's frustrating to just watch one. I wound up waiting a month so I could watch the last 4 episodes together.
Beautifully done from beginning to end. I just love this show so much.
Season 2 (8 stars): Wow, that was a long wait!
Season 2 continues the story. The episodes are longer, the plotlines are crazier, the mythology is messier, and there's a goddamn cliffhanger which will never be resolved because the series was cancelled. So I'm pretty aggravated about that.
This second season is still tremendously fun and involving. It's funny and the plot is chockful of twists.
This time around, Joon knows more about his world and Seth has a new scheme clearly patterned after incel culture. And Claire is in a love triangle.
But a lot of this isn't really consistent with dramaworld as we know it. For example, Joon's character in this isn't his previous character, nor the character of his current drama. It's more the character of a perplexed actor who finds Dramaworld peculiar. Which makes no sense. Nor does it make sense that you can derail all the secondary characters.
It's as though at some point the writers thought, hey, is Dramaworld actually some sort of purgatory or metaphorical torment? Which is absolutely not the attitude that made me fall in love with the show.
I binged the second season in one day. At first this was because it was so much fun, but towards the end it was more because I was invested in learning how all this craziness would be resolved. And then ... it wasn't! Instead, we got a really dark cliffhanger. And since I discovered this at 1 a.m. When I was very, very tired, I was very angry. Had I known I would have spaced out my viewing over a few days.
Maybe the writers, depressed by the increase of authoritarianism throughout the world, the rise of incel trolls, and the pandemic, wanted to somehow pack all of that darkness into a cute comedy. I wish they hadn't done that.
Anyway, after I finished with the series I googled the show and found that it had been cancelled. So now all I have is a very unsatisfactory last episode and no idea how they were planning to dig themselves out of that very deep hole.
Don't get me wrong, Season 2 is still good overall. It's just not as perfect as Season 1.
Some people say this show isn't well-made or acted. For a spoof on K-drama, I'd say it was amazingly done! Great video quality, great sound, wonderful expressions! Claire, who I am assuming is an American, is very over the top of from how a normal/modern US citizen would be. But if she is going to act along with the level of K-drama, she needed to act as she did. The reactions were priceless in this show and they tickled me so much. I didn't realize there were so many themes in K-drama until I watched this show. If you understand how a normal drama works, then this will be hilarious. If you don't, then it will be a mildly amusing concept that is entertaining. I am very happy with this show and am crossing my fingers for another!
Funny and nice series. Claire is a very friendly and endearing character. other than that, an ordinary Korean drama, expected events occurred.
I have been a K-Drama junkie since 2009 since the volume controls on my now old-fashioned, non-flat-screen television set malfunctioned and the only shows I could watch were the ones with English subtitles. Beginning with an historical drama called "Dae Jo-Young" which I had believed to be either Chinese or Japanese. As a 50-year old white woman who's Irish/Scottish on the paternal side of my family and Sicilian on the maternal side of it I didn't realize that what I was watching was an historical drama set centuries ago in Korea. However, "Dae Jo- Young" wasn't the K-Drama that put me over the edge into becoming fully addicted to the genre. It was a series called "Boys Over Flowers" and ever since I have been watching K-Dramas; both the ones that take place in the past and in the present ever since.
There are actually only a very few Hollywood television series that I find to be as well done as many of the K-Dramas that I have seen.
Now enough of that.
"Dramaworld" is a an extremely charming series that has managed, in my opinion, to combine the best of a Hollywood and a Korean T.V. show. I found the episodes to be much too short at an average of 10 minutes each and binge-watched the entire first season of the series on Netflix.
I especially liked how Claire was able to interact with the characters on the K-Drama that she had been thrust into without the makers of "Dramaworld" using the fish-out-of-water cliché.
There are actually only a very few Hollywood television series that I find to be as well done as many of the K-Dramas that I have seen.
Now enough of that.
"Dramaworld" is a an extremely charming series that has managed, in my opinion, to combine the best of a Hollywood and a Korean T.V. show. I found the episodes to be much too short at an average of 10 minutes each and binge-watched the entire first season of the series on Netflix.
I especially liked how Claire was able to interact with the characters on the K-Drama that she had been thrust into without the makers of "Dramaworld" using the fish-out-of-water cliché.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesLiv Hewson character Claire Duncan seems to be unable to catch items or react quickly, this is seen in several episodes and a recurring "pun/joke"
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- Tempo de duração15 minutos
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