Before The Glory and Descendants of the Sun , Song Hye-kyo perfected the "pitiful but fierce" heroine. Ji-eun cries a lot (often in the rain, ironically), but she never stays down. She talks back, she throws things, and she writes her terrible, adorable fanfiction-like scripts. She is the heart of the show.
Young-jae needs a wife to make his secret crush (and his manipulative agent) jealous. Ji-eun needs a roof over her head. The result? The mother of all contract marriage tropes: "I own your house, you pretend to love me." Cue three months of screaming matches, forced proximity, flying chopsticks, and the slow, agonizing burn of two idiots realizing they actually like each other. 1. The Chemistry is Nuclear (Even When They’re Fighting) Modern dramas often have polished, whispered arguments. Full House features screaming, stomping, slapstick fights over boiled eggs and vacuum cleaners. Song Hye-kyo’s Ji-eun is a hurricane of bright sweaters and tearful resilience, while Rain’s Young-jae is the original "annoying rich boy" prototype. When they fight, it’s genuinely funny. When they finally kiss, you feel the relief of a thousand weeks of pent-up tension. full house korean drama review
You will scream at your screen. 90% of the conflict arises because one person sees the other talking to someone of the opposite sex and immediately assumes betrayal. No one has a single conversation. The noble idiocy ("I’m leaving to protect you!") happens about five times too many. Before The Glory and Descendants of the Sun
You will never look at a stuffed teddy bear or a bowl of pickled radish the same way again. Three bears, fighting! 🐻🐻🐻 She is the heart of the show