Ever since we watched the last episode of Boys Over Flowers, there’s been a void in our hearts. Many K-dramas with their jaded chaebols and their flower boy cliques have tried to fill up the emptiness, but nothing really feels quite the same. But then came Cinderella and Four Knights with its three good-looking, rich […]
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Untitled-design-3.png7681024Alexis Hodoyan-Gastelumhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngAlexis Hodoyan-Gastelum2016-08-27 11:00:032016-08-27 11:00:03Who’s your ‘Cinderella & Four Knights’ ideal guy? [QUIZ] [EXCLUSIVE CLIP]
Watching a K-drama is typically a lot of fun, whether they’re feel-good romances or haunting melodramas. But over the past few years, there has been an uptick in Korean television shows whose sole purpose is to highlight the feelings of a generation. The Answer Me and School (sans perhaps the last 2015 installment) are two […]
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Age-of-Youth-Poster.jpg7371300Tamar Hermanhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngTamar Herman2016-08-26 05:58:582016-08-26 19:46:07‘Age of Youth’ is the sweetest, most realistic, & most underrated K-drama of 2016
Ever since we watched the last episode of Boys Over Flowers, there’s been a void in our hearts. Many K-dramas with their jaded chaebols and their flower boy cliques have tried to fill up the emptiness, but nothing really feels quite the same. But then came Cinderella and Four Knights with its three good-looking, rich […]
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Untitled-design-3.png7681024Alexis Hodoyan-Gastelumhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngAlexis Hodoyan-Gastelum2016-08-27 11:00:032016-08-27 11:00:03Who’s your ‘Cinderella & Four Knights’ ideal guy? [QUIZ] [EXCLUSIVE CLIP]
Watching a K-drama is typically a lot of fun, whether they’re feel-good romances or haunting melodramas. But over the past few years, there has been an uptick in Korean television shows whose sole purpose is to highlight the feelings of a generation. The Answer Me and School (sans perhaps the last 2015 installment) are two […]
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Age-of-Youth-Poster.jpg7371300Tamar Hermanhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngTamar Herman2016-08-26 05:58:582016-08-26 19:46:07‘Age of Youth’ is the sweetest, most realistic, & most underrated K-drama of 2016
Ever since we watched the last episode of Boys Over Flowers, there’s been a void in our hearts. Many K-dramas with their jaded chaebols and their flower boy cliques have tried to fill up the emptiness, but nothing really feels quite the same. But then came Cinderella and Four Knights with its three good-looking, rich cousins who hate each other and the relatable heroine who will help them be normal and better people. Yup, sign us up.
Starring Jung Il Woo(The Moon Embracing the Sun), Ahn Jae Hyeon (Blood), Lee Jung Shin (of group CNBLUE), Choi Min (Yong Pal) and Park So Dam (Because it’s the First Time), Cinderella and Four Knights recreates a classic tale with a Korean twist. It follows Eun Ha Won (Park So Dam) as she moves into a fancy mansion with four handsome billionaires after being kicked out of her house by her mean stepmother. She takes on the job of improving the guys’ personalities.
With only five episodes in, it’s not definite who Eun Ha Won will fall for: the player Kang Hyun Min (Ahn Jae Hyeon), the dreamy Kang Seo Woo (Lee Jung Shin), the reliable Lee Yoon Sung (Choi Min), or the badass Kang Ji Woo (Jung Il Woo). However, us viewers are already setting our eyes on which knight we like the best. And to help you make a better informed decision on who to stan and make your heart race a little, KultScene has an exclusive clip of today’s episode of Cinderella and Four Knights streaming on DramaFever. More on that later…
Have you already fallen for one of the knights? Are you still on the fence? Want a little help to reinforce that you’ve made the right choice? Or maybe we can just help you make it. Take our quiz and find out who your idealCinderella and Four Knightsguy is:
…Of course it doesn’t end with knowing who your Cinderella and Four Knights beau is. If you’ve been keeping up with the drama, you can’t wait to find out what’s next, and we’re hooking you up with an exclusive clip for today’s episode. Check it out here:
Are you watching Cinderella and Four Knights? How are you liking it so far? Share your thoughts and quiz results in the comment section below and be sure to subscribe to the site and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Tumblr to keep up with all of our posts.
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Untitled-design-3.png7681024Alexis Hodoyan-Gastelumhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngAlexis Hodoyan-Gastelum2016-08-27 11:00:032016-08-27 11:00:03Who’s your ‘Cinderella & Four Knights’ ideal guy? [QUIZ] [EXCLUSIVE CLIP]
Watching a K-drama is typically a lot of fun, whether they’re feel-good romances or haunting melodramas. But over the past few years, there has been an uptick in Korean television shows whose sole purpose is to highlight the feelings of a generation. The Answer Me and School (sans perhaps the last 2015 installment) are two such series praised for their capacity to make the audience recognize the trials young people go through. JTBC’s soon-to-be-ending drama Age of Youth strives to do the same, but rather than focus on a generation, it emphasizes the stressors in the lives of young women modern day Seoul and South Korean society as a whole. It does such a phenomenal job that it’s going to be depressing come the award season when Age of Youth will likely be overlooked in favor of bigger budget and high-profile dramas.
Between the superb acting, endearing plotlines, and well-written script, Age of Youth is one of the best dramas South Korea’s seen this year. While high-profile dramas get a lot of attention both locally and internationally, Age of Youth is slowly garnering attention. According to Wikipedia, the show achieved nearly 3 percent of ratings nationally in South Korea during the Olympics, nothing to scoff at. So what’s the big deal and why is this little, 12-episode drama grabbing the attention?
[Disclaimer: Some spoilers are included but no major plot points.]
1. It’s All About The Ladies
These five roommates may not be the best of friends, but they still root for one another through all the ups and downs of the last few months. Have a job interview? Here are some shoes to borrow. (Or not…) Need a drink? We got you, whether you need a raucous party or just to be left alone to nurse your beer and a broken heart. Miss a shift at work? Here are four replacement workers! Break up? We’ll throw you a party! And, my personal favorite, started dating and you’re an innocent cutie (who may not have committed patricide)? Here, have a folder full of porn.
If you’re a fan of K-pop, you’ve probably heard the idea of a girl crush girl group (BlackPink and Twice, anyone?) But Korean dramas aren’t exactly known for their strong, tough “girl crush” characters for women to look up to. Handsome men? Check. More or less independent women who still swoon the minute they see one of those men? Check. But women doing their own thing? Sometimes…? That’s what this whole show is about. The quintet are one another’s cheerleaders, sometimes lovers, and even though there are still misunderstandings the beauty of the show is that the five women truly support one another.
I was a bit doubtful, considering that Age of Youth had no names I recognized except former T-ara member Ryu Hwayoung (who looks a lot like actress Park Shin Hye) and former KARA member Han Seungyeon, who play a high-end call girl and a blinded by love student in an abusive relationship respectively. But all of the stars are phenomenal actors. The viewers will root for the five women, even at their worst. And by worst, I mean when you find out that at least two of the main characters have killed people.
credit DOLLIU on Tubmlr
credit DOLLIU on Tubmlr
Han Yeri in particular evokes a sense of sadness even though she has the least lines in the show, but she is such a consummate actress that every movement is full of meaning. And if you don’t absolutely hate the characters played by Ji Il Joo (slimy Doo Young) and Min Sung Wook (the restaurant manager), then you should go back and rewatch because those two actors make it believable that there are such detestable people in the everyday world.
3. No Chaebols
Can it be true??? Chaebols, or the (usually young and handsome) heirs of family conglomerates, often play a role in many popular South Korean dramas. But Age of Youth is almost entirely devoid of this K-drama cliche. Some characters come from wealthier backgrounds or earn more, but overall, most characters are regular, everyday middle class Koreans living in random neighborhoods throughout Seoul. This is a drama so, of course; everybody still has the best phones and looks stylish, but it’s a step in the right direction to make relatable television. It’s clearly one of the best dramatizations of everyday life out of Korea, and the U.S to be honest, this year.
4. It Talks About All The Big Issues
Sex, depression, stalking, murder, death, poverty, finding direction, workplace harassment, and prostitution are just some of the things that Age of Youth addresses.
While many dramas make a big deal of sleeping with someone, in this drama, it just is normal. The budding romance between Park Hyesoo and Shin Hyunsoo’s characters, Eunjae and Jongyeol is sweet and innocent, but the minute they kiss the next question the other girls ask is when they’re going to have sex, no coyishness whatsoever. This is the real world, and these are real young women with desires.
And as for finances, it simply makes sense a few episodes in when the roommates discover one of their peers is selling herself for money; it’s the only way to live fashionably in Seoul. (Some social commentary, maybe?) A recurring theme, several characters encounter situations where they face being forced to reject money in favor of preserving their self-respect. Even debt is portrayed realistically, as something horrifying and life-threatening. And the debt collectors aren’t ruthless gangsters as in most dramas, they’re just guys trying to collect even while feeling bad for harassing a college student to pay for her mother’s mistakes.
5. We’re All People
The first episode gave us a basic introduction through the five women living in the house together. And while it seemed like the story would be centered around newcomer Eunjae, but by the end of the episode the screenwriting enabled viewers to see the point of view of each of the quintet and has since followed that pattern. It was, in essence, a maturing from the typical K-drama trope of following just one or two main characters. Age of Youth is all about the process of growing older through college years, and those few minutes of understanding the other housemates for the first time seemed like the first baby steps that will lead the path to adulthood (which, unfortunately, will likely arrive when the final episode airs this week).
If you haven’t realized yet, this show isn’t the typical K-drama romance. These girls sit around chatting sometimes, do laundry, exercise, play pranks, bicker, date, go to school and work, etc. Thankfully, Age of Youth is filled with young women who are literal Wonder Women doing their own thing and it’s very clear that happiness doesn’t innately mean finding Mr. Right. It’s still a K-drama, so that definitely helps, but these ladies are searching for their paths in life first with romance coming as just one part on a path to self-fulfillment. Even though each of the five women have some sort of loveline, the relationships are used more to depict personal growth and character development rather than the innate goal of this drama.
7. But We’re Still Rooting for Happy Endings
While Age of Youth is atypical for a drama, it will still likely aim for the happy ending trope and that’s not particularly a bad thing. (Although if one of them gets a sad finale… Well, it will just prove how quasi-realistic this show is!).
Even though it’s not all about love, each of main characters are young teens and twenty somethings (the youngest Eunjae is 20 by Korean standards, likely 18 internationally, while the eldest Jinmyung is 28 Korean age/26 internationally) and looking for happiness. For some of them, at the moment that hopefully includes the men who have been cheering them on as they overcome their hardships and for others it means finding out what makes them happy.
Have you watched Age of Youth? Which roommate is your favorite? Share your thoughts in the comment section below and be sure to subscribe to the site and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Tumblr to keep up with all of our posts.
https://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Age-of-Youth-Poster.jpg7371300Tamar Hermanhttps://kultscene.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/KULTSCENE-LOGO-2018-TRANSPARENT-RED.pngTamar Herman2016-08-26 05:58:582016-08-26 19:46:07‘Age of Youth’ is the sweetest, most realistic, & most underrated K-drama of 2016